This guy has changed since Jodhaa Akbar..... I mean Joginder. 
Jodhaa Akbar needed a little time to grow on... that is why his review was not 
up to the mark.....
As per the awards this year I think with Ghajini coming up ARR has a chance 
getting all the nominations for this year.. By the way is Yuvraj coming this 
year??




Muktak Kanjilal

--- On Tue, 17/6/08, juliencristobal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: juliencristobal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [arr] Ada...a way of life music review! (by Joginder Tuteja)
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, 17 June, 2008, 5:19 PM







2008 has been a great year for Rahman fans. While the maestro works 
on one or at most two Bollywood projects every year, 2008 has already 
seen the arrival of Jodhaa Akbar, Jaane Tu…Ya Jaane Naa and now 
Ada...A Way Of Life. 

However, not many are aware that the music of Ada...A Way Of Life was 
actually composed for a different project immediately after Rahman 
was through with Lagaan. Though the project never saw the light of 
the day, director Tanvir Ahmed came up with a new subject and 
launched Ada...A Way Of Life while retaining the same soundtrack that 
has lyrics by Raqueeb Alam and Nusrat Badr. 

Rashid Ali - Now does the name ring the bell? Well, if you have been 
singing 'Kabhi Kabhi Aditi Zindagi' [Jaane Tu…Ya Jaane Naa] then you 
know that who is the man behind the brilliant rendition. In Ada…, 
Rashid opens the album with 'Ishq Ada', which comes with a trademark 
Rahman sound that has a Middle East feel to it. 

Moving at a moderate pace with a slight haunting feel to it, the 
number hails the beauty of 'Ishq', as penned by Raqueeb Alam. 
Surprisingly though, Rashid sounds quite different from 'Kabhi Kabhi 
Aditi Zindagi' which by the way would still stay on to be the 
preferred choice. There is another version of 'Ishq Ada' heard a 
little later in the day and this time around it has newcomer Parul 
Mishra at the helm of affairs. She is fine with her rendition in this 
song, which does have shades of Rahman's 'Tu Hi Tu' [Dil Se]. 

Sonu Nigam and Alka Yagnik, a pair which one would like to hear any 
time around, come together for 'Hawa Sun Hawa' which turns out to be 
a very good hear within first minute of hearing itself. In fact one 
doesn't quite feel like hearing a Rahman composition since it carries 
the kind of sound which is now associated with Shankar-Ehsaan- Loy, 
especially after their score in Kal Ho Na Ho, Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna 
and Salaam-E-Ishq. Coming back to Nusrat Badr written 'Hawa Sun 
Hawa', it is indeed a pleasant sounding melodious number, which goes 
well with the serene mood and environment, as required by the song. 

The singing pair returns with Nusrat Badr written 'Gum Sum', which 
continues to take the graph higher up for Ada… This time around, 
Rahman attaches a lot of rhythm to the song, which carries an overall 
happy feel to it. By this time one starts looking at the composer in 
awe because of the timeless feel that his songs have managed to carry 
in Ada… so far. One wonders about the fresh feel of the song without 
looking dated even as the soundtrack was created 5-6 years back! 

Sonu Nigam makes it three in a row with 'Gulfisha', which has all the 
making of a dance number with a lounge setting. In fact, the song 
does remind of 'Fanaa' [Yuva] that did have a faster pace to it but 
still carried a similar sound when one takes the club/lounge setting 
into consideration. In spite of Western arrangements, Indian melody 
is kept intact for this Sonu Nigam-Sunidhi Chauhan duet, which is 
written by Nusrat Badr and continues to grow further and further 
after repeated hearing. 

As always, there is quite some excitement in store the moment Rahman 
himself decides to come behind the mike. A mushy love song set in an 
Indi-pop mode that has Rahman dominating the proceedings with just a 
couple odd instruments in the background, 'Meherbaan' is easily the 
best of the enterprise so far and deserves full marks for the way it 
has been composed, arranged, sung, and overall packaged. You would 
love to carry this Raqueeb Alam written track in your iPod while on a 
move as it does carry a feel similar to that of Rahman's non-film 
single - 'Pray For Me Brother'! No wonder, you don't mind it at all 
when Sanjeev Thomas' created instrumental is included as the last 
track of the album. A very good move since it results in the album 
ending on a very high note. 

Now this song takes you in the times when Rahman had started making a 
mark in his early days. 'Tu Mera Hai', a love song, is a kind of 
composition, which Rahman used to create during the early 90's. With 
a South Indian classical music touch to it, this number crooned by 
Chitra and Sukhwinder Singh does carry a trademark Rahman feel it to 
but is mainly for those in hunt of some nostalgia. 

For the first time in the album, Udit Narayan arrives on the scene 
with 'Hai Dard', a sad number written by Nusrat Badr. Arrangements 
belong to the kind which one can associate only with Rahman while the 
tune belongs to the era of the 50's/60's when Mohd. Rafi or Mukesh 
sung songs belonging to this genre. Of course, the number is quite 
difficult to sing but overall the feel is quite situational and one 
can expect some visibility for it only if the film is a success. 

A love song about revisiting the old times, 'Milo Wahan Wahan' has a 
haunting feel to it due to its intrinsic sad setting. Rendered by 
Alka Yagnik and Jayachandran, it is again a situational number, which 
has an extremely slow pace with minimal instruments in the 
background. 

While 'Hawa Sun Hawa', 'Gum Sum', 'Gulfisha' and 'Meherbaan turn out 
to be the best of the lot, 'Tu Mera Hai', 'Hai Dard' and 'Milo Wahan 
Wahan' do not match up to the same scale due to their setting. 
Meanwhile the title song 'Ishq Ada' falls somewhere in between. 
Though there isn't song in the album which can be considered below 
the mark, there is indeed a stark difference between the way Ada...A 
Way Of Life opens and ends. 

Rating: 3/5

Courtesy: http://indiafm. com/movies/ musicreview/ 13892/index. html

 














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