Slumdog Millionaire Soundtrack Review- A.R. Rahman at his best
Category: music , Reviews , Soundtrack By Manu

http://tshirtjunkieindian.blogspot.com/2008/12/slumdog-millionaire-soundtrack-review.html


Slumdog Millionaire is the film critics are raving about these days. All the 
people whom I have talked described this movie as a must watch. The film is set 
to release in India on January next year. I can't wait for this movie to 
release. In the meanwhile the soundtrack by Indian Legend A.R. Rahman is 
released.

Nobody in the West knows about the musical genius of A.R. Rahman. Working in 
several of India's various state/language film industries, international cinema 
and theater, Rahman, in a career spanning over a decade, has sold more than one 
hundred million records of his film scores and soundtracks world-wide, and sold 
over two hundred million cassettes making him one of the world's top 25 
all-time top selling recording artists. His acclaimed music compositions have 
led TIME Magazine to declare him the "Mozart of Madras".

With his latest international venture "Slumdog Millionaire" A.R Rahman has once 
again proved his ability to produce tracks which will make you go "wow". Being 
an Indian, I have known about A.R Rahman all along and am well aware of the 
musical genius in him. But most of the Western world are unfamiliar with this 
gem of a talent. I hope this soundtrack will change that.

Rahman's compositions, most of them, have a peculiar character- they may not 
appeal to you when you hear it the first time, but it soon grows on you and 
make you realise the potential in the song. A biggest example of this is 
Slumdog Millionaire. When I first listened to it the only tracks that jumped 
out at me was "O..Saya" and "Mausam and Escape". But the second time i heard it 
I noticed a couple more tracks that are really good and by the time I finished 
listening to it the third time I fell in love with all the tracks barring a 
couple.

The Soundtrack starts with "O..Saya" which Rahman produced and sung in 
collaboration with the grammy nominated MIA (who by the way called Rahman the 
"Indian Timbaland"). Its a great fusion of Electronica, Hip Hop with traces of 
Bollywood that captures us right from the start. Rahman's unique voice and 
production is exquisitely complemented by M.I.A and what we get is a explosive 
track. This is followed up with an intense and ominous "Riot" in which A.R 
Rahman used african drums, electronics and small traces of vocals which are 
barely audible.

After "Riot", comes "Mausam and Escape"( weird title being Mausam means 
Climate), for which no amount of familiarity with Rahman's musical genius will 
prepare you. This track is absolutely other worldly. I almost have no words to 
describe the enormity of the track. In this racy track Rahman simply shows off 
as a producer. The tracks starts off serenely with Rashid Ali and Sanjay Joseph 
plucking at the guitar but at about 40 seconds into the track it shifts the 
gear to overdrive and takes off on a crescendo of ridiculously thrilling Sitar 
plucks by Asad. Rahman dexterously lets Asad take the lead and compliment him 
by playing magic with hisSynthesizer and introducing violins to create a 
dramatically thrilling and racy track which will you get high. I have already 
heard the track a million times and I still get high on it.



After M.I.A's Paper Planes, Rahman's remix of the same(both are decent tracks) 
and a very forgettable "Ringa Ringa"(may be its there to give the album an 
Indian feel which it does, but I found it a little jarring) comes the genre 
breaking "Liquid Dance". How would one classify a sound he has never heard 
before and may well never hear again? Rahman mixes classical Indian vocals from 
Palakkad Sriram, electronic Hip Hop beats and an orchestral feel to create 
another phenomenal track.

"Lathika's Theme" is a slow, romantic , and melodious score over which Suzanne 
hums along and gives the song a beautiful feel to it. One can almost feel the 
romance in the air as one listens to it. With the mood slowed down a bit Rahman 
jumps to another racy track "Millionaire" which feels pretty ordinary on this 
soundtrack which has rise to ridiculously high levels by this time.

"Gansgta Blues" is yet another track which exhibits Rahman's ability to compose 
tracks in any genre. With "Gangsta Blues" he brings out a track bordering on 
Reggae beats and Gangsta Rap featuring Blaaze and Tanvi Shah. We have a little 
Techno, some Hip Hop, a splash of Jazz, a hint of Reggae, and a shade of Rap 
all bundled into one amazing track like only Rahman can do it.

"Dreams on Fire" follows which is basically "Lathika's Theme" with Suzanne 
returning to give soulful vocals and take the track to another level. And to 
finish off the soundtrack in an upbeat note Rahman includes the massively 
entertaining "Jai Ho", which is the most Indian track in the soundtrack, 
barring the out of place composition by Shankar-Ehsan-Loy "Aaj ki Raat". The 
sheer energy levels on the soundtrack just jumps off the chart with this track. 
Rahman uses the energetic Sukhwinder Singh and breezy melodic riffs to bring 
and all out dance track.

My Verdict- As with most soundtracks, the music loses some impact without the 
images and sounds that accompany them on screen. I haven't seen the movie and 
love the tracks already. I can't imagine how I would feel listening to the 
tracks on the movie with the help of images. This is easily the best 
International work by Rahman. This will go down in the history as one of the 
greatest soundtracks ever made. If no other surprises comes up during the year, 
Slumdog Millionaire will pick up an Oscar for its soundtrack among many others. 
Rahman has many names- Mozart of Madras, Indian Timbaland, Musical Prophet- all 
of them agreeing on one thing- he is a musical genius who makes music on a 
level which is totally different from anyone else.

My Rating- 4.5/5

The Soundtrack is not released yet. It will be available on December 23, 2008 
on Amazon.
Be sure to get a copy of the album. I promise you will not regret it.
You can pre-order it here at Amazon

If you'd read the book(originally titled Q&A) by Vikas Swarup from which it is 
adapted before the release, you can get it here at Amazon

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