Three from Dilli 6(music, A R Rahman, Bollywood)

January 16, 2009 by rameshram

Dilli 6 is a Raykesh omprakash mehra(Rang de Basanti)  film receiving
rave reviews  for it's haunting music , by  AR Rahman.

Im trying to get my mind wrapped around the very diverse ten tracks,
and not finding a unifying anthem through the album,  I am treating
these songs as individual compositions for the purposes of criticism.

A R rahman used to do this kind of thing in his early tamil film
scores. The score for Kadhalan, for instance, would have  one
soundbite of pure carnatic music seducing the listener on behalf of
Nagma(the heroine of the film) , and the next one would be a complete
chennai equalent of a frat boy comedy in five minutes.

You wouldn't know quite what to make of the mood shifts across the
album, until you saw the film and then the soundtrack would fall in
place, because you'd see the songs as high emotional points in the
film. The melody in the melodrama would be part of the one two punch
of a film. ARR, the OST composer would have earned his keep, while
indulging in his need to compose diverse genres into the same album.
You realize that  ARR is doing compositional heavy lifting here, not
dabbling in many genres or styles.

In this same spirit , from dilli 6 here are three very diverse tracks,
each a classic in its chosen genre. The abiding feature of the album
is the peace in each track. ARR composes no sudden moves,while easing
the techno …or genre mixes in , almost without us realizing that we've
suddenly started dancing to Bhangra, in what started off as a hip hop
track

To the songs…

The simple ones:

Bhor Bhaye : Shreya Ghosal, Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan

Bhor bhayi is a remix . its a bade ghulam ali khan thumri in gurjari
todi (todi is very popular with film composers of hindustani classical
music.  Ja Ja Re from Lekin, Insaan bano from Baiju bavra and  Jo Tum
Todo Piyafrom silsila in gurjari todi, Jhoote naina bole from Lekin in
bilaskani todi. ) Shreyas ghosal does a voice over. (presuming here
that Soha will be picturized singing this to a grahamphone record.
This is a voiceover technique used in a couple of films before.  The
song ketaki gulab juhi (basant bahar) had a very classical Bhimsen
joshi pitting voices with the more pop Mohammed rafi, for instance. In
this song, Shreyas sounds very much like the student. while she sounds
outclassed in training and easy of rendition, she is more than equal
to taking the melody of the thumri and making it her own.

Rehna Tu : A R Rahman, Benny Dayal, Tanvi : is a lounge classic from
AR Rahman that walks us through an amazing array of smooth jazz and
soft  rock genres. When ARR overdoes the smooth in jazz, he does so
with an enthusiasm that is so endearing that you like the song much ,
in the end, even if smooth jazz is a genre you loathe.

It starts like an old deva favorite from the film kadhal kottai.That
song( Kalamellam Kadhal )featured a kenny G style sax cameo, Or even
ARR's New york nagaram from sillendru oru kadhal.Soon we're awash in
california smooth jazz. The song then morphs into a pop ballad in
Rahman's voice and sounds very yanni.

A change in scales wakes up the melody luxuriously…..and then the
Oud(Iraqi instrument) takes over and floats us down middle eastern
coloring…. but not long enough…we waft back into the reinforced main
melody… is he holding the song too long? it's already four minutes
gone….wait…there's more….you give up. he wafts you gently into a
mandolin srinivas(styled) hamsadwani on a synthesizer/panflute….for
another two minutes….and the sounds are in your head …gentle..long
after the melody has faded out…

An openended blend of genres. it lets you define where your mind wants
to go next.. mine , for some reason, went to the Amjad Ali khan cameo
on the Rahman composed Iruvar song Narumughaye (go to 1:30 to 2:10,
and again 3:52- 4:06).

Hey Kaala Bandar : Karthik, Naresh, Srinivas, Bony Chakravarthy :

Brings together a few musical ideas ARR has been playing with in his
mind for some time. One is a genuine rap sound (bony chakravarthy?),
which the track opens with, the second is the early  hiphop sound he
worked on in the apache Indian ( No Problem)collaborated album, Love
birds which had a song  that was titled Om Santhi Om Santhi (with
aslam mustapha) .  The arab coloring blends pretty seamlessly with the
rap but this is not the last…we morph smoothly into bhangra! I'd
explored this in a photograph of a poster I saw in New york city a
couple of months ago…a smooth blend of bhangra and hiphop is the most
logical possible of popular musical blends. Good job AR! The small 
problem is that the song is not long enough. is a remix and a longer
version in the offing?

Dilli 6 is the most freeform set of compositions from ARR (or anyone,
really) Ive heard in a long time …I might post more on the utter
freedom from genre dictated constraints in these songs, subsequently,
but three here were fun to deconstruct.


http://rameshram.wordpress.com/2009/01/16/three-from-dilli-6music-a-r-rahman-bollywood/

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