So well and rightly said. It was a sheer bliss reading your write-up! 
Thank you so much for this wonderul post.


--- In [email protected], Dasun Abeysekera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> 
> Aesthetic Judgment (Taste)
> 
> I don't have to tell you that ARR's taste is of the highest 
possible kind compared with composers of all time. I mean how many 
composers the world-over has ever had the privilege of being compared 
to the ideal of Mozart, let alone being called one? Not even the 
kings of melody of the West – Richard Rogers (of The Sound of Music 
(59) fame) Sir Francis Lai (Love Story (1970)), Maurice Jarr (Dr. 
Zhivago (1965)), or even Ennio Morricone, who have written some of 
the most soulful and moving music I have ever heard, have been told 
they are like Mozart, at least not to my knowledge. Most music 
lovers, and all great minds, Leo Tolstoy and Albert Einstein among 
them, have acknowledged unanimously that Mozart's music is the most 
perfect and the most universal imagined, no, let me use the word 
conjured, by any human being; because imagination, to many, could 
still mean there's some conscious involvement in that process of 
creation; perhaps, it is still a conscious process, but it is a far 
superior sense of consciousness that, by average human standards, it 
cannot be called one. If anybody here has seen the Oscar-winning 
movie Amadeus (84) by Milos Forman, you can see why it is so: 
Mozart's music, to use a phrase Einstein once used, seems like have 
simply been `plucked out of the universe'; the great scientist who 
adored Mozart and used to play his Sonatas on his little violin when 
he wanted a break from his scientific pursuits, says that compared to 
Mozart, Beethoven's music feels `too personal, almost naked.' 
Tolstoy, in his polemical book `What is Art?' destroys the kind of 
conscious creativity that he believes Beethoven and the followers of 
the Romantic movement that he charted, Richard Wagner, for example, 
brought about to Europe, overthrowing the musical dominance of the 
spontaneous and universal music of Mozart.
> 
> In essence, Mozart's music and its perfection are not a result of 
conscious processing, they come from a superior sense of natural 
harmony and an extremely rare capability of letting go of one's self 
and connecting with the universal spirit and listening to it in all 
its infinite beauty. There cannot be a more fitting description of 
ARR's music and how he has conjured his magical output over the 
years; and it is no accident that the West would offer up their ideal 
for comparison with the best the East has offered to date. That sort 
of taste, a sincere kinship with the natural harmony and beauty of 
the universe, with God, if you will, years in an industry cannot fade 
away or dilute, and, if anything, I can confidently say that ARR's 
taste has, over the years, been refined like fine old wine, and I 
have not witnessed an instance where his aesthetic judgment, given 
the proper opportunities, has faltered beyond identification. In his 
choice of movies, directors, and lyrics, there maybe exceptions, but 
I will address these in a later category.
> 
> It is difficult to pin down one or two works from the 92-96 period 
in which, like Rano said, beauty oozed out of every single phrase 
that he weaved, but I will pick two of my favorite songs `Kannalane' 
from Bombay (95) and `Uyirum Neeye' from Pavitra (94) in which I 
think ARR achieves the highest form of perfection. Sometime back, I 
analyzed the beauty of the song Uyirum Neeye from a conceptual 
viewpoint, so if anybody is interested, let me know and I will send 
it to you or post it on the forum. Kannalane (or Kehna Hai Kya), I 
hear, has entered the music textbooks in certain parts of the world 
(Canada, if I recall correctly)! Yes, these are songs of superior 
beauty that they have that universal appeal that Tolstoy hailed as 
the finest ingredient of the greatest of art. 
> 
> What about now? What are the ARR compositions within the past 5 
years which evoke the same feelings in me? Piya Ho from Water (2005) 
and Do Kadam from Meenaxi (2004) for sure are my favorites from this 
period with Tere Bina from Guru not too far off. When I refer to the 
perfection of these songs, I mean that I don't feel that I need to 
remove any part, any phrase, any instrument, sound or note, 
everything is in the right place at the right time! If anybody felt 
differently about these songs, I would be curious to know which parts 
destroy the perfection of these songs. I can write an essay on the 
song Do Kadam and will do soon so that I can back up my feelings just 
like I did with Uyirum Neeye. Do Kadam is so personal for me that I 
don't want to hold it up as universal! This song symbolizes what ARR 
and I share in silence without speaking a single word with each-
other, but by connecting to the same universal spirit that we both 
trust wholeheartedly and by whose mysterious ways we are awed day in 
and day out. The highest taste, as Immanuel Kant defines it, is 
always subjective, but universal, and it will always flow from God 
and only God; Not only is ARR connected with Him, he can articulate 
His beauty with such ease and finesse that it brings many a tear to 
my eye thinking how much of my faith I owe to ARR; Even as I share 
this very personal story with you, I can feel a warm tear roll down 
my cheek. Now if that's not beauty, I don't know what is.
> 
> 
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