Music: A R Rahman

Lyrics: Thamarai

Label: Sony Music

Rating: 3.5/5

Anticipations have been high for A R Rahman’s music in Gautham Menon’s
Vinnaithandi Varuvaya as this is the first Tamil album composed by the
maestro after he bagged the Academy awards, Bafta and Golden Globe honours
last year. Expectations increase all the more as Thamarai has penned the
lyrics for the album.

Vinnaithandi Varuvaya is packed with impressive tracks by the acclaimed
musician but is dominated by western influences, which might not go down too
well with the audiences. But the album is a sure treat for music lovers
looking for experimental music. Here’s a walk through the tracks in the
album-

*Mannipaya -* Mannipaya is a melodious track with Shreya Ghoshal and Rahman
on the mike. Although you are hooked to flawless vocals of the singers, you
can’t miss the orchestration which stands out in the track. The perfect
blend of music arrangements with the keyboard, piano, flute, chorus and the
vocalists would definitely hook music lovers.

*Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya -* The album has a great title track Vinnaithaandi
Varuvaaya rendered by Karthik. The free flowing guitar in the background
blends naturally with the vocals - yet both seem to have their own
character. The music and vocals seem to be competing throughout the track,
often outdoing each other.

*Hossana -* This track is bound to have a mass appeal with its contemporary
arrangements and rap portions rendered by Blaaze. Vijay Prakash is at his
best and the track starts on a melodious note with Prakash, enters the rap-
hip hop mode with Blaaze and Prakash again brings back the melody bit.
Suzzane D’Mello’s humming in the background makes the song even more
likable.

*Kannukkul Kannai -* The violin is a prominent instrument in this track
dominated by western music influences. Rahman displays his flair for western
music with this track sung brilliantly by Naresh Iyer. But it is a mediocre
track and nothing about it grips you even after repeated hearings. This is
not the track I would look forward to in the album.

*Aaoromale -* Passionate singing by Malayalam music director Alphonse Joseph
and amazing guitar play make the song grow on you after the first hearing
itself. A Malayalam track with a feel of country music, Aaromale is an
experimental track by Rahman. The song has a perfect fusion of western and
Indian music with violin interludes along with base instrument - guitar.

Alphonse has composed for Malayalam films including Pachamarathanalil,
Jalolsavam and is a regular band member of Rex Band, a prolific guitarist
and a carnatic classical vocalist. *Anbil Avan -* Sung by Devan Ekambaram
and Chinmayi, Anbil Avan is a peppy song with nothing exceptional. With some
spellbound tracks in the album, Anbil Avan falls much below the
expectations.

*Omana pene -* Benny Dayal does what he is best at in this rhythmic song.
Kalyani Menon’s voice surprises as, just when you conclude that it is a male
song, Menon surfaces beautifully. Another surprise in the track is the
traditional nadaswaram towards the end which gives an altogether different
essence to the track.

Experimental in nature, the album Vinnaithandi Varuvaya exudes freshness. My
pick in the album includes Hossana which would go well with the audiences,
Alphonse Joseph owes Rahman for beautiful composition- Aaoromale and
Mannipaya.
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-- 
Regards,
Uday Kiran

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