Re: [arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

2010-01-14 Thread kishore parayath
Yes.. Chord should charge for his reviews..Also, he should sue the websites,
ripping his reviews without permission!


Re: [arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

2010-01-14 Thread Roshan
ichord should start blogging :) or has he already ?

On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 1:46 PM, kishore parayath 
kishore.paray...@gmail.com wrote:



 Yes.. Chord should charge for his reviews..Also, he should sue the
 websites, ripping his reviews without permission!
  




-- 
---
http://ramblingsoul.com
http://2ic.in


[arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

2010-01-13 Thread $ Pavan Kumar $
http://movies.rediff.com/report/2010/jan/13/south-tamil-music-review-vinnaithaandi-varuvaaya.htm

No other album has
raised such high expectations or created quite this much frenzy among
eager fans like Escape Artists' Motion Pictures' Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya (Will 
You Cross the Skies for Me?). 
The Tamil movie has everything going for it namely Gautam Menon as its 
director, Academy Award winner A R Rahman  [ Images ] as its composer, and 
lyricists like Thamarai, Kalyani Menon and Kaithapram.
With Simbhu and Trisha  [ Images ] as the lead pair, VTV has been making 
headlines ever since it was launched as a touching love story with music set to 
blitzkrieg everyone's heart. 
Add to that is the fact this is the
composer's return to Tamil after his Oscar success. So, does the
collection live up to the hype? Let's find out.
A guitar strums lazily, reminding you
very faintly of the old Wild West, and then morphs into something that
might be an ancient native Indian chant -- that's Aaromale, sung by Alphonse. 
The lyrics in Malayalam seem to form a
neat accompaniment to the general structure of the song. There's a
soothing, gentle feel to the number, an experience that lets you sink
into it. The song proper starts some time later, with a faint strain of
violins somewhere far off. Even as Alphonse's voice rises to higher
octaves, the refrain hugs the original depths, supplying a many-layered
experience. An intense number, this. 
You sit blinking when you listen to Anbil Avan as you're transported straight 
to a church choir until you realize that
the song, rendered by Devan Ekambaram and Chinmayi, is actually a
conglomerate that describes two kinds of religious weddings. 
The lyrics are all about eternal
bonding, unending love and essentially the basics of wedding vows. It's
got a peppy feel, full of happy anticipation, an eagerness to seek out
the next heady experience, supplemented by synthesized instrumental
arrangements. It seems a little like the Ibiza number -- but you're too carried 
away by its zeal to notice that until the end.
On a half romantic, half mournful note, with a flute interlude begins possibly 
the most publicized number of the album: Hosanna by Blaaze, Vijay Prakash and 
Suzanne. 
The musical arrangement somehow takes you right back to the early days of ARR 
until you realize which number the refrain, Hosanna, bears a striking 
resemblance to: Only Time, by Enya. 
The rap segment closely follows the tune
as well; the lyrics celebrate the lover pining away for his beloved
until his world shrinks to just her. There's no denying that it's
romantic what with church bells pealing, complicated violin
arrangements and a chorus which all reach a crescendo in the finale.
It's a pleasant listen but still seems inspired. 
The violin rendition in the first few seconds of Kannukkul Kannai is enticing 
and the number itself, rendered by Naresh Iyer in a fast-
and almost breathless manner that aims to bring the heady feeling of
being in love. 
Aside from the violin segment, though,
you feel like this is a musical arrangement you've heard often in
Rahman's earlier albums, and faithfully mimicked by others following in
his footsteps. In terms of ARR numbers, it's pretty run-of-the-mill. 
Shreya Goshal's melodious voice begins Mannippaya with anguish, and it morphs 
gradually into a more gentle melody.
Remorse and forgiveness are the prevalent themes of this number, and
the soothing tones suit the sentiment, with ARR himself providing the
accompaniment. 
Appealing, yes, but the lyrics have
precedence in this song and the tune seems to have been composed to
accommodate it. Even the flute segment reminds you of the signature
tune of Titanic  [ Images ]. The kural couplets that suddenly appear take you 
by surprise. They're a pleasant listen -- and then it's back to the meandering 
tune. 
Kalyani Menon and Benny Dhayal begin Omanappenne,
which seems like a fusion between western and classical music with a
violin suddenly launching into a classical melody at certain points. 
And that's the essence of the whole song: a gentle composition which attempts 
to crossover from one genre to another, while a nadaswaram makes a not 
unwelcome appearance to add a different flavour to the
proceedings. Having said that, we've heard many such numbers from ARR
himself, and with more variation. 
Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya,
accompanied by guitar strings and rendered by Karthik, comes in a
different fashion altogether. It's slow, introspective, and the general
tone doesn't seem to care much whether it hits the highs and lows of
notes in an approved manner, which is actually a plus. 
The tune moves from contemplative to
contentment to interrogative, and that seems to be the essence of the
number itself: all the different emotions encompassed in one question. 
It isn't possible to toss an opinion of
an A R Rahman album based on just one listen. This composer has a
talent for coming up with numbers that grow on you. 
Lyricist 

Re: [arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

2010-01-13 Thread kishore parayath
To be frank above REVIEW, is not at all, a good one! Very unprofessional..
Firstly, he never goes in the order of the Original tracklist.. Secondly, he
wraps up the description of AROMALE, with a very vague description.

Also... I didnt find anything inspired from that ENYA track... The general
GENRE is like this, and many songs use the same kinds of progression, and
layered synthpads!

And regarding the TITANIC signature coming in shades in MANNIPAAYA, I felt
it right from the TIME I heard the AMAZON PROMO... But is that
INTENTIONAL
It is STILL a beautiful track, eventhough the melody loses connection
somewhere in the middle. .the tune running slightly directionless..

Kannukkul Kannai, reminds you of the RACY ARR tracks of the 90's and early
2000's. The composition is on the lines of Shakalaka Baby and Yakai Thiri /
Fanaa (aayutha Ezhuthu/Yuva).
Anbil avan too being of  similar kind, but with surprising gospel
interludes, making a swift cameo.

ARR decides to keep Omana Penne, simple and predictable, while he drives our
emotions through those scintillating violin accompaniments and Nadaswaram
interludes. I initially suspected whether ARR used the continuum for the
Nadaswaram bit, but the tracklist revealed that it had been recorded LIVE.

Hossaana certainly is a NEW BREED for lovestories and the concept would
certainly be adopted by other Kollywood composers, in their upcoming
soundtracks! I would say, ARR worked less while creating the scratch of the
song. But the mesmerising vocals, heavenly flow of synthpads and lavishly
arranged chord progressions amplify the impact of the song! And ofcourse,
those fantastic flue interludes add to the allure. Overall, this is a
clever, yet classy work from ARR.

The title song, Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya, is soft, subtle, yet, a melodious
treat, which would take its time to hold your nerves.

Aromalae, is probably the most experimental track, that a Gautham Menon film
ever had. The innovative guitar design reminds you, of the Golden Era of
bands like 'The Doors' and 'Pink Floyd'. Again, the brilliance of ARR here,
there are not more than 4 chords in this song!!!
The tune is a brilliantly reworked piece, of  'Ottam Thullal' Chants of
Kerala.

Overall, Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya, is a completely different experience, as
ARR delivers the unexpected. Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya, has the most
innovative music design amongst all Gautham menon films!


RE: [arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

2010-01-13 Thread wiredbeats .
I still like ichord's review the bestest.

how does hosana feel inspired by enya's only time i have no clue. And wheres 
the bit of sounding like titantic?

Ancient indian chant in aromale..ha ha. Nice fun review.

Ichord sir, now please start charging for your reviews. 

sent thru mobile device
-Original Message-
From: $ Pavan Kumar $
Sent:  13/01/2010 12:50:15 pm
Subject:  [arr] Rediff reviews VTV music - Vintage Rahman

http://movies.rediff.com/report/2010/jan/13/south-tamil-music-review-vinnaithaandi-varuvaaya.htm

No other album has
raised such high expectations or created quite this much frenzy among
eager fans like Escape Artists' Motion Pictures' Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya (Will 
You Cross the Skies for Me?). 
The Tamil movie has everything going for it namely Gautam Menon as its 
director, Academy Award winner A R Rahman  [ Images ] as its composer, and 
lyricists like Thamarai, Kalyani Menon and Kaithapram.
With Simbhu and Trisha  [ Images ] as the lead pair, VTV has been making 
headlines ever since it was launched as a touching love story with music set to 
blitzkrieg everyone's heart. 
Add to that is the fact this is the
composer's return to Tamil after his Oscar success. So, does the
collection live up to the hype? Let's find out.
A guitar strums lazily, reminding you
very faintly of the old Wild West, and then morphs into something that
might be an ancient native Indian chant -- that's Aaromale, sung by Alphonse. 
The lyrics in Malayalam seem to form a
neat accompaniment to the general structure of the song. There's a
soothing, gentle feel to the number, an experience that lets you sink
into it. The song proper starts some time later, with a faint strain of
violins somewhere far off. Even as Alphonse's voice rises to higher
octaves, the refrain hugs the original depths, supplying a many-layered
experience. An intense number, this. 
You sit blinking when you listen to Anbil Avan as you're transported straight 
to a church choir until you realize that
the song, rendered by Devan Ekambaram and Chinmayi, is actually a
conglomerate that describes two kinds of religious weddings. 
The lyrics are all about eternal
bonding, unending love and essentially the basics of wedding vows. It's
got a peppy feel, full of happy anticipation, an eagerness to seek out
the next heady experience, supplemented by synthesized instrumental
arrangements. It seems a little like the Ibiza number -- but you're too carried 
away by its zeal to notice that until the end.
On a half romantic, half mournful note, with a flute interlude begins possibly 
the most publicized number of the album: Hosanna by Blaaze, Vijay Prakash and 
Suzanne. 
The musical arrangement somehow takes you right back to the early days of ARR 
until you realize which number the refrain, Hosanna, bears a striking 
resemblance to: Only Time, by Enya. 
The rap segment closely follows the tune
as well; the lyrics celebrate the lover pining away for his beloved
until his world shrinks to just her. There's no denying that it's
romantic what with church bells pealing, complicated violin
arrangements and a chorus which all reach a crescendo in the finale.
It's a pleasant listen but still seems inspired. 
The violin rendition in the first few seconds of Kannukkul Kannai is enticing 
and the number itself, rendered by Naresh Iyer in a fast-
and almost breathless manner that aims to bring the heady feeling of
being in love. 
Aside from the violin segment, though,
you feel like this is a musical arrangement you've heard often in
Rahman's earlier albums, and faithfully mimicked by others following in
his footsteps. In terms of ARR numbers, it's pretty run-of-the-mill. 
Shreya Goshal's melodious voice begins Mannippaya with anguish, and it morphs 
gradually into a more gentle melody.
Remorse and forgiveness are the prevalent themes of this number, and
the soothing tones suit the sentiment, with ARR himself providing the
accompaniment. 
Appealing, yes, but the lyrics have
precedence in this song and the tune seems to have been composed to
accommodate it. Even the flute segment reminds you of the signature
tune of Titanic  [ Images ]. The kural couplets that suddenly appear take you 
by surprise. They're a pleasant listen -- and then it's back to the meandering 
tune. 
Kalyani Menon and Benny Dhayal begin Omanappenne,
which seems like a fusion between western and classical music with a
violin suddenly launching into a classical melody at certain points. 
And that's the essence of the whole song: a gentle composition which attempts 
to crossover from one genre to another, while a nadaswaram makes a not 
unwelcome appearance to add a different flavour to the
proceedings. Having said that, we've heard many such numbers from ARR
himself, and with more variation. 
Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya,
accompanied by guitar strings and rendered by Karthik, comes in a
different fashion altogether. It's slow, introspective, and the general
tone doesn't seem to care much whether