Various - Slumdog Millionaire OST  (Polydor) UK release date: 12 January
2009
<http://www.musicomh.com/stars.htm>

<http://www.musicomh.com/albums/slumdog-millionaire_0109.htm#>

*track listing*

1. O... Saya
2. Riots
3. Mausam & Escape
4. Paper Planes
5. Paper Planes Remix
6. Ringa Ringa
7. Liquid Dance
8. Latika's Theme
9. Aaj Ki Raat
10. Millionaire
11. Gangsta Blues
12. Dreams On Fire
13. Jai Ho

  MORE  ALBUM:
M.I.A. - Kala <http://www.musicomh.com/albums/mia-2_0807.htm>

ALBUM:
M.I.A. - Arular <http://www.musicomh.com/albums/mia.htm>

GIG:
M.I.A. @ Coronet, London <http://www.musicomh.com/music/gigs/mia_1207.htm>

TRACK:
M.I.A. - Bucky Done Gun <http://www.musicomh.com/singles/mia.htm>

 LINKS   Slumdog Millionaire<http://www.foxsearchlight.com/slumdogmillionaire>


     *It will come as no surprise to anyone listening to the soundtrack to
the multiple Golden Globe-scooping Slumdog
Millionaire<http://www.musicomh.com/films/slumdog-millionaire_0109.htm>that
one of these was awarded to 'Mozart of Madras' A
R Rahman for Best Original Score - or that he now stands to win a potential
three Academy Awards across two categories in next month's ceremonies.*

For this is about as close to perfection as a soundtrack can ever hope to
get - perfectly capturing the emotional grit of Danny Boyle's onscreen
drama, while successfully evoking a very Indian atmosphere for a very
Western audience.

*M.I.A.* was a wise recruit for the purpose of bridging this gap - as a
London artist with Sri Lankan roots, her relevance along with her
familiarity to Western ears makes Rahman's compositions all the more
accessible, as well as lending the score her inimitable kudos and an urban
touch that evokes well the gritty underworld of Mumbai.

She sings on the Oscar-nominated opening track O Saya, whose lyrical imagery
("They can't touch me / We break off / Run so fast they can't even catch
me") well conveys the urgent pace of life onscreen as well as providing a
relevant motto for the film's protagonists. ("We live for the buck / We get
for the family.")

Her own song Paper Planes is included too, both in its original form and as
a DFA remix - an upbeat, eloquent song that provides the perfect match for
the dynamic and colourful onscreen imagery: the chorus sung by children and
the sounds of cashdrawers and gunfire perfectly coincides with the plight of
the young gang of street urchins desperately trying to survive by any means
available.

Elsewhere, Rahman negotiates the East/West duality with an accomplished
hand, combining the conventions of both filmic traditions, with an epic
Bond-esque string section that plays out over a sitar in Mausam and Escape.
The strings recur in Liquid Dance, which layers these with classical Indian
vocals over moody electronica.

Ringa Ringa is more traditional fare, featuring *Alga Yagnik*, who has been
one of Bollywood's most popular playback singers since the late 1980s,
although those unfamiliar with Bollywood may still recognise her from
another wonderful soundtrack - to *Moulin Rouge* (2001) on the track Hindi
Sad Diamonds.

Latika's theme is wonderfully intimate and touching in its hushed simplicity
- a sweetly hummed melody that serves as a consistent motif for its titular
character, and manages to be as beautiful as *Freida Pinto* who plays her.
It is also a teaser for the film's penultimate number Dreams, which picks up
where it left off, featuring the same melody and adding the lush vocals of
the mononymous *Suzanne* to celebrate a very happily-ever-after indeed.

The record is rounded up by Jai Ho, an exuberant Bollywood dance number that
encapsulates the film's feel-good-factor, and reminds us just how much this
score deserves the accolades it has already won and the many it is sure
still to receive - just as India's most treasured composer deserves the
new-found global recognition it has earned him.
- Emily Heward <http://www.musicomh.com/emily-heward.htm>
http://www.musicomh.com/albums/slumdog-millionaire_0109.htm

-- 
regards,
Vithur

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