I like this person's reviews ....his reviews feature on naachgaana.com as
well ....

the last line especially is a gem of a line ....."*But why compare, when,
like all good Rahman fans, one ought to have both*?"
Music Review: SAKKARAKATTI (Tamil; 2008)
As I arrived home today to find the Sakkarakatti CD waiting in my mailbox, I
was struck by the fact that even thirteen years after I first encountered
the sound of A.R. Rahman, even when the soundtrack in question is not
associated with a Mani Ratnam film, and promises to be, most assuredly, a
"minor" work in the context of Rahman's oeuvre, my excitement when
unwrapping the album remains undimmed. Some of that is obviously because
Rahman -- even "lesser" Rahman -- speaks to me in a way no other Hindi or
Tamil composer does. But much of that is also due to the fact that even
"minor" Rahman contains gems, the sort of musical passage that rears up to
dazzle the listener when least expected. And much of the excitement is
undoubtedly due to the fact that it is often precisely in Rahman's "lesser"
work that one encounters the nimble sense of play, the occasional
cheekiness, that once made him the most light-footed of all of Indian
popular cinema's titanic presences.

On that front, Sakkarakatti does not disappoint: it isn't pathbreaking
music, but it is, quite simply (and provisionally, given these are early
days for me where the album is concerned), an immensely enjoyable, even
satisfying, album. That the master should have it in him to compose a
soundtrack so high on the fun quotient just a few months after the
ultra-sober (perhaps even staid) Jodha-Akbar speaks volumes about not just
Rahman's versatility, but indeed to the composer's need for "smaller"
projects. These days, these projects might be among his few opportunities
(Shankar's films always excepted) to let his hair down. [Aamir and
Murugadoss, I hope you are paying attention.]

Taxi...Taxi... is on the face of it downright silly, a pastiche of neo-hip
hop, ragamuffin, and some desi tapori. But its ponderous percussive beat, in
contrast to the somewhat drunk quality of the vocals here, that is to say
its sheer catchiness, makes it downright irresistible. And there are some
moments of genuine zaniness here: from Viviane's French lyrics (delivered in
a voice that is nothing if not saucy) to the childishly high-pitched
"MamamamamamamamamamaMAMA" refrain, to the incongruous Middle Eastern
strains littered over the song. This will never be a great song, but its
refreshing to see Rahman hasn't lost the ability to poke some fun at
himself.

Marudaani following on the heels of Taxi...Taxi... seems to be the sort of
formula that had Munbe Vaa follow the catchy Kummi Aadi on the Sillunu Oru
Kaadal soundtrack. But irritation at creative laziness aside, Marudaani is a
surprisingly enjoyable song. There's certainly nothing new about this
Madhushree (for the most part) solo, and we've heard Rahman croon many many
times before -- and yet I was simply unable to resist this song as much as
my brain felt I needed to. Old wine in a new bottle? Assuredly. But stale?
Far from it: more like one that becomes familiarly mellow with age.

The third song on the album is a rarity in Rahman's recent Tamil work,
namely a relatively quiet, almost reflective nocturnal song -- or at least
as reflective as a song called I Miss You Da can be. For those who
found Sillunu
Oru Kaadal's Machakaari too busy, and the same film's Majaa too, well,
silly, I Miss You Da is the perfect antidote: it is far simpler than many of
Rahman's nighttime songs, but nevertheless one takes it seriously, even on a
first listen -- perhaps the result of Indai Haza's forlorn "Yevanay" refrain
that recurs over the course of the song; or perhaps because Chinmayi's
vocals are recorded at a louder level than one might expect, almost as if
she were insisting in one's ear.

If handsome could be a song, then surely the dashing Elay would be it: part
tribute to the now-past Urvashi Urvashi era of Rahmania, yet all very much
contemporary Rahman in its lush orchestration and assured instrumentation,
Elay displays whiffs of a younger, more playful Rahman, but for the most
part the urge to experiment is represented here with relative abstraction,
reflected in the composer's easy assimilation of a wide array of influences
into a recognizably Rahman signature, rather than by means of the
instinctive energy of his younger days. There's no reason to complain: the
season might be different, but the clarity of the Master's voice shines
through just the same. Rahman covers a surprising amount of terrain here,
from the peppy opening that brings to mind Roobaroo from Rang De Basanti,
but veers off into a more raw vocal direction, while introducing jazzy riffs
and even fiddler strains with seeming carelessness. Krish and Naresh Iyer's
stolid vocals ground this song, but the music suffusing their words is of a
different mind: it wants to soar.

Last but not least, the album recycles two songs from Meenaxi, Ye
Rishtainto Naan
Epoudhu and Chinnamma into a Tamil song of the same name. The former is a
straight re-do (even to the point of Reena Bharadwaj's voice), but the
latter is, ah, very far from anything denoted by the term "recycling." For
through it one gets an insight into how the Tamil masala side of Rahman's
brain refracts a tune, a soundscape, he's been living with for quite some
time. The result lacks the poise of the Meenaxi number, but more than makes
up for it with greater energy, and even -- dare one say it, given how good
just about everything in Meenaxi is? -- greater personality. Some of this is
undoubtedly the result of Chinnamma's Tamil avatar being a love duet between
the expressive Chinmayee and Benny Dayal, as opposed to a Sukhwinder Singh
soliloquy, but there's more: the instruments seem more hurried, more
assertive, more urban. If the Hindi Chinnamma was bucolic in tone, this one
sounds a bit more urban -- and all the while exceptionally well served by
the alliterative Tamil lyrics. To this non-Tamil ear, the greater
alliteration permitted by that language suits this tune better than the
Hindustani of Meenaxi's version. But why compare, when, like all good Rahman
fans, one ought to have both?

http://qalandari.blogspot.com/2008/07/music-review-sakkarakatti-tamil-2008.html

-- 
-A
http://viewsnmuse.blogspot.com

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