: For international listeners, Spotify hosts tracks by artists like Haries Christan where the song might appear under a slightly different name, such as "Neerindri Vazhvethu".

To help you get exactly what you need for your blog or your playlist, could you tell me:

This platform has several Tamil devotional albums. Search by the song name, then filter by "Top Result" or "Popular Versions." Look for album titles containing "Vol. 50" or "50 Divine Bhajans."

"Neer Indri Vazhvethu Iraiva" has transcended its origins as a film song to become a cultural phenomenon. It is often played during traditional gatherings, festivals, and even in religious ceremonies, where its soothing melody and meaningful lyrics are appreciated by audiences of all ages.

| Artist / Album | Duration | Platform | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Poornima Srinivasan ("Sai Anugraham") | 7:17 | JioSaavn | | John ("Neer Indri") | 4:31 | JioSaavn | | Haries Christan | 2:13 | Spotify |

A well-known version released in 2021 as part of an album of the same name.

Neer indri vazhvathu iraivaa, Un kirubai indri vazhvathu pol

Ummaiyandri anuvethum asaiyathaiya, Um thunaiyindri uyir vaazha mudiyathaiya.

: Much like how roots require water to keep a tree alive, the song posits that the soul cannot flourish without spiritual nourishment.

'Neer Indri Vazhvethu Iraiva' ஒரு உணர்ச்சிபூர்வமான, பக்தி நிறைந்த பாடல். இது பொதுவாக F மைனர் (Fₘ) என்ற ராகத்தில் அமைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. Chordify தளத்தின் படி, இப்பாடலின் டெம்போ (BPM) 86 ஆகும். இது பாடலின் மெதுவான, தியானம் மற்றும் வழிபாட்டுக்கு ஏற்ற, கம்பீரமான வேகத்தைக் குறிக்கிறது. இப்பாடலை இசைக்கும் போது, நான்கில் நான்கு (4/4) என்ற தாளத்தில் வாசிப்பதற்கான குறிப்புகள் (chords) வழங்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

For multi-media worship setups, lyric videos and keyboard tutorials are readily available on the YouTube Tamil Christian Devotional Channel . Premium subscribers can download the audio for offline listening. Musician's Resource: Learning the Song

Thus, the title translates to "O Lord, there is no life without water." It is a poignant prayer acknowledging water as the essence of all existence. The song is typically addressed to Lord Krishna (often as Govinda or Narayana) or sometimes to Lord Shiva, depending on the rendition, but its core message is universal: gratitude for nature’s most precious resource.

Listening context and placement