[arr] Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam - Song Review

2010-05-25 Thread $ Pavan Kumar $
http://movies.rediff.com/review/2010/may/25/south-review-tamil-ulaga-tamizh-semmozhi-maanadu.htm

Rahman's Tamizh Anthem is a pleasant experience
May 25, 2010 13:43 IST

Scholars and academicians are gearing up for the biggest academic event of the 
year, the World Classical Tamil Conference to be held in Coimbatore from June 
23 to 27.
In preparation, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi [ Images ] has already released 
the Conference's anthem titled Ulaga Tamizh Semmozhi Maanadu, tuned exclusively 
by A R Rahman [ Images ], and filmed by director of the moment, Gautam Vasudev 
Menon.
Sung by 30 different artists who represent the cream of Tamil industry's 
musical elite, the lyrics have been penned by Kalaignar Karunanidhi. Here's 
what the anthem has to offer:
With an enthusiastic crash begins the Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam anthem, 
starting out with the first Thamizh letter (the letter morphs from its 
earliest, centuries-old version to its present form), and the impressive words, 
Pirappokkum Ella Uyirkkum, sung by legend T M Soundarrajan after a flash of 
Thiruvalluvar's statue at Kanyakumari, eagerly picked up by A R Rahman himself, 
singing Yaadhum Oore, Yaavarum Kelir.
Other singers like Harini, Chinmayi and Karthik follow, singing the simple 
phrases that make up Thamizh's long literary lineage and even as Karthik's 
voice rises in an impressive crescendo, the instrumental background score takes 
over, and the song proper begins.
Montage shots of stone-etched Thamizh inscriptions flow, while Hariharan [ 
Images ], A R Rahman and Yuvan Shankar Raja croon the song, and then the entire 
team of songsters take up the refrain, Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiye … while 
the words glow in the background.
The beat thunders while it rises and ebbs across the musical plane. In the 
midst, another legend, P Susheela takes up the song, even as the Thamizh 
alphabet runs across the screen. Bharathanatyam dancers flit around while G V 
Prakash, Nithyashree Mahadevan and Sowmya show their vocal power, classical 
fashion.
Abruptly, the song changes courses, with strains of nadhaswaran, while Blaaze 
suddenly jumps into the fray with Thamizh rap, bizarrely beginning Kamba 
Nattazhwan … The words sound odd and forced, but after a while, the fusion 
actually begins to appeal to you, courtesy the rhythm. Dazzling Thamizh letters 
intriguingly emerge from boiling oil as murukkus, while ethnic singers take up 
the chorus.
From hereon, the jump from classical to rap occurs more frequently; the melody 
is unstructured, yet appealing. Thamizh's gradual ascension from stone temples 
to blackberrys is shown. Singers like Naresh Iyer sing in pop fashion on 
brightly-lout stages, while at the same time, poi kal kudhirai and karakattam 
dancers spin around in festivals; even Chinna Ponnu contributes.
The anthem, meanwhile, rises slowly note by note, closing with a grand 
crescendo amidst crashing beats, even as the chief minister sits at his desk, 
signing documents with a flourish.
The lyrics themselves are unstructured at best, and take some time getting used 
to but the meaning contained within the instrumental arrangement and varied 
vocals make it a very pleasant musical experience.
Praise for Thamizh is lavishly sung, even while exploring its development 
through the centuries, its ability to adapt and stay within the common man's 
grasp without dying out, and evolving into the digital age.
A R Rahman has gone with his favourite template, it seems but even when you can 
predict the rise and fall of notes, it's still very appealing for the swift 
shift in genres and style. The lyrics and picturization undoubtedly add to the 
allure.
Rediff Rating:


  

Re: [arr] Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam - Song Review

2010-05-25 Thread Uday Kiran
Now hearing bit by bit through this review!

On 25 May 2010 13:16, $ Pavan Kumar $ pawancum...@yahoo.com wrote:




 http://movies.rediff.com/review/2010/may/25/south-review-tamil-ulaga-tamizh-semmozhi-maanadu.htm

  Rahman's *Tamizh Anthem* is a pleasant experience
 May 25, 2010 13:43 IST

  Scholars and academicians are gearing up for the biggest academic event
 of the year, the World Classical Tamil Conference to be held in Coimbatore
 from June 23 to 27.

 In preparation, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=m+karunanidhi ]
 has already released the Conference's anthem titled *Ulaga Tamizh Semmozhi
 Maanadu*, tuned exclusively by A R Rahman [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=a+r+rahman ],
 and filmed by director of the moment, Gautam Vasudev Menon.

 Sung by 30 different artists who represent the cream of Tamil industry's
 musical elite, the lyrics have been penned by Kalaignar Karunanidhi. Here's
 what the anthem has to offer:

 With an enthusiastic crash begins the *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam* 
 anthem,
 starting out with the first Thamizh letter (the letter morphs from its
 earliest, centuries-old version to its present form), and the impressive
 words, *Pirappokkum Ella Uyirkkum*, sung by legend T M Soundarrajan
 after a flash of Thiruvalluvar's statue at Kanyakumari, eagerly picked up by
 A R Rahman himself, singing *Yaadhum Oore, Yaavarum Kelir*.

 Other singers like Harini, Chinmayi and Karthik follow, singing the simple
 phrases that make up Thamizh's long literary lineage and even as Karthik's
 voice rises in an impressive crescendo, the instrumental background score
 takes over, and the song proper begins.

 Montage shots of stone-etched Thamizh inscriptions flow, while Hariharan [
 Images http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=hariharan ], A R
 Rahman and Yuvan Shankar Raja croon the song, and then the entire team of
 songsters take up the refrain, *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiye* … while
 the words glow in the background.

 The beat thunders while it rises and ebbs across the musical plane. In the
 midst, another legend, P Susheela takes up the song, even as the Thamizh
 alphabet runs across the screen. Bharathanatyam dancers flit around while G
 V Prakash, Nithyashree Mahadevan and Sowmya show their vocal power,
 classical fashion.

 Abruptly, the song changes courses, with strains of nadhaswaran, while
 Blaaze suddenly jumps into the fray with Thamizh rap, bizarrely beginning 
 *Kamba Nattazhwan* … The words sound odd and forced, but after a while,
 the fusion actually begins to appeal to you, courtesy the rhythm. Dazzling
 Thamizh letters intriguingly emerge from boiling oil as *murukkus*, while
 ethnic singers take up the chorus.

 From hereon, the jump from classical to rap occurs more frequently; the
 melody is unstructured, yet appealing. Thamizh's gradual ascension from
 stone temples to blackberrys is shown. Singers like Naresh Iyer sing in pop
 fashion on brightly-lout stages, while at the same time, *poi kal kudhirai
 * and *karakattam* dancers spin around in festivals; even Chinna Ponnu
 contributes.

 The anthem, meanwhile, rises slowly note by note, closing with a grand
 crescendo amidst crashing beats, even as the chief minister sits at his
 desk, signing documents with a flourish.

 The lyrics themselves are unstructured at best, and take some time getting
 used to but the meaning contained within the instrumental arrangement and
 varied vocals make it a very pleasant musical experience.

 Praise for Thamizh is lavishly sung, even while exploring its development
 through the centuries, its ability to adapt and stay within the common man's
 grasp without dying out, and evolving into the digital age.

 A R Rahman has gone with his favourite template, it seems but even when you
 can predict the rise and fall of notes, it's still very appealing for the
 swift shift in genres and style. The lyrics and picturization undoubtedly
 add to the allure.

 *Rediff Rating:*

 *
 *

 *


 *


  




-- 
Regards,
Uday Kiran


Re: [arr] Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam - Song Review

2010-05-25 Thread Vinayakam Murugan
Love this

~
Abruptly, the song changes courses, with strains of nadhaswaran, while
Blaaze suddenly jumps into the fray with Thamizh rap, bizarrely
beginning *Kamba
Nattazhwan* … The words sound odd and forced, but after a while, the fusion
actually begins to appeal to you, courtesy the rhythm. Dazzling Thamizh
letters intriguingly emerge from boiling oil as *murukkus*, while ethnic
singers take up the chorus.
~


Warm Regards
~~~
Vinayak

http://www.flickr.com/photos/rightplacerighttime/


On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 2:46 PM, $ Pavan Kumar $ pawancum...@yahoo.comwrote:




 http://movies.rediff.com/review/2010/may/25/south-review-tamil-ulaga-tamizh-semmozhi-maanadu.htm

 Rahman's *Tamizh Anthem* is a pleasant experience
 May 25, 2010 13:43 IST

  Scholars and academicians are gearing up for the biggest academic event
 of the year, the World Classical Tamil Conference to be held in Coimbatore
 from June 23 to 27.

 In preparation, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=m+karunanidhi ]
 has already released the Conference's anthem titled *Ulaga Tamizh Semmozhi
 Maanadu*, tuned exclusively by A R Rahman [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=a+r+rahman ],
 and filmed by director of the moment, Gautam Vasudev Menon.

 Sung by 30 different artists who represent the cream of Tamil industry's
 musical elite, the lyrics have been penned by Kalaignar Karunanidhi. Here's
 what the anthem has to offer:

 With an enthusiastic crash begins the *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam* 
 anthem,
 starting out with the first Thamizh letter (the letter morphs from its
 earliest, centuries-old version to its present form), and the impressive
 words, *Pirappokkum Ella Uyirkkum*, sung by legend T M Soundarrajan
 after a flash of Thiruvalluvar's statue at Kanyakumari, eagerly picked up by
 A R Rahman himself, singing *Yaadhum Oore, Yaavarum Kelir*.

 Other singers like Harini, Chinmayi and Karthik follow, singing the simple
 phrases that make up Thamizh's long literary lineage and even as Karthik's
 voice rises in an impressive crescendo, the instrumental background score
 takes over, and the song proper begins.

 Montage shots of stone-etched Thamizh inscriptions flow, while Hariharan [
 Images http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=hariharan ], A R
 Rahman and Yuvan Shankar Raja croon the song, and then the entire team of
 songsters take up the refrain, *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiye* … while
 the words glow in the background.

 The beat thunders while it rises and ebbs across the musical plane. In the
 midst, another legend, P Susheela takes up the song, even as the Thamizh
 alphabet runs across the screen. Bharathanatyam dancers flit around while G
 V Prakash, Nithyashree Mahadevan and Sowmya show their vocal power,
 classical fashion.

 Abruptly, the song changes courses, with strains of nadhaswaran, while
 Blaaze suddenly jumps into the fray with Thamizh rap, bizarrely beginning 
 *Kamba Nattazhwan* … The words sound odd and forced, but after a while,
 the fusion actually begins to appeal to you, courtesy the rhythm. Dazzling
 Thamizh letters intriguingly emerge from boiling oil as *murukkus*, while
 ethnic singers take up the chorus.

 From hereon, the jump from classical to rap occurs more frequently; the
 melody is unstructured, yet appealing. Thamizh's gradual ascension from
 stone temples to blackberrys is shown. Singers like Naresh Iyer sing in pop
 fashion on brightly-lout stages, while at the same time, *poi kal kudhirai
 * and *karakattam* dancers spin around in festivals; even Chinna Ponnu
 contributes.

 The anthem, meanwhile, rises slowly note by note, closing with a grand
 crescendo amidst crashing beats, even as the chief minister sits at his
 desk, signing documents with a flourish.

 The lyrics themselves are unstructured at best, and take some time getting
 used to but the meaning contained within the instrumental arrangement and
 varied vocals make it a very pleasant musical experience.

 Praise for Thamizh is lavishly sung, even while exploring its development
 through the centuries, its ability to adapt and stay within the common man's
 grasp without dying out, and evolving into the digital age.

 A R Rahman has gone with his favourite template, it seems but even when you
 can predict the rise and fall of notes, it's still very appealing for the
 swift shift in genres and style. The lyrics and picturization undoubtedly
 add to the allure.

 *Rediff Rating:*

 *
 *

 *


 *

  



Re: [arr] Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam - Song Review

2010-05-25 Thread Thulasi Ram
i starting to tune into this song. after 6 hearings, i'm pleased with this
song and the way it has turned out. nathaswaram bit before blaze's rap is
divine.

On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 10:16 AM, $ Pavan Kumar $ pawancum...@yahoo.comwrote:




 http://movies.rediff.com/review/2010/may/25/south-review-tamil-ulaga-tamizh-semmozhi-maanadu.htm

 Rahman's *Tamizh Anthem* is a pleasant experience
 May 25, 2010 13:43 IST

  Scholars and academicians are gearing up for the biggest academic event
 of the year, the World Classical Tamil Conference to be held in Coimbatore
 from June 23 to 27.

 In preparation, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=m+karunanidhi ]
 has already released the Conference's anthem titled *Ulaga Tamizh Semmozhi
 Maanadu*, tuned exclusively by A R Rahman [ 
 Imageshttp://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=a+r+rahman ],
 and filmed by director of the moment, Gautam Vasudev Menon.

 Sung by 30 different artists who represent the cream of Tamil industry's
 musical elite, the lyrics have been penned by Kalaignar Karunanidhi. Here's
 what the anthem has to offer:

 With an enthusiastic crash begins the *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam* 
 anthem,
 starting out with the first Thamizh letter (the letter morphs from its
 earliest, centuries-old version to its present form), and the impressive
 words, *Pirappokkum Ella Uyirkkum*, sung by legend T M Soundarrajan
 after a flash of Thiruvalluvar's statue at Kanyakumari, eagerly picked up by
 A R Rahman himself, singing *Yaadhum Oore, Yaavarum Kelir*.

 Other singers like Harini, Chinmayi and Karthik follow, singing the simple
 phrases that make up Thamizh's long literary lineage and even as Karthik's
 voice rises in an impressive crescendo, the instrumental background score
 takes over, and the song proper begins.

 Montage shots of stone-etched Thamizh inscriptions flow, while Hariharan [
 Images http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=hariharan ], A R
 Rahman and Yuvan Shankar Raja croon the song, and then the entire team of
 songsters take up the refrain, *Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiye* … while
 the words glow in the background.

 The beat thunders while it rises and ebbs across the musical plane. In the
 midst, another legend, P Susheela takes up the song, even as the Thamizh
 alphabet runs across the screen. Bharathanatyam dancers flit around while G
 V Prakash, Nithyashree Mahadevan and Sowmya show their vocal power,
 classical fashion.

 Abruptly, the song changes courses, with strains of nadhaswaran, while
 Blaaze suddenly jumps into the fray with Thamizh rap, bizarrely beginning 
 *Kamba Nattazhwan* … The words sound odd and forced, but after a while,
 the fusion actually begins to appeal to you, courtesy the rhythm. Dazzling
 Thamizh letters intriguingly emerge from boiling oil as *murukkus*, while
 ethnic singers take up the chorus.

 From hereon, the jump from classical to rap occurs more frequently; the
 melody is unstructured, yet appealing. Thamizh's gradual ascension from
 stone temples to blackberrys is shown. Singers like Naresh Iyer sing in pop
 fashion on brightly-lout stages, while at the same time, *poi kal kudhirai
 * and *karakattam* dancers spin around in festivals; even Chinna Ponnu
 contributes.

 The anthem, meanwhile, rises slowly note by note, closing with a grand
 crescendo amidst crashing beats, even as the chief minister sits at his
 desk, signing documents with a flourish.

 The lyrics themselves are unstructured at best, and take some time getting
 used to but the meaning contained within the instrumental arrangement and
 varied vocals make it a very pleasant musical experience.

 Praise for Thamizh is lavishly sung, even while exploring its development
 through the centuries, its ability to adapt and stay within the common man's
 grasp without dying out, and evolving into the digital age.

 A R Rahman has gone with his favourite template, it seems but even when you
 can predict the rise and fall of notes, it's still very appealing for the
 swift shift in genres and style. The lyrics and picturization undoubtedly
 add to the allure.

 *Rediff Rating:*

 *
 *

 **
 *


 *