Kavin’s throat tightened. His father’s version had been slower, more broken. But the intent was the same. A poem that refuses to be sung. A song that lives only in the gaps between instruments.
The next morning, the BGM played. The hesitant piano. The searching harmonium. And for the first time in three years, Kavin didn’t reach for the snooze button. He just lay there, listening to a poem that had finally found a place to stay—inside a phone, inside a ringtone, inside a son who never learned to play a single note but could recognize his father’s ghost in a pirated MP3.
That’s how he landed on the search page.
When his father passed away three years ago, the tune died with him. Or so Kavin thought.
The results were a graveyard of ringtone websites: "Ringtones.in", "MobiloCup", "TamilBgmWorld.net". Each one was more broken than the last—pop-up ads for dubious weight loss pills, fake "Download Now" buttons, and comment sections filled with desperate souls from 2017. "Bro upload full bgm pls" "This is not original, has water mark" "Anyone have flute version?" Kavin clicked the third link. A page titled "Sangathil Padatha Kavithai – Ilaiyaraaja’s Lost BGM (Extended)" appeared. The description was in Tamil script, typed with typos: "This BGM was used only in climax scene. Never released officially. Ripped from old theatre print."
His father, a retired school music teacher, used to hum a particular tune every evening after tea. It had no lyrics, no meter. Just a wandering, melancholic rise and fall on the harmonium’s keys. “It’s a song that never found its lines,” his father would say. “ Sangathil padatha kavithai —a poem that won’t fit into a tune.”
He wasn’t a musician. He wasn’t even a hardcore film buff. Kavin was just a 24-year-old software engineer living in a cramped Chennai paying guest, missing home—specifically, his father’s old Harmonium.