Hi Gopal
Can you please post the source of this dozen list?
OR is this your personal selection?
Thanks
Raghu

--- In [email protected], Gopal Srinivasan <catchg...@...>
wrote:
>
> 
> 
> His master's voice
> A.R. Rahman deserves all the awards he has been getting for Slumdog
Millionaire. But he has
> done better work before. Here are a few of his soundtracks that the
Oscar jury should lend
> their ears to first.
> 
> Roja (1992): The big breakthrough album that instantly created waves
across the nation. But
> what it did more importantly was having Mani Ratnam switch to Rahman
from Illayaraja. The two
> would go on to do some of the best film music produced in the
country. From Chhoti si asha to
> Roja jaaneman, the film was a bravura feat from a 25-year-old
genius. No wonder Roja was
> featured on Time magazine's 10 best soundtracks of all time.
> 
> Song for the feet: Rukmani rukmani
> 
> Song for the soul: Yeh haseen vaadiyan
> 
> Thiruda Thiruda (1993): One of Rahman's few Tamil soundtracks that
got heard in Mumbai and the
> rest of India, thanks to MTV, which couldn't have enough of Thee
thee and Chandralekha. The
> other wonders were the buddy song Kannum kannum, the immensely
chatty Veerapandi kottayile and,
> of course, the brilliant Raasathi, where Rahman uses only voices and
a choir in the background
> to create the desired effect.
> 
> Song for the feet: Chandralekha
> 
> Song for the soul: Raasathi
> 
> Bombay (1995): The Rahman-Ratnam magic continued with this film,
where Rahman recorded his
> first of the many translated soundtracks, where the tunes remained
the same and the Tamil
> lyrics were converted into Hindi. From the intimate Kehna hi kya to
the chaotic Kuchi kuchi
> rakamma, Rahman showed his versatility yet again and by picking Remo
for Hamma hamma, he
> stressed again — after Baba Sehgal and Shweta Shetty in Rukmani
rukmani — that he was not
> afraid to experiment. The masterpiece of the album was arguably the
Bombay theme.
> 
> Song for the feet: Hamma hamma
> 
> Song for the soul: Tu hi re
> 
> Dil Se (1998): Yet another Mani Ratnam film. Yet another gem of a
soundtrack from Rahman. While
> Chhaiyya chhaiyya initially overshadowed every other song in the
soundtrack, one possibly
> couldn't keep songs like Jiya jale and Satrangi re under wraps for
too long. With Jiya jale,
> Rahman first showed his keenness to give Lata Mangeshkar a reason to
sing again. Chhaiyya
> chhaiyya, of course, also saw the advent of singer Sukhwinder Singh,
who would become Rahman's
> constant collaborator. One listen and you don't need to be a genius
to figure out why Spike Lee
> used the song in Inside Man.
> 
> Song for the feet: Chhaiyya chhaiyya
> 
> Song for the soul: Ae ajnabee
> 
> 1947 Earth (1998): One of Rahman's most underrated soundtracks, this
one was period yet very
> contemporary, slow yet very moving. While the kite-flying song Rut
aa gayee re was the instant
> hit, the quaint cycle song Dheemi dheemi grew with every hearing.
The other gems in this Deepa
> Mehta film — the harmonium-driven Banno rani and the smouldering
paean of pain Raat ki dal dal.
> 
> Song for the feet: Rut aa gayee re
> 
> Song for the soul: Dheemi dheemi
> 
> Zubeidaa (2001): Shyam Benegal's first film without composer Vanraj
Bhatia had Rahman producing
> one of his best works. Whether it was the chirpy gypsy song Main
albeli or the pristine love
> song Hai na or the moody Mehendi hai rachnewali or the liberating
Dheeme dheeme, this was a
> must-listen collection. But what took the cake and the entire
confectionery was Lata
> Mangeshkar's So gaye hain with the grand symphony structure.
> 
> Song for the ear: Dheeme dheeme
> 
> Song for the soul: So gaye hain
> 
> Saathiya (2002): Shaad Ali's remake of Mani Ratnam's Alaipayuthey
not only had the same shots
> and the same cut points, it had the same soundtrack, it's just that
Gulzar's lyrics took the
> Hindi album to Level Next. While Sonu Nigam shone in the title song,
Adnan Sami made his entry
> into Rahman territory with the breezy Aye udi udi. The hidden gems?
Chupke se and Naina
> milaike.
> 
> Song for the ear: Oh humdum suniyo re
> 
> Song for the soul: Saathiya saathiya
> 
> Yuva (2004): If Thiruda Thiruda was a trailer of what Rahman could
do to a youthful soundtrack,
> Yuva was the full picture. While the two Vivek-Kareena songs Fanaa
and Khuda hafiz used trance
> and jazz to the hilt, the Abhishek-Rani songs Kabhi neem neem and
Dol dol had a very rustic
> lilt to them while the Ajay-Esha numbers Badal and Dhakka laga buka
rode high on percussion.
> The film didn't deliver but the soundtrack was wow!
> 
> Song for the feet: Fanaa
> 
> Song for the soul: Kabhi neem neem
> 
> Swades (2004): Ashutosh Gowariker helped Rahman be heard in the West
with Lagaan and the two
> stuck together for more great work. Swades was another Rahman
masterpiece starting with the
> stirring title song, the spiritual Yun hi chala chal, the joyous Yeh
tara woh tara, and the
> bouncy Saawariya.
> 
> Song for the feet: Yeh tara woh tara
> 
> Song for the soul: Yeh jo des hai tera
> 
> Rang De Basanti (2006): With new partner in rhyme Prasoon Joshi,
Rahman got super-chatty with
> RDB. From Khalbali to Masti ki pathshala, it all sounded like a gang
of guys having a lot of
> fun. The title track used Punjabi robustness to the full while Mohit
Chauhan's Khoon chala left
> us shaken and stirred. Plus the veteran Lata Mangeshkar's Lukachupi
and the newcomer Naresh
> Iyer's Rubaroo.
> 
> Song for the feet: Masti ki pathshala
> 
> Songs for the soul: Rubaroo, Lukachupi, Khoon chala
> 
> Jodhaa Akbar (2008): Could Rahman do a Naushad was the question?
Well he perhaps went one step
> further with a soundtrack which was both tour de force and yet very
tender. From the
> sword-hitting-sword beats of Azeemo shah shahenshah to the uplifting
Khwaja mere khwaja to the
> simmered In lamhon ki daman mein to the dulcet Jashn-e-baharaa, it
was an incredible musical
> trip.
> 
> Song for the ear: Jashn-e-baharaa
> 
> Song for the soul: Khwaja mere khwaja
> 
> Jaane Tu... Yaa Jaane Na (2008): After a slew of period films,
Rahman sunk his teeth into the
> Jaane Tu... score, peppering it with peppy songs like Pappu can't
dance saala, Nazrein milana
> and, of course, Kabhi kabhi Aditi. The title track sung by Rahman
himself again sees the
> composer go big with jazz and how!
> 
> Song for the feet: Pappu can't dance saala
> 
> Song for the soul: Kahin toh
> 
> The magic continues...
> 
> Well, the Academy and the rest of the awards honchos hopefully would
tune in to this one for
> their consideration next year, because Rahman's latest OST — Rakeysh
Mehra's Delhi-6 is one of
> his best till date and that's counting the other soundtracks on
these pages. From Masakkali to
> Dil gira dafatan to Maula mere maula to Genda phool, this is clearly
one of the crests of
> Rahman's career. And Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan enters Rahman's
world with Bhor bhaye...
>


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