First of all, I do not support piracy.  I wanted to wait until Tuesday before 
hearing the songs and eventually writing a review, but the weaker part of me 
got the upper hand this time and I caved in.  Please forgive me.  I assure you 
that I did order the CD from Amazon and awaiting that in the mail.

If there's a distinct trend that I see in ARR's music over time, it's his 
reduced emphasis on musical adventurism and acrobatics and increased emphasis 
on subtle musical forms within a composition, often perceived subjectively as  
"not living up to his own standards".  I don't agree with that notion since 
it's ARR who recreates his own standards with each release, just like 
destroying his own ego before a compositional session.  The burden of 
responsibility to recognize this is up to the listener, who may be challenged 
and confounded by expectations and biases, which is normal and natural.  Again, 
these are trends only and just from my observational standpoint...nothing is 
black and white or exclusionary.  This trend may be a function of two forces:  
1)Age (emphasizing more of a gestaltic perspective) 2) Progressive evolution as 
part of a unique artist whose mindset is bent on conceptual expansion and 
really trying hard to avoid being typecasted, escaping from his own set trails 
to form new and distinct roads.  The music of VTV is a major step in AR's 
evolutionary process as an artist who's never content with the status quo, or 
even his own previous success.  Remember, it's the artist over the entertainer, 
and in VTV, it's the pure artist within ARR, even beyond musician, that is in 
the driver's seat. I will not comment on the lyrics since I don't understand 
Tamil.

1) Omanna Penne:
Steady and soothing.....a composition that oozes with spiritualness and 
introspection.  I love how AR juxtaposes the Western rhythms with the Carnatic 
raagas first by the female voice, and weaving throughout the stylistic 
Nadaswaram, whose roots are deeply carnatic, but expressed so universally in 
this track.  Wonderful singing by Benny and the Nadaswaram ending is surely a 
page from the Rehna Tu continuum outro.  Nothing fancy in this composition, but 
the feeling left behind is extrenmely elevating and cleansing.  Fantastic 
start. (8/10)

2) Anbil Avan:
ARR at his playful best.  He must have had a lot of fun putting this track 
together.  There is nothing heavy or mindblowing about this track, but what 
makes it work for me is the joyful innocence in the melody and the very 
interesting sonic arrangements using a Shehnai type sound juxtaposed with a 
church organ sound.  The musical interlude that has this also has some very 
nice, quick chord progressions that defy banality.  The melody sticks easy and 
would be a fun song to dance with. (7/10)

3) Vinnathaandi Varuvaayaa:
Wow......what a minimalistic impact!  Minimalistic impact is something that I 
have been missing from Rahman's ouevre in recent films, but here it is, in its 
full glory and form.  Using a minimalistic sound template for a title song is 
quite bold and outside the box, but boy does it work for me!!!  The acoustic 
strings (guitar? harp?) along with vibes and small bells create such a unique, 
peaceful ambience in this song that transports me into a dreamlike world.  
Beautiful string additions in the mid section only add depth to amazing vocals, 
chords, and heartfelt emotions in this gem, but likely to be underrated track.  
Delicate, subtle, dreamy, ambient, soft, restrained, soothing, warming.....I 
can go on and on.....  Again, a track doesn't have to be complex and 
adventursome to be powerful....this is the genius of AR....he can create such a 
powerful ambience using minimal quantity. (8/10)

4) Hosana:
There is no other composer in India who can arrange better than AR.  In this 
song, many of AR's strengths are showcased.....sound structure, layered, thick, 
yet uncluttered arrangements, symphonic textures, haunting melody, soothing 
ambience.  The sound layers are so clean and crisp....that beautiful strumming 
acoustic guitar is so nice!!!  Also worthy of metion is the high toned Scottish 
flavored flute and the subtle mandolin rhythms in sync with the main rhythms, 
punctuated by the pulsating string sections.  The female choir with the angelic 
expression is one of the most beautiful choir sounds I've heard. This song 
sticks to you and won't let go.  A complete masterpiece IMO that is one of the 
best songs that ARR has composed in recent years. (9/10)

5) Kunnukkul Kannai
Another playful techno oriented track with some pleasing electronic 
arrangements.  The unique feature of this track for me are the string quartet 
type rhythmic accents throughout that give this youth song a very Western 
classical feel.  Relatively simple by composition and sound, but again, a nice 
dance number with good melody.  Rahman not living up to his standards on this 
one?  Well, that's up to you to decide, but it's an enjoyable one for me, 
though If I had to pick my least favorite in this soundtrack, it's this one.  
(7/10)

6) Mannipaaya
I was looking forward to this song ever since I knew Shreya and AR would be 
singing it, a romantic duet.  The song has everything I could hope for in a 
romantic duet....breathtaking melody, beautiful soundscapes, sophisticated 
arrangements, gentle ambience, subtle symphonic artistry.  I love the piano 
backdrop and so many of the symphonic instruments can be heard in 
isolation...oboe, clarinet, tympany, flute, etc.  A very subtle masterpiece in 
my opinion, that can only be appreciated by those with a certain musical 
sensitivity and emotional open-ness, and of course, who like mushy romantic 
numbers!  The melody is quite drawn out with long contours, so it's not a song 
that's easily melodically remembered the first time go, but certainly sticks 
with you with repeated exposure.  Strengths of this track...mood, delicate 
arrangements, subtle artistry, certain melodic sections, innocence, sincerity.  
One of the album's highlights for sure and I hope it's picturized well (9/10)

7) Aaromale
Wow.....just wow!!!  AR takes a page from the Pink Floyd era, but nothing here 
is lifted or copied.  Sensual, stylistic, clean acoustic guitar playing along 
with passionate and mindblowing vocals by Alphonse make this track simply 
mindblowing.  What is so unique about this song is again, minimalistic impact 
with sound, instruments, but also chordal architecture.......there are only 2 
alternating chords being used in the entire song!!  Can you believe it?  The 
chorus part which begins with "Susti Susti" harks on raaga Bhimpalas to create 
a magical effect....imagine...juxaposing a 2 chord bluesy guitar riff with a 
raaga based melody.....only AR....only AR....  The added percussions increasing 
the tempo only add to the intensity and sinisterness to this pathbreaking and 
out of the box track.  And man, what an ending...the way the vocals fade 
out......oh man!!!!  The ambience created is just out of this world....it 
leaves me stunned, mesmerized, in awe. (10/10)!!!  

General highlights of this album include minimalistic impact, originality, very 
sophisticated and classy arrangements, incredibly strong ambience and sound 
quality, and soothing influence.  I don't think anyone will be complaining 
about sound issues in this album like we saw for Blue, as ARR I think paid a 
lot more attention to that aspect this time around, perhaps keeping our "Blue" 
feedback in mind???  The soundtrack also has a wide range of styles, sounds, 
musical forms that keep you interested.  Because of the highly international, 
situational, and somewhat unconventional nature of the songs, these will only 
be appreciated most with time, post movie visuals, and by those who are most 
open minded about music in general.  Those who only like the antara-mukhda type 
film songs will find the listening experience to be awkward and just too 
esoteric.  Also, except for the first track with carnatic raagas, most of the 
rest of the album is void of obvious ethnic Indian sounds/styles/forms, 
consistent with the international and more universal musical approach.  This 
again, may be a turn off to some.  Like all new ARR albums, esp. ones like this 
that have some unconventional and new elements, it will take time to grow.  

My overall rating....9/10.  A distinct highlight of ARR's career...one of the 
very finest musical packages you will find anywhere in the world today, not 
because of its complexity, wizzardry, or dynamics, but for sincerity, ambience, 
mood, minimalism, subtlety, and overall spiritualness.  A nice instrumental 
track addition would have made this album perfect for me.

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