Reviews GURU Music

[qalandari.blogspot.com]

Mani Ratnam's much discussed penchant for duos returns as drunken
parody in Ek lo Ek muft. This crazy bit of inebriated revelry is
especially welcome inasmuch as it shows (for the second time this
year, after Sillunu Oru Kadhal's Kummi Aadi) that the man's ear for
"low brow" rambunctiousness remains as sharp as ever. Bappi Lahiri's
enthusiastic neo-quaver is the perfect vehicle for this chattering
number that takes many a detour, bringing the basti into one's living
room, until one is reduced to gibbering idiotically "ye-maw ye-maw
ye-maw ye-maw yeeeeeeeeh". And that's not a bad thing.

Speaking of Sillunu Oru Kadhal, if you thought Machakari was a fine
example of decadent globalized sound (and even if you didn't), Mayya
ramps up the intensity several notches. If Ek lo Ek muft was carousing
revelry, this one is drunken lewdness given form, oozing sex and
overripe fruit from every second. Full marks are... ... owed to Maryam
Toller and Chinmayee for demonstrating that mere vocals can in
themselves push the boundaries of the censor code. And there's a lot
more in this song: in particular, the tension between the come hither
vocals and Gulzar's stylish vocals makes an unforgettably stylish yet
unrestrained number -- and that's even before the song erupts toward
the end.

Imagine a cross between the Madan Mohan's classic Lata solo from Woh
Kaun Thi -- Lag ja gale ke phir yeh haseen raat ho na ho -- and A.R.
Rahman's own Azaadi from Bose, then add night and solitude, and you'll
get the haunting Jaage Hain. The best way to describe this song is as
a lori for adults, perhaps the most private song in this film that
appears to be another Ratnam take on power that is "public" in some
way, shape or form. Appropriately enough, the seclusion does not last,
as choral voices meld into the song after a point. Perhaps even the
dreams of those whose lives are lived in the public gaze are populated
by multitudes.

Is this the year for retro? For Baazi Laga (Paisa Chale) appears to be
Rahman's attempt at a 1980s Laxmikant Pyarelal or perhaps
Lawaaris-style number, and while it is very catchy it lacks the
nuanced richness I associate with Rahman's work. Not to mention that
its lyrics are far less cynical than the thematically similar Takay
Takay from Mangal Pandey, possibly a reflection of Javed Akhtar's own
Marxist inclinations to a certain extent, but which also make this
cheerfully hustling and bustling song a fitting anthem to an urban
India that is increasingly optimistic and enthusiastic about commerce.

Barso Re is a saawan song, once a staple of Hindi films; although my
first impressions of this song are not especially favorable, it is
elevated from "mere" sweetness by Rahman's use of an urgent -- and
rousing -- vocal refrain that insists upon the listener's attention. I
doubt this will ever be a great Rahman number in my estimation,
although I do expect it to grow on me with time, as Sandha Kozhi/Kabhi
Neem Neem from Aayitha Ezhuthu/Yuva did.

Rahman's passion for the neo-qawwali love song remains undimmed, as
Tere Bina shows: the chorus is smoother, less edgy than Bombay's
Kannalane/Kehna hi kya or Alai Payuthey's Sneghidane (indeed the song
is shot where Bombay's was), but Chinmayee's voice is throatier,
earthier than anything Chitra managed (or was aiming for) in
Kannalane/Kehna hi kya. Unquestionably, Rahman stresses the repetitive
aspect of the qawwali in this song rather than the virtuosity he has
explored in qawwali-ish songs in the past, and the result is less
energetic and more decorous, yet heartfelt and (for me, I predict)
ultimately addictive.

Ae Hairat-e-Aashiq is the most conventional song in the album, a
reminder (if any were needed after Khamoshiyan Gungunaane Lageen from
One 2 ka 4 and Sunta hai mera Khuda or Qismet se tum humko mile ho
from Pukaar) that Rahman's command over the traditional Hindi film
duet is second to none among his peers. A "classic" love song by
Hariharan and Alka Yagnik, this is for me musically the least
surprising song here, although its evergreen freshness ensures that it
will age well, and with a wide audience.



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