Oh no, not even in my wildest dreamsSong and BGM 'masters' ???Neways AR is a
master of both!
On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 12:00 PM, V S Rawat <vsra...@gmail. com> wrote:
I want to understand the connection between songs in a film
as against
BGM of a film. Does it, and how does it help in improving the quality of
the music and/ or the BGM if the same person composes songs as well as
BGM, or if they are composed by different persons?
Normally, I think, songs-directors are quite busy and a song has to
sound unique, different from his and others' other songs, songs should
have instruments and style in tune with the time and place of the movie,
the lyrics should reflect the psychological profile and social
background/ religion/ caste/ maturity/ education of the character
singing them on the screen, so songs in a film, I think, should be
requiring more efforts, and as they also get sold to public, this
commercial angle also requires more efforts to be put in the songs to
make people shell out money.
However, BGMs could be general. Human brains are not so much attuned to
find similarities between BGMs of two different films, the reason could
be that BGMs are sadly not sold nor made available to public so almost
all of us happen to get to hear them only once or twice when we see the
film and then we tend to forget them. Another drawback could be lack of
lyrics in BGM. Lyrics in a song act as place marker, an aid to remember
and repeat music, so when we memorize the lyrics, the song of those
lyrics gets etched in our brain, but as there are no lyrics in BGM, it
is mostly hard to memorize the BGM.
Thus, BGM could be general. A BGM director can even prepare a BGM bank
that he can keep on giving them to different films and people would mind..
So, I think songs and BGMs are quite different area, having quite
different requirement. Then, how would it help when a songs-master
creates BGM or when a BGM-master creates song.
In fact, I think a songs-master is more busy so he might not pay more
attention in creating the BGM for the film so it might reduce the
quality of the BGM if a songs-master creates them. Or, a songs-master
might tend to create BGMs as "lyrics-less songs", that is, in
independent, individual patches like he was creating a song for a
situation but just didn't add lyrics to them.
I want to know whether you think ARR should concentrate on creating
songs and should leave BGMs to be developed by others, :-) even though
we love BGMs or any piece of created by our man?
--
Rawat
--
regards,
Vithur