Very poetic. When it comes to reviewing style,   Baradwaj is peerless..



________________________________
From: Vinayakam Murugan <mvinaya...@gmail.com>
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, January 23, 2010 11:17:00 AM
Subject: [arr] Baradwaj Rangan on VTV

  
http://www.desipund it.com/baradwajr angan/2010/ 01/23/between- reviews-music- 
from-beyond- the-skies/


MUSIC FROM BEYOND THE SKIES
AR Rahman proves, once again, that love his songs or loathe them, there’s no 
questioning the spirit of restless creation in them.
JAN 24, 2010 – WHATEVER THE OSCARS HAVE DONE FOR AR RAHMAN on a professional 
level, they certainly haven’t altered an iota of his person. Ascending the 
stage towards the close of the audio launch of Gautham Vasudev Menon’s Vinnai 
Thaandi Varuvaayaa, the musician came off less like someone celebrated across a 
series of global platforms than a bashful school-kid still unable to comprehend 
all this fuss. Gracious as ever, he confessed to harbouring doubts about 
matching the standards set by the hit combination of Gautham and Harris Jayaraj 
– and he probably wasn’t alone in these doubts. Whatever the reasons – the 
requirements of the market, the quality of the films, the guidance from the 
directors – Rahman in Hindi is quite a different beast from Rahman in Tamil, 
and at least some part of the houseful audience, that Tuesday evening in 
Chennai, was wondering if their idol’s penchant for multi-tangential 
experimentation would coalesce with
 their requirement for a soundtrack that was admirable yet accessible.
But even that old bugaboo about Rahman’s compositions needing time (not to 
mention a lot of petting and stroking and the lighting of heavily aromatic 
incense) to grow on you was dispelled the instant Alphons Joseph started to 
strum his guitar in preparation for Aaromale, the album’s standout track. 
Before getting to the song, however, can I note how thoroughly refreshing it 
was to witness a music release function that was actually about the music? No 
windbag speeches from the architects of other aspects of the film, no 
gratuitous bowing and scraping before political (and other petty) powers – it 
was just the musicians on stage, belting out unplugged versions of the songs 
they’d sung in the studio, accompanied simply by a piano, a couple of guitars 
and manmade effects like clicks and harmonies. Gautham would introduce a song 
with a sliver of context, and the singer would take off from there – no muss, 
no fuss.
This approach, in hindsight, was unexpectedly rewarding. Firstly, it ensured 
that the spotlight shone on the most deserving – namely, AR Rahman and his 
singers. But more importantly, it etched into the audience’s minds the 
barebones template of each song – something that may not be of much use with 
another music director, but absolutely worthwhile in the case of Rahman. His 
methods of creation are so unique – the skeleton of melody gradually layered 
with sinew and tissue and muscle and, finally, skin – that the full-bodied song 
often bears little resemblance to the outline that birthed it. And we were 
privileged, that evening, to listen to these outlines, which instilled in our 
minds a rudimentary map of the musical terrain that was going to be stalked. 
Rahman, who came on stage only after all the songs were thus unveiled, may only 
have been partly joking when he mused that his numbers sounded so much better 
this way.
I hadn’t heard any of these songs earlier, and when, for instance, Naresh Iyer 
began to spit out the phrases of Kannukkul kannai, I was instantly drawn to the 
end of the opening stretch, where vocals and guitar came together in a set of 
staccato steps with the synchronised heat of a tangoing duo. Listening to the 
album later, I was surprised that this portion was submerged under backing 
vocals (including whoops), strings and a furiously tapping percussion, and what 
had previously been the highlight of the song, for me, was now merely an 
organic part of the whole. How would I have responded to the song had I not 
heard the earlier, acoustic rendering, which isn’t unlike reading the 
screenplay before watching a movie? The tone and tempo and colour are the same, 
yet different – the core the same, yet the conclusion different. Perhaps, 
henceforth, all albums should be required to perform this double duty – giving 
the musically curious amongst us the
 opportunity to peel back the skin and slice right to the bone.
On the other hand, Benny Dayal’s Omana penne sounded better recorded than live, 
primarily due to its studio-crafted special effects – like the electronically 
tweaked contribution from Kalyani Menon, or the lush raga passages in Bilahari 
that bequeathed an air of piquancy to a tune that otherwise might have been 
dismissed as generically chirpy. In general, Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaayaa is one 
of Rahman’s stronger Tamil albums, bearing just enough outré envelope-pushing 
to sound different but still managing to appeal on first (or second) listens. 
The sole outright disappointment is Anbil avan (from Devan and Chinmayi), which 
holds little surprise (or interest) after a first listen. And with a couple of 
other tunes, such as Karthik’s soulful crooning of the title track and 
Rahman-Shreya Ghoshal’s Mannipaaya, everything looks perfect on the surface – 
from the patient and flavourful parsing of (lyricist) Thamarai’s phrases to the 
relatively
 unadorned musical flourishes – but something (I can’t put my finger on it yet) 
seems vaguely off. And yet, there’s always some sort of hook – a bluesy 
intonation here, iterative phrasings that spread out like ripples over there – 
that keeps drawing you back. Speaking of Thamarai, however, her staunch 
contribution to Gautham’s films certainly found a better showcase in Harris 
Jayaraj’s less-layered music, though even here, certain signature constructions 
announce themselves beautifully – like maru idhayam, a second heart to be 
offered the callous lover after she crushes the first one.
But Aaromale is everything you wish for – a dazzling boundary-pusher contained 
within the perimeter of a standard stanza-chorus construction, except that the 
stanzas aren’t quite stanzas in the way we usually know them, a block of music 
(comprising, say two individual lines of melody repeated twice, once by the 
male singer and once by the female counterpart) . The non-chorus portions, 
here, are structured along the lines of blues-rock and country music (think 
Creedence Clearwater Revival’s recording of I put a spell on you layered onto 
an Ennio Morricone score for a spaghetti Western, and brushed lightly with the 
psychedelia of Pink Floyd) – and looping through the song’s lazy meanderings, 
you realise, once again, that Rahman’s legacy (in continuance with MS 
Viswanathan’s legacy of the “light music” melody line and Ilayaraja’s legacy of 
interstitial orchestration and arrangement) is not just the sound of his music, 
the clean, clear
 sound that’s the musical equivalent of a bracing breath of pure oxygen on a 
mountaintop, but also his systematic demolition of the constituents of a film 
song.
It isn’t that others, earlier, have always buckled down and conformed quietly 
to the prototype of the Opening (namely, pallavi/mukhda) followed by an 
Interlude that bridges to the Stanza (namely, charanam/antara) which, 
subsequently, loops back to the Opening – I can quickly think of RD Burman’s 
Logon na maaro ise from Anamika and Ilayaraja’s Thendralile thoranangalfrom 
Eera Vizhi Kaaviyangal (both with no Stanzas whatsoever), Harris Jayaraj’s 
Manjal veyyil maalayile from Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu (not invoking Stanza until 
after four iterations of Chorus and Opening), MS Viswanathan’s title track for 
Ninaithaale Inikkum and (its spiritual successor) Maragadhamani’ s Nivedha in 
Nee Paadhi Naan Paadhi (both comprising merelyswara/solfa passages and a single 
word/phrase) – but Rahman has displayed a remarkable consistency in chipping 
away at the taken-for-granted foundations of film music grammar. What, with 
those older composers constrained
 by their times, was a one-off (or two-off) experiment is for Rahman the 
undiluted norm.
Does this mean, then, that the Opening-Interlude- Stanza format is heaving its 
last gasps? I don’t think so, for I have yet to come out from under the spell 
of Anal mele panithuli from Vaaranam Aayiram, Gautham’s last (in the sense of 
both previous and final) soundtrack with Harris Jayaraj. The value of a strong 
tune yoked to a sensitive singer and sympathetic orchestration is still 
priceless, and it’s still the primary reason many of us listen to music. But 
Rahman’s peerless talent for painting soundscapes (as opposed to crafting 
soundtracks) ensures that the opportunity for boredom is minimised. With tunes 
and arrangements conforming to no particular pattern, and with there being no 
scheduled returns to a preordained base camp before successive ascents or 
descents, even the underwhelming stretches skip by without tedium. And as 
Rahman himself proves with Hosanna (sung by Vijay Prakash, Suzanne D’Mello and 
Blaaze), the best of composers, can,
 at times, induce fatigue – by the third iteration of the Stanza, we’ve had 
enough. (A third Stanza, in general, is never really a good idea unless your 
name is MS Viswanathan, who’d stave off predictability by adorning one of the 
Stanzas with an entirely different tune, as with the exquisite Mana medai from 
Gnana Oli.) And yet, the reggae-spiked sprightliness of Hosanna sneaks under 
your skin. That’s where Rahman wins – love his songs or loathe them, there’s no 
questioning the spirit of restless creation contained in them.
Warm Regards
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~
Vinayak

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