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Annamācārya

1408 – 1503 · Pre-Trinity — Tallapaka composer of Tirumala

Composed ~32,000 saṅkīrtanas in Telugu in praise of Veṅkateśvara at Tirumala. The earliest major composer of the Carnatic tradition.

Biography

Tallapaka Annamācārya (1408–1503) is the earliest major composer of the Carnatic tradition. Born in Tallapaka, Andhra Pradesh, he spent his life at Tirumala, composing saṅkīrtanas in praise of Veṅkateśvara.

Tradition holds that he composed 32,000 saṅkīrtanas (of which about 12,000 survive in various forms). Many were inscribed on copper plates and preserved at the Tirumala temple. His compositions span the full range of human emotion — from philosophical Vedānta ('Brahmam Okkate') to intimate devotional confession ('Enta Mātyracunu') to the rhythm of pilgrimage ('Nadaci Nadaci').

Annamācārya's style is direct and accessible — Telugu verse set to simple, memorable melodies. He does not use a mudrā; instead, every composition resolves to the name of Veṅkateśvara. Primary sources include the T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha (1950–1990s) and the Tallapaka copper-plate inscriptions.

Textual source

Tallapaka copper plates

Tallapaka copper-plate inscriptions (Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams) and the Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha (T.T.D. editions, 1950–1990s)

Annamācārya composed ~32,000 saṅkīrtanas in praise of Veṅkateśvara at Tirumala. Many were inscribed on copper plates and preserved at the temple. The T.T.D. scholarly editions (particularly the 1950s–1970s publications) provide the most authoritative texts.

Citation: Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha (Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams, 1950–1990s); Tallapaka copper-plate inscriptions (preserved at T.T.D. Annamācārya Library).

Mudrā signature

Does not use a mudrā. Compositions are identified by the refrain to Veṅkateśvara.

Birthplace

Tallapaka, Kadapa district (present-day Andhra Pradesh)

Final years

Tirumala — 1503

Lyrical language

Telugu

Signature gītī

Sādhāraṇī

Signature gamaka

Sphurita (quick touch, like a devotee's trembling hand)

Favoured ragas

Associated kṣetras

  • Tallapaka (birthplace)
  • Tirumala / Tirupati (lifetime residence and composition)
  • Veṅkateśvara temple (the deity of all his compositions)

Kṛti catalog· 5 entries

Cards marked ▸ Full text expand to show the pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇa text from Tallapaka copper plates.

Philosophical· 1

Vedāntic compositions on the oneness of Brahman and the unity of all paths.

  • Brahmam Okkate

    Brahmam okkaṭe

    115 BPM

    BowliĀdi TālaVeṅkateśvara

    The oneness of Brahman — all paths lead to the same truth

    Opening sahitya

    Brahmam okkaṭe, para-brahmam okkaṭe

    Rāga preview · Bowli · Ādi Tāla
    Deep dive into Brahmam Okkate
    Section summary (pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇam)
    Pallavi
    Brahman is one — the supreme Brahman is one.
    Anupallavi
    Whether you call him Śiva, Viṣṇu, or by any other name, the truth is one.
    Charaṇam
    Annamācārya's philosophical core — Vedānta in simple Telugu verse.

    Source: T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha

Bhakti· 4

Direct devotional saṅkīrtanas — yearning, surrender, and the joy of pilgrimage.

  • Enta Mātyracunu

    Enta mātyracunu

    120 BPM

    MukhāriĀdi TālaVeṅkateśvara

    The futility of worldly praise without devotion

    Opening sahitya

    Enta mātyracunu, enta mātyracunu, enta mātyracunu

    Rāga preview · Mukhāri · Ādi Tāla
    Deep dive into Enta Mātyracunu
    Section summary (pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇam)
    Pallavi
    However much they praise me, it is futile without devotion to Hari.
    Anupallavi
    Wealth, fame, learning — all are empty without Veṅkateśvara's grace.
    Charaṇam
    Tallapaka Annamāyya — the poet who sang 32,000 saṅkīrtanas on Tirumala's lord.

    Source: T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha

  • Nadaci Nadaci

    Nadaci nadaci

    125 BPM

    KāpiĀdi TālaVeṅkateśvara

    The pilgrim's journey to Tirumala

    Opening sahitya

    Nadaci nadaci, yācuṭakuṇi pādamulu celagi

    Rāga preview · Kāpi · Ādi Tāla
    Deep dive into Nadaci Nadaci
    Section summary (pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇam)
    Pallavi
    Walking and walking, I have come to bow at your feet.
    Anupallavi
    Seven hills, seven steps — each one a prayer.
    Charaṇam
    Annamāyya's walking songs — the rhythm of pilgrimage set to rāga.

    Source: T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha

  • Śrīman Nārāyaṇa Nin

    Śrīman Nārāyaṇa Nin

    108 BPM

    BhūravīĀdi TālaNārāyaṇa

    O Śrīman Nārāyaṇa — protect me with compassion

    Opening sahitya

    Śrīman nārāyaṇa nin, śrī pāda kamala daśaratha

    Rāga preview · Bhūravī · Ādi Tāla
    Deep dive into Śrīman Nārāyaṇa Nin
    Section summary (pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇam)
    Pallavi
    O Śrīman Nārāyaṇa — your lotus feet are my refuge.
    Anupallavi
    The lord of Lakṣmī, the support of all worlds.
    Charaṇam
    Annamācārya's plea for grace — the devotee surrenders at the divine feet.

    Source: T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha

  • Govinda, Govinda Yāni

    Govinda, Govinda Yāni

    120 BPM

    KēdāragauḷaĀdi TālaVeṅkaṭeśvara

    The name Govinda as the destroyer of obstacles

    Opening sahitya

    Govinda, Govinda yāni vēḍina, vāḍu veṅkaṭagirini

    Rāga preview · Kēdāragauḷa · Ādi Tāla
    Deep dive into Govinda, Govinda Yāni
    Section summary (pallavi · anupallavi · charaṇam)
    Pallavi
    Those who call on Govinda — he resides on Veṅkaṭa hill.
    Anupallavi
    The protector of the three worlds, the friend of the helpless.
    Charaṇam
    The divine name is the bridge across the ocean of saṃsāra.

    Source: T.T.D. Annamācārya Saṅkīrtana Saṅgraha

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