"Don't mind me. I am frank. I still feel Rahman's best is Dil Se Re from Dil
Se. He is yet to repeat that vision."
AGREED :D

On Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 8:53 PM, wiredbeats <wiredbe...@yahoo.co.in> wrote:

>
>
> Hello all,
>
> I have not written a review of any album so far in this group in the last 8
> odd years of being around. I think its been that long...what with so many
> good reviewers around such as Chord etc, we are well balanced.
>
> I just thought this time i would attempt to sort of share some notes on
> enthiran.
>
> Enthiran did not require any brilliance in actual composition, the whole
> sound track needed lot of energy and some out of the world programming and
> mixing expertise. The concept of the sound track of enthiran suits all
> gizmos and toys that today almost all good composers have or can gain access
> to. It is the balance of what to use, how much to use to strike a trade-off
> between noise and music. This trade-off is seen in its absolute best in the
> first track of the CD.
>
> I am great fan of electronica -  house, techno, beach house,down tempo and
> lounge music produced by lables such as Ministry of sound, Hed Kandi and few
> select DJ/programmers such as Armin Van Burren, Ferry Corsten, ATB, Moby to
> name a few. What these guys ensure is that the overall feel of the song, the
> production values are so damn rich that you feel that extra cash that you
> spend on your expensive CD system is well spent. They many not always
> produce melody, but the rhythm, the bass, the ambient pads, synths used are
> chosen and placed with such perfection that a rather simple 4x4 beat track
> sounds awesome. Rahman has a team that achieves and exceeds the standards
> set by such international artists. However, in the context of film songs
> such brilliance are often interrupted by the demands of the song,situation
> and directors brief. And i think striking a balance is very tough given so
> many strings pulling. If you remove the strings, Rahman's music becomes more
> free flowing and thats why Vande Mataram and his latest god level tracks in
> Nokia Connections album are talked about.
>
> Now, if you listen to puthiya manitha, the first track in enthiran disc -
>  the samples used, the structuring of the song, the reverb and the overall
> usage of the stereo soundscape has come out so well that it is an absolute
> satisfaction. The dept of the kick (beat), the open and closed HiHats, the
> rising and falling synths are right there where the best of the music
> producers operate. I mean when  i heard it for the first time and after the
> Khatija's lines are over i felt ..It would be great if he introduces a layer
> of soft kicks with prominent highs and sort of make the track flow into the
> mainline. And it happened and happened so well. This is strikingly
> brilliant. It feels rich.
>
> Same is the case with Khilimanjaro track. The taiko drums sink deep and
> uses all the stereo landscape such an instrument needs. Taiko drums have a
> very loud character to it. Once you introduce it in a song, you must be
> careful not to under utilise it because energy levels in the song will drop
> so badly that you would start to loose interest. Over usage would be very
> irritating. Khilimanjaro is a fairly simple track and has a of space to
> breath. This makes it very catchy and to top it, the production values are
> awesome.
>
> The problem comes in the other track - Irumbile oru idhayam. This is a very
> sad and average track. It seems to be put in a hurry. Very ordinary. When i
> heard it first i felt the track is going to take off in an another level
> when Kash n krisshy start their lines, those vocals sounded so classy, so
> global and so trance. But then the song remained the same with some loose
> lyrics. Not done, this is the weakest track.
>
> Infact, Trance has never been Rahman's forte. That track - Kellamal Kayile
> from Azhagiya Tamil Magan was very sad too. It had a template beat and fell
> flat in the first 60 second. Infact, i don't like Fanaa from Yuva either.
> Its very jarring. Going by the standard set in Puthiya manitha, irumbile oru
> idhyam should have sounded something like 9PM by ATB or check out Ferry
> corsten's latest release called Twice in a Blue moon. I am comparing for a
> reason....Rahman need not produce flat tracks like this.
>
> Chitti Dance showcase is playing with toys and super interesting and fun to
> listen to.Perhaps even better fun to watch the video. But thats it.
>
> Rest of the tracks are ok. Good, for a change Yogi B has been used instead
> of Blaaze. He is good, but Yogi B gives a good break from Blaaze.
>
> However, what is satisfing with Enthiran is it 'sounds good' and achives
> its purpose. There is no great melody, just the overall feel of the disc is
> very positive and one does not go through dips and rises.
>
> *More than Rahman, i congratulate K.J. Singh and Deepak P.A for setting a
> standard of production values. *We have come a long way from the trash
> sounding BLUE to some awesome sounding VTV, Puli and Enthiran. Skipping
> Raavan(an)...i don't know whats wrong what that album...i have forgotten it!
>
> And belive me guys when i say this...Enthiran NEEDS and CD. You loose the
> maximum when you convert in MP3. The loss is noticably maximum in this CD
> especially...buy, beg,borrow or steal the disc. But get it..
>
> Don't mind me. I am frank. I still feel Rahman's best is Dil Se Re from Dil
> Se. He is yet to repeat that vision.
>
> regards
>
> wb
>
>
> Remixes I Originals I Opinions at  http://www.wiredbeats.com 
> <http://www.wiredbeats.com/>
>
>
>
>  
>

Reply via email to