I think maybe our expectations are too high at times.  You have every
right to feel the way you do.  I try to look at the positives and
appreciate.  Rahman is only a human afterall and he can't possibly
create masterpieces with every single song or album, esp. with films.
 Maybe he wants to create lighter pieces on purpose these days to help
lower our expectations or simply wants to experiment.  ARR is still
ARR....still the genius, still the model musician.  Along the journey,
there will be highs and lows, but we will stick with him through thick
and thin.  

When Connections releases, let's see if you feel the same way as you
do now.



--- In [email protected], Vithur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> With two new movies, Yuvvraaj and Ghajini, A.R Rahman's music is
again all
> over the place. And like every time, the music is going to be
appreciated
> and detested with great intensity. It has been some time now, since some
> people have started groaning against A.R and his works. I didn't
care about
> all those uproars at the beginning.  But as you listen to more and
more of
> those old classics from Rahman, you would slowly start to
contemplate some
> kind of a 'fall' in his present day's works. I 'am not good at
technically
> specifying 'what went wrong', but I sure can assure you that
something is
> not the same.  It's with great hope and delight that we are waiting
for each
> new work from ARR. But faithfully, things are not paying like they
used to
> be.
> 
> Speaking of Yuvvraaj, the main track 'Tu meri dost hain' appeared
promising
> and signaled something greater in the original album. But unfortunately,
> that wasn't the case. 'Mastam Mastam' and "Zindagi' are the only two
tracks
> that can be categorized as 'likeable'. "Zandagi' was almost near
becoming a
> real good one, but failed because of its evident similarity with
other works
> ("Lukka Chuppi"- RDB, anyone?). Then there was the fast number, 'shano
> shano' which simply..err… pisses you off! Usually you can't easily
hate a
> 'Rahman work', however bad it may be, but "shano shano" is an exception.
> "Manmohini morey" is another good composition, but I seriously doubt how
> many will really like that song.
> 
> A very interesting point about the album "Ghajini" is that the best
track is
> the instrumental version of "Kaise Muhje". But now if you listen to the
> original version of 'kaise mujhe' it's a letdown (for someone who
loved the
> instrumental). Can't understand why that is happening.  I wouldn't go as
> much to call the main track "Guzarish' a bad one, but come on its
A.R Rahman
> and you rightly deserves a lot better.
> "Guzarish" is however, the kind of song that would get better with each
> listening (something which doesn't applies to the 'Yuvvraaj"
tracks). Other
> songs in the album are just 'okay' kind, by the Rahman standards.
> 
> In Tamil, "Sakarkati" another recent work from ARR has this fast number
> "taxi taxi", which will just make you go like, 'come on Rahman didn't do
> that…' Maybe that song is not bad as such, but that's something
anyone out
> there could easily create. Neither Rahman's magic nor his great
experience
> is needed for such a sunken piece of music. It's really what you
call a down
> fall. "ADA, the way of life" is the only album in recent times, that
could
> be called as a 'complete' work from Rahman.
> 
> At some point or another, all these songs would get really exciting
and will
> have that Rahman seal in them, it could be a humming or a fading
instrument
> in the background or anything, but unfortunately nothing is getting
> complete. Like with all those great guys, Rahman's greatest
competitor is he
> himself.  His works can never be rated on comparison with the works of
> another music director. That's because even the worst work from
Rahman is
> better than the best of many others. Still, when you feel a
particular album
> from him is disappointing, it's because you didn't get the kind of
> delectation that you considers granted with every Rahman songs.
> 
> Maybe this so called 'fall' is just the invention of some
unimaginative and
> conventional kind of perspectives, which can't afford to understand the
> depth of change. Maybe it's Rahman going in search of music with greater
> depth.
> Whatever, I simply don't enjoy the kind of intimacy that I used to have,
> with AR's music these days, and that is really a bad thing!
> http://tinylittlethoughts.wordpress.com/2008/11/23/on-ar-rahman/
> -- 
> regards,
> Vithur
>


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