awesome post. I njoyed reading it

thx
-Suresh

--- On Tue, 2/17/09, Chord <[email protected]> wrote:
From: Chord <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] Rahman  - The Quintissential Artist
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, February 17, 2009, 9:19 PM











    
            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.    




 

      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


      

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