When A Treat Is Not A Treat, But Is A Double Treat! 
Trust A R Rahman to
pull a fast one on us when least expected. For the past 3 years we’ve
been fed on crumbs, literally – there have been a measly 3 albums (Rang De 
Basanti, Guru and Jodhaa Akbar)
composed by the musical genius since 2006 and we’ve been forced to
sportingly take that lying down. And now out of the blue, two A R
Rahman albums releasing one day apart! Talk about a double treat. And
even though I know that as a die-hard A R Rahman fan I should be
ashamed for not having had a shadow of an inkling that Rahman had been
preparing to cut his own album for the past 6 months or so, there’s a
certain special charm to pleasant surprises like these. It kind of
makes me wish I hadn’t spent the 6 months before the release of the 7th Harry 
Potter book obsessing about the million or so theories concerning anything and 
everything about Potterverse.

Right then, so the big question, of course, is – how good are the two new A R 
Rahman albums – Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na and Ada? I’ll start with Jaane Tu Ya Jaane 
Na, or JTYJN for short (I really did think Aamir Khan, of all people, wouldn’t 
find
the need to have the title of his movie sound like the first half of
the script). The movie is supposed to be a youthful romance, and
Rahman, as always, makes sure that every track in the album perfectly
fits the theme of the movie. The first track, Kabhi Kabhi Aditi Zindagi is - 
there’s no other word for it – vintage A R Rahman. In other words, a very very 
good composition. Jaane Tu Mera Kya Hai is somewhat a middling track – a little 
weird on melody, and the kind of song you don’t really know whether to like or 
not. Nazrein Milaana almost sounds like Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy territory, and I 
think I should
add here that Rahman does a better Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy than anyone else,
maybe even better than the trio themselves. I normally hate to use this
word, but the track is wonderfully- peppy. So much for the perennial classical 
inclinations of the maestro.

Pappu Can’t Dance is, plain and simple, disappointing. If there has been one 
grouse I
have held against Rahman these past few years, other than his tendency
to occasionally disappear from the music scene for months together, is
that he seems to have lost his touch when it comes to dance numbers.
Which was the last really rocking dance number you heard from him? Masti Ki 
Pathshala from Rang De Basanti?
When I heard that song for the first time, I had a hard time getting
past the fact that the song actually had no tune to speak of.
Personally, I thought the Meherbaan track from Tehzeeb was great, but even that 
was nearly 5 years ago. I don’t know about you, but I really miss the days of 
Rangeela Re and Humma Humma. But we must make do with what we have, and what we 
have is still quietly and impressively enthralling. Kahin To Hogi almost sounds 
like a Westlife/Boyzone track with Hindi lyrics, and it
does its job well. And can we ever have a Rahman album without a single
track that strays dramatically from the beaten Bollywood path? Tu Bole Main 
Boloon is laden with heavy jazz and funk elements, and while I’m sure it’d
suit the context of the movie well, I can’t really say that I enjoyed
the track. 

Ok, enough of film talk. Let’s talk about Rahman’s own privately recorded album 
Ada now. The thing that struck me the moment I started listening to the
tracks of the album is how unnatural Rahman’s songs sound when sung by
typically dulcet singers like Sonu Nigam and Alka Yagnik. Maybe I don’t
notice that in Rahman’s Bollywood albums, but then again, how often
does he sign up the typical Bollywood singers anyway? I personally
can’t get enough of Rahman’s own vocals – there’s something very
endearing about the way he completely disregards the lyrics of the song
(he still can’t speak Hindi, even after all these years) and gets lost,
almost like a child, in the rhythm and melody of the track. As it turns
out, however, there’s just one song sung by him in the album, and that
put me off in a big way. Ada is a very nice album, no
doubt, but I somehow get the feeling that Rahman is playing it safe
with this album – almost too many mass-appealing numbers. Gulfisha is a 
fantastic track, but what on earth is Gumsum all about? For a second there I 
almost felt like looking it up on the
internet and making sure that it was actually Rahman who’d composed the
track and not some blissfully stagnant Nadeem-Shravan or Sajid-Wajid
type of music director, what with the Madanpura-style beats andall. Hawa Sun 
Hawa restored some of my faith in Rahman, and Meherbaan almost made me feel 
guilty of my earlier disparaging thoughts about him, but Ishq Ada again goes on 
a tailspin, taking ‘weird melody’ to another level. Hai Dard and Milo Wahan are 
a little too ordinary for my liking, but Tu Mera Hai is again an impressive 
piece. I suppose by now I should’ve gotten used
to the wild fluctuations in quality that have been the norm with any
Rahman album ever since I can remember, but it always comes as a
surprise to me that genius must necessarily have its low moments to
inspire and propagate its incredible highs.
I
think I’m going a little overboard with the whole ‘Rahman and genius’
thing. But you know what, when compared with the run-of-the-mill
plagiarists that make up the majority of Bollywood’s musical talent,
‘genius’ might actually be a bit of an understatement. It’s not
everyday, after all, that a Taal or a Dil Se is created. To be honest, however, 
the Rahman magic seems to be waning
a little these days – perhaps he needs to take himself a little less
seriously? He’s become the mascot, so to speak, of international music,
and it just seems to me that he’s become a little too conscious about
making sure that his music reflects the global appeal of his work. I
think he needs to let go of all the baggage that comes with being a
larger-than-life icon and concentrate, instead, on making
uncomplicated, beautiful music, the kind of music he made for Roja and Rangeela,
the kind of music that made us fall in love with his astonishing – I’m
sorry, but there’s no other word for it – genius. No, I have not
over-used that word. Some people just deserve to be exaggerated about.

http://musababid.blogspot.com/2008/05/when-treat-is-not-treat-but-is-double.html

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