That blogger is an HC IR fan and most of his posts are in-depth analysis of IR 
songs. You can find his limited posts on A.R. here.

http://7swara.blogspot.com/search/label/A.R.Rahman

I felt terribly disappointed reading this post of his on Rahman. 

http://7swara.blogspot.com/2008/07/rise-of-rahman-i.html





________________________________
From: Vithur <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, January 2, 2009 11:00:50 PM
Subject: Re: [arr] Rahmanism - 7 swara

 
Superb Post. Pls explain for more songs. 
 


 
On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 1:15 PM, Prakash Balaramkrishna <prakysn...@yahoo. com> 
wrote:

 
http://7swara. blogspot. com/2008/ 12/rahmanism. html


Rahmanism In one of my earlier posts, I have written my views on rise of 
Rahman. One of the key factor that I mentioned about was "Rahmanism". For 
anyone to standout from the crowd, they need to exhibit a unique style and 
Rahman did it with a style. No doubt.

My opinion is that he very carefully avoided the spheres that were explored and 
dissected by others, especially Illayaraja when he began the journey. To unseat 
a person from the crown of Tamil industry who enjoyed only success throughout 2 
decades would have been possible only with something special. 

If SPB and Janaki were "overused" (I have no problems with that, personally), 
Rahman brought new voices to the forefront. If violin and Tabla dominated the 
era of Illayaraja, Rahman brought the techno music to the forefront. If "poor 
sound/recording quality" was the norm, Rahman changed it. He kept "Vairamuthu" 
by his side, when he was almost ignored for over 5-6 years. If 30-40 movies 
were scored by Illayaraja at that time, Rahman chose to limit to 5-6 movies a 
year. To an extent, even ther timings of work were opposite. He stood out.

One such instance, that I can think of is even usage of Raaga. If "Keeravani", 
"Mayamalavagowla", "Kalyani", "Sivaranjani" and "Natabhairavi" were 
predominantly used by Illayaraja, Rahman either chose the Raagas that Raaja 
scored a very little or moved to the Hindustani paradigm.

Even on the Raagas where both have scored, there is a paradigm shift in the 
usage. Take for instance - "Sivaranjani". As I had written in my earlier post, 
this Raaga has been used by many music directors to depict the emotional 
bonding and that comes out very clearly in the scale - S R2 G2 P D2 S. Various 
hits in the past set in Sivaranjani scale are: Adi Aaathadi, Kuyil Paattu, Oru 
Jeevan thaan Un Paadal thaan, Oh Priya Priya, Tere Mere Beech Mein and so on.

All of the above as you can see, depicts the emotional bonding and that is 
mainly derived by the traversal from P D2 to upper octave's S R2 G2. Try 
humming a song in the list above and you would easily be able to connect to any 
other song set in the same Raaga with the same feel. However, now look at 
"Kannum Kannum Kollai Adithaal" set in the same Raaga featured in the movie 
"Thiruda Thiruda". Can you believe this song is set in the same Raaga that 
generates a completely different mood. Though orchestration is one of the 
possible reasons for the same, this is mainly due to the handling of the Raaga.

I find it difficult to explain in words, however, the way he split the scale 
into pieces and traversed makes the song feel completely different from other 
"Sivaranjanis".

 


-- 
regards,
Vithur



 


      

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