Thanks Anil.  Much appreciated!  Look forward to your thoughts too.


--- In [email protected], Anil Nair <rhythmca...@...> 
wrote:
>
> Couldn't agree more Chord.
> And noticing your posts over the past few days ..I can't but help 
comment
> that ARR's music also seems to be extracting some amazing 
thoughts/feelings
> (in the form of these writings) from you :-).
> 
> Not just you - I have seen a spurt in people putting down their 
feelings as
> posts. Truly its ARR's artistry thats causing all this :-)
> 
> I enjoy reading every bit of it ...so keep it up ..
> 
> -A
> 
> On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 7:49 AM, Chord <purev...@...> wrote:
> 
> >   As a teenager, I used to visit a local fine arts museum through
> > school trips and with family. There was a Picasso painting there
> > that I always used to gaze at but never really appreciated it 
until
> > one day, several visits later, it finally "hit" me. Then I fell in
> > love. As I was thinking about this memory, this experience, it
> > dawned on me how this experience in some ways parallels another 
more
> > contemporary experience.
> >
> > There is a distinction between arts and fine arts. Film music is
> > commonly commercial and weighs mostly on entertainment factor. For
> > example, if you look at the music of SEL, they have a very
> > entertaining, uplifting style of composition that's very 
celebratory
> > in nature. It's one of the reasons why I like them a lot. Their
> > music is instantly likeable, catchy, makes you feel positive. Yet,
> > their music also sounds fresh and not stale. Some other good MDs 
out
> > there also follow this example.
> >
> > With Rahman by comparison, the additional factor in his music is 
his
> > dabbling into the finer arts in terms of his compositional style.
> > There are splashess of Western classical, Indian classical, jazz,
> > folk in his music laid out more in depth and elaborated than any
> > other MD's works. When I hear a great Rahman composition, I find
> > more subtlety, more refined beauty in the sound, the arrangements,
> > the melody hits you very differently than a piece that's instantly
> > likeable and catchy. Hence, why we often need repeated listens for
> > the song to finally "hit" us due to the deeper layers and us as
> > listeners being forced to acoomodate to the new musical directions
> > rather than assimilate to an existing one. Of course, many of
> > Rahman's songs are also instantly accessable and catchy, but more
> > often than not, there is this finer arts aspect to his music that
> > makes his scores very special.
> >
> > Sometimes his songs evoke images of a Picaso painting, a Leonardo 
De
> > Vinci sculpture......striking, yet subtle, booming yet modest,
> > divinely beautiful yet subdued. Rarely is his music ever flashy,
> > gaudy, obvious. It's the subtlety, the refined beauty of his songs
> > overlapping into the finer arts category that really sets him a 
world
> > apart. But, keep in mind, not everyone has the sensitivity to
> > appreciate this in his music. Those music listeners who are
> > interested in only the obvious, the flashy, will not appreciate
> > Rahman's finer compositions, the finer layers, the deeper sounds, 
the
> > small ornaments. And the amazing thing about Rahman is that you
> > cannot label or categorize him as only one type of composer. At 
the
> > drop of a hat, he can create a racy, flashy piece of music that 
will
> > send the charts on fire. In the next instant, he can wear Mozart's
> > or John Williams' hats and create a Monet-esque or DaVinci-esque
> > refined sound sculpture worthy of display in a future musical 
museum.
> >
> > Rahman is not just an entertainer, he is a true artist in the very
> > finest sense of the term.
> >
> >  
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> -A
> http://viewsnmuse.blogspot.com
>


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