Ghajini
http://ursmusically.blogspot.com/2008/11/ghajini.html
In
Rahman’s recent Tamil soundtrack ‘Sakkarakatti’, there is this song ‘I
miss u da’, where Rahman tries to bend the rules, break convention on
how not just a Indian film song but any song should sound, but the song
is just that, it just bends the sound but not the music. It is one of
the classic examples where there is more of Rahman’s sound than
Rahman’s music. 

Some of the very deeply emotive and soul
stirring melodic phrases are in “Ghajini” soundtrack like those hums,
hoons and hymns of Sonu Nigam throughout the extremely catchy
‘Guzairsh’, which on surface sounds like a routine love ballad with a
familiar repetitive rhythm. It is Sonu’s soothing interruptions that
take the song a notch higher with its emotional content. Though Kavitha
Baliga’s operatic interlude sounds like an after thought, it is rare to
find a Rahman song with such a simple sounding interlude that creates
an aural ambience around the listener. 

Equally soothing is
Shreya’s humming in Kaise Mujhe with which she starts her part of the
song, after Benny quite uncomfortably wanders through a tedious melody
that has more silence in between phrases which sounds more manufactured
than naturally fallen, so as to bring out the effect and emotion in the
melody fabricated around those silences in between. But inspite of a
very unconventional flow of the melody, with some touching phrases of
melody and with the clever and an aurally alluring orchestration (which
is more so evident in its blissful instrumental version) Rahman manages
to convince at least those for whom a song need not be instantly hooky. 

Bekha is unarguably THE song of the soundtrack where Karthik
seems to have had a blast singing it. The attitude, expression and
rendition of Karthik is mind blowing in this song, just listen to the
way he casually rounds off those rough western notes in a sweet
classical way. Rahman goes a little further from where he left in
‘September Maatham’ from Alaipayuthey (or ‘Chori pe chori’ from
Saathiya) in writing unconventional melodies that makes lyricists go
mad in finding words to fit the tune. The song sounds as if all those
complex phrases of melody and counter saxophone pieces just flew
instinctively out of Rahman’s mind when he went into the same euphoric
and romantic mood in which the character in the movie is when he sings
this song. 

The sound heavy ‘Aye Bachchu’ is an enjoyable
Rahman cliché with abundant layers, e-sounds and loops and head banging
rocking guitars and percussions. Once the song gains momentum with
‘Jhoom le’, it refuses to stop and make us swing with its rhythm.
Coming to ‘Latto’, by using Shreya Ghosal, with the addictive ‘Yaar
Yaar’ hook and the interesting vocal harmonies in the interludes,
Rahman sold it to me. When you put these two songs on your noise
canceling headphones, you are in a unique Rahman’s sound universe where
each sound makes some sense and doesn’t add up as a cacophony. 

To continue from where I left in the beginning, 

When
Rahman’s sound is almost in balance with Rahman’s music, we get a
soundtrack like Ghajini. Sometimes while doing so, Rahman asks too much
from his listeners, he takes them too far a place where they are so
uncomfortable, not because they don’t like the place but because they
haven’t been there before. But indeed by Rahman standards, it isn’t an
extremely unconventional or path breaking soundtrack, it is just (just
is just because it is Rahman) an enjoyable and a vibrant soundtrack apt
for a commercial movie like Ghajini and the one that has its highs and
lows and those who want to like it will like it for those highs,
patiently waiting in those few lows for the next following high. And I
am one of them.

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