Re: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back

2009-01-21 Thread mb4zap®
Excellent expression... and I could relate myself so much to it that i sort of 
started visualized everything written here with my past experiences... first 
love with roja at around 10-11 years of age... my music shelf once only filled 
with ARR albums... my Sony player.. growing up with rahman and going through 
same emotions... same highs and lows with rahman and his music...

wow...!



--- On Wed, 1/21/09, Vithur  wrote:
From: Vithur 
Subject: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, January 21, 2009, 10:23 AM













Its a long one, I must warn!

It was love at first beat on a sultry afternoon in Trivandrum. I was ten and 
training for a cultural fest appa's office organized for the employees' 
families annually. We were a group of unruly kids, with two left feet, shaking 
our booties to 'chikubuku rail eh'; we were literally marring any attempts the 
racy number and a sexier Gautami had stirred in the youth that summer. For us 
it meant aping prabhu deva, yelling the lyrics as we disco-ed and understanding 
a phenomenon that would grow faster than we did – A R Rahman.


Roja was my first tamil movie in a theatre and it was not until years later 
that I realized the essence of the movie and its lovely direction. To me, it 
was my first audio cassette and the treasure of songs it contained. I clearly 
remember getting Goosebumps listening to 'tamizha tamizha' and the kindle of 
patriotism that the music created back then. I had clearly turned a fan and 
Rahman was too good to be true.


The elderly were quick to counter the Rahman fever shunning him as another 
passing cloud of different music genre. Every time, I'd hear someone say that, 
my heart would sink and I would secretly wish Rahman would never falter; he 
would never let us down. And I had been right. The little shelf beside my study 
table grew consistently with cassettes rendered by the maestro, songs I would 
listen to until I'd know every word by heart and every tune like a rhyme. This 
had included some coldly received and quick to vanish albums like super police, 
one 2 ka four, Udaya and Gangmaster; I was unmoved. His music was one that grew 
on you.


But, then he would always come back and sweep you off yet again; He would 
render heart wrenching, foot tapping and mind blowing music; Indra, 
Bombay,Duet, Rangeela, Kadal Desam, Kadhalan, Indian, padayappa, Jeans, 
Sapney.. It was the era he had been unstoppable. It was the time when teasers 
on TV literally were teasers and I would have to wait until the cassette became 
available at the then huge store 'sangeet sagar' in the center of a busy 
secundarabad. I would impatiently wait for appa to return from work with the 
new cassette and finish up my exams, so that I could play the songs on my 
little sony player in the labyrinth of my room. It was a time of bliss and an 
extended love affair with the music and the maker of it.


By the time, I had submitted myself to wonders like alaipayuthe, Lagaan, 
Boys,yuva, taal.. he had continued to amaze. But I had grown over childish 
love. I was judgmental. I would pick tunes that sounded like old numbers. I had 
found other quarters to share the warmth. A shelf that only held Rahman's 
collections now harbored others. There were many making music in his adopted 
style and may be even catching up. Yet Rahman sold; but now he sold as the 
brand ambassador, of (a)typical styles, consistent deliverance and artful 
recycling; Baba, Boys, New, kisna, Meenaksi, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Varalaru, 
kadal virus.


He did win me over many times; But now I would be hooked to certain songs in 
the album; I had lost patience to let the whole thing grow on me phase. Our 
relationship was stale now. I knew how much to love and how much to let go. I 
was almost beginning to accept that he was as human as us all. He had made some 
noise with Rang De basanti, ATM, shivaji. It was now all about, listening to 
most of the album and letting go of not even worth 'grow-able' on you ones like 
the 'uru koodai sunlight' or some of the extra saccharine ones of Jodha Akbar. 


Amidst this sea of transformation, I had never given up. Not once. I would 
always ensure, I do a run of the songs and a second time and then pick the 
best. I'd say its Rahman after all. When Slumdog millionare had come by, I 
loved it. I knew Rahman has done better, but this was totally worth the 
recognition he got now; for all these years of hard work And when the golden 
globes were bestowed upon this modest shy person, I could not have been 
happier; for he deserved every bit of it.


But last week, a vintage Rahman was back; the one who had swooned Roja and 
Bombay into us. He had struck a heavy chord with Delhi6. Every song a true 
love, emanating innovation and variety, I sure turned into the ten year old 
again. I felt he had his heart and mind at the same place when he made this 
music. My cousin remarked that the album was her s

Re: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back

2009-01-21 Thread naushad ali.b ali
i could relate to every word of it too.
my status update on FaceBook reads

Naushad feels that 6.50 min of Rehan Tu is t short and is gonna request ARR 
to do a 20 min version for people going mad like me as a therapeutic dosage"

i have not felt this capture in a long time - i always maintained Roja was his 
best ever album coz it just was undoubtedly MindBoggling - now after so many 
years a vintage ARR is coming back at me in full gale.

He was the inspiration for me like many other to become a musician and he is 
the inspiration for sutained interest to do better.

i agree - SDM is NOT arr's best ablum - coz we have heard him do better stuff 
even way back in Bombay and Alaipayuthae (Mani rathman get the best out of him 
i think) but the GoldGlobe is a fitting award coz the WEST is just waking up to 
the phenomenon ARR whom we behold and cherish.

We love u ARR - really do.

nash
prana the band





From: Neetika Raina 
To: arr YG 
Sent: Wednesday, 21 January, 2009 10:04:26 AM
Subject: RE: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back


Awesome writeup!
I could relate myself to most of it.
Thanks for sharing!
 
~love music love life
  Neetika raina




 

To: arrahmanfans@ yahoogroups. com
From: vith...@gmail. com
Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2009 09:53:39 +0530
Subject: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back



Its a long one, I must warn!

It was love at first beat on a sultry afternoon in Trivandrum. I was ten and 
training for a cultural fest appa's office organized for the employees' 
families annually. We were a group of unruly kids, with two left feet, shaking 
our booties to 'chikubuku rail eh'; we were literally marring any attempts the 
racy number and a sexier Gautami had stirred in the youth that summer. For us 
it meant aping prabhu deva, yelling the lyrics as we disco-ed and understanding 
a phenomenon that would grow faster than we did – A R Rahman.

Roja was my first tamil movie in a theatre and it was not until years later 
that I realized the essence of the movie and its lovely direction. To me, it 
was my first audio cassette and the treasure of songs it contained. I clearly 
remember getting Goosebumps listening to 'tamizha tamizha' and the kindle of 
patriotism that the music created back then. I had clearly turned a fan and 
Rahman was too good to be true.

The elderly were quick to counter the Rahman fever shunning him as another 
passing cloud of different music genre. Every time, I'd hear someone say that, 
my heart would sink and I would secretly wish Rahman would never falter; he 
would never let us down. And I had been right. The little shelf beside my study 
table grew consistently with cassettes rendered by the maestro, songs I would 
listen to until I'd know every word by heart and every tune like a rhyme. This 
had included some coldly received and quick to vanish albums like super police, 
one 2 ka four, Udaya and Gangmaster; I was unmoved. His music was one that grew 
on you.

But, then he would always come back and sweep you off yet again; He would 
render heart wrenching, foot tapping and mind blowing music; Indra, 
Bombay,Duet, Rangeela, Kadal Desam, Kadhalan, Indian, padayappa, Jeans, 
Sapney.. It was the era he had been unstoppable. It was the time when teasers 
on TV literally were teasers and I would have to wait until the cassette became 
available at the then huge store 'sangeet sagar' in the center of a busy 
secundarabad. I would impatiently wait for appa to return from work with the 
new cassette and finish up my exams, so that I could play the songs on my 
little sony player in the labyrinth of my room. It was a time of bliss and an 
extended love affair with the music and the maker of it.

By the time, I had submitted myself to wonders like alaipayuthe, Lagaan, 
Boys,yuva, taal.. he had continued to amaze. But I had grown over childish 
love. I was judgmental.. I would pick tunes that sounded like old numbers. I 
had found other quarters to share the warmth. A shelf that only held Rahman's 
collections now harbored others. There were many making music in his adopted 
style and may be even catching up. Yet Rahman sold; but now he sold as the 
brand ambassador, of (a)typical styles, consistent deliverance and artful 
recycling; Baba, Boys, New, kisna, Meenaksi, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Varalaru, 
kadal virus.

He did win me over many times; But now I would be hooked to certain songs in 
the album; I had lost patience to let the whole thing grow on me phase.. Our 
relationship was stale now. I knew how much to love and how much to let go. I 
was almost beginning to accept that he was as human as us all. He had made some 
noise with Rang De basanti, ATM, shivaji. It was now all about, listening to 
most of the album and letting go of not even worth 'grow-able' on you ones like 
the 'uru koodai sunlight' or some of the extra saccharine ones of Jodh

Re: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back

2009-01-21 Thread jamshid TC
Nice read ,Vithur. Good pick.
 
-Jamshid

--- On Tue, 1/20/09, Vithur  wrote:

From: Vithur 
Subject: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 8:23 PM









Its a long one, I must warn!

It was love at first beat on a sultry afternoon in Trivandrum. I was ten and 
training for a cultural fest appa's office organized for the employees' 
families annually. We were a group of unruly kids, with two left feet, shaking 
our booties to 'chikubuku rail eh'; we were literally marring any attempts the 
racy number and a sexier Gautami had stirred in the youth that summer. For us 
it meant aping prabhu deva, yelling the lyrics as we disco-ed and understanding 
a phenomenon that would grow faster than we did – A R Rahman.

Roja was my first tamil movie in a theatre and it was not until years later 
that I realized the essence of the movie and its lovely direction. To me, it 
was my first audio cassette and the treasure of songs it contained. I clearly 
remember getting Goosebumps listening to 'tamizha tamizha' and the kindle of 
patriotism that the music created back then. I had clearly turned a fan and 
Rahman was too good to be true.

The elderly were quick to counter the Rahman fever shunning him as another 
passing cloud of different music genre. Every time, I'd hear someone say that, 
my heart would sink and I would secretly wish Rahman would never falter; he 
would never let us down. And I had been right. The little shelf beside my study 
table grew consistently with cassettes rendered by the maestro, songs I would 
listen to until I'd know every word by heart and every tune like a rhyme. This 
had included some coldly received and quick to vanish albums like super police, 
one 2 ka four, Udaya and Gangmaster; I was unmoved. His music was one that grew 
on you.

But, then he would always come back and sweep you off yet again; He would 
render heart wrenching, foot tapping and mind blowing music; Indra, 
Bombay,Duet, Rangeela, Kadal Desam, Kadhalan, Indian, padayappa, Jeans, 
Sapney.. It was the era he had been unstoppable. It was the time when teasers 
on TV literally were teasers and I would have to wait until the cassette became 
available at the then huge store 'sangeet sagar' in the center of a busy 
secundarabad. I would impatiently wait for appa to return from work with the 
new cassette and finish up my exams, so that I could play the songs on my 
little sony player in the labyrinth of my room. It was a time of bliss and an 
extended love affair with the music and the maker of it.

By the time, I had submitted myself to wonders like alaipayuthe, Lagaan, 
Boys,yuva, taal.. he had continued to amaze. But I had grown over childish 
love. I was judgmental. I would pick tunes that sounded like old numbers. I had 
found other quarters to share the warmth. A shelf that only held Rahman's 
collections now harbored others. There were many making music in his adopted 
style and may be even catching up. Yet Rahman sold; but now he sold as the 
brand ambassador, of (a)typical styles, consistent deliverance and artful 
recycling; Baba, Boys, New, kisna, Meenaksi, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Varalaru, 
kadal virus.

He did win me over many times; But now I would be hooked to certain songs in 
the album; I had lost patience to let the whole thing grow on me phase. Our 
relationship was stale now. I knew how much to love and how much to let go. I 
was almost beginning to accept that he was as human as us all. He had made some 
noise with Rang De basanti, ATM, shivaji. It was now all about, listening to 
most of the album and letting go of not even worth 'grow-able' on you ones like 
the 'uru koodai sunlight' or some of the extra saccharine ones of Jodha Akbar. 

Amidst this sea of transformation, I had never given up. Not once. I would 
always ensure, I do a run of the songs and a second time and then pick the 
best. I'd say its Rahman after all. When Slumdog millionare had come by, I 
loved it. I knew Rahman has done better, but this was totally worth the 
recognition he got now; for all these years of hard work And when the golden 
globes were bestowed upon this modest shy person, I could not have been 
happier; for he deserved every bit of it.

But last week, a vintage Rahman was back; the one who had swooned Roja and 
Bombay into us. He had struck a heavy chord with Delhi6. Every song a true 
love, emanating innovation and variety, I sure turned into the ten year old 
again. I felt he had his heart and mind at the same place when he made this 
music. My cousin remarked that the album was her suprabatam these days. It only 
made me smile to wonder how much ARR had turned into a household name and we 
didn't even realize it.

I cannot say Rahman is timeless or applaud him as the Mozart. For, I am just 
the addict, who has been picking up pieces of the aftershocks he leaves behind.






inked by Divya Das   http://divyadurgada s.blogspot. com/2009/ 01/musically- 
yours

RE: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back

2009-01-20 Thread Neetika Raina

Awesome writeup!
I could relate myself to most of it.
Thanks for sharing!
 
~love music love life
  Neetika raina




To: arrahmanf...@yahoogroups.comfrom: vith...@gmail.comdate: Wed, 21 Jan 2009 
09:53:39 +0530Subject: [arr] Vintage Rahman was back






Its a long one, I must warn!It was love at first beat on a sultry afternoon in 
Trivandrum. I was ten and training for a cultural fest appa's office organized 
for the employees' families annually. We were a group of unruly kids, with two 
left feet, shaking our booties to 'chikubuku rail eh'; we were literally 
marring any attempts the racy number and a sexier Gautami had stirred in the 
youth that summer. For us it meant aping prabhu deva, yelling the lyrics as we 
disco-ed and understanding a phenomenon that would grow faster than we did – A 
R Rahman.Roja was my first tamil movie in a theatre and it was not until years 
later that I realized the essence of the movie and its lovely direction. To me, 
it was my first audio cassette and the treasure of songs it contained. I 
clearly remember getting Goosebumps listening to 'tamizha tamizha' and the 
kindle of patriotism that the music created back then. I had clearly turned a 
fan and Rahman was too good to be true.The elderly were quick to counter the 
Rahman fever shunning him as another passing cloud of different music genre. 
Every time, I'd hear someone say that, my heart would sink and I would secretly 
wish Rahman would never falter; he would never let us down. And I had been 
right. The little shelf beside my study table grew consistently with cassettes 
rendered by the maestro, songs I would listen to until I'd know every word by 
heart and every tune like a rhyme. This had included some coldly received and 
quick to vanish albums like super police, one 2 ka four, Udaya and Gangmaster; 
I was unmoved. His music was one that grew on you.But, then he would always 
come back and sweep you off yet again; He would render heart wrenching, foot 
tapping and mind blowing music; Indra, Bombay,Duet, Rangeela, Kadal Desam, 
Kadhalan, Indian, padayappa, Jeans, Sapney.. It was the era he had been 
unstoppable. It was the time when teasers on TV literally were teasers and I 
would have to wait until the cassette became available at the then huge store 
'sangeet sagar' in the center of a busy secundarabad. I would impatiently wait 
for appa to return from work with the new cassette and finish up my exams, so 
that I could play the songs on my little sony player in the labyrinth of my 
room. It was a time of bliss and an extended love affair with the music and the 
maker of it.By the time, I had submitted myself to wonders like alaipayuthe, 
Lagaan, Boys,yuva, taal.. he had continued to amaze. But I had grown over 
childish love. I was judgmental. I would pick tunes that sounded like old 
numbers. I had found other quarters to share the warmth. A shelf that only held 
Rahman's collections now harbored others. There were many making music in his 
adopted style and may be even catching up. Yet Rahman sold; but now he sold as 
the brand ambassador, of (a)typical styles, consistent deliverance and artful 
recycling; Baba, Boys, New, kisna, Meenaksi, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Varalaru, 
kadal virus.He did win me over many times; But now I would be hooked to certain 
songs in the album; I had lost patience to let the whole thing grow on me 
phase. Our relationship was stale now. I knew how much to love and how much to 
let go. I was almost beginning to accept that he was as human as us all. He had 
made some noise with Rang De basanti, ATM, shivaji. It was now all about, 
listening to most of the album and letting go of not even worth 'grow-able' on 
you ones like the 'uru koodai sunlight' or some of the extra saccharine ones of 
Jodha Akbar. Amidst this sea of transformation, I had never given up. Not once. 
I would always ensure, I do a run of the songs and a second time and then pick 
the best. I'd say its Rahman after all. When Slumdog millionare had come by, I 
loved it. I knew Rahman has done better, but this was totally worth the 
recognition he got now; for all these years of hard work And when the golden 
globes were bestowed upon this modest shy person, I could not have been 
happier; for he deserved every bit of it.But last week, a vintage Rahman was 
back; the one who had swooned Roja and Bombay into us. He had struck a heavy 
chord with Delhi6. Every song a true love, emanating innovation and variety, I 
sure turned into the ten year old again. I felt he had his heart and mind at 
the same place when he made this music. My cousin remarked that the album was 
her suprabatam these days. It only made me smile to wonder how much ARR had 
turned into a household name and we didn't even realize it.I cannot say Rahman 
is timeless or applaud him as the Mozart. For, I am just the addict, who has 
been picking up pieces of the aftershocks he leaves behind.




inked by Divya Das   
http://divyadurgadas.blogspot.com/2