Always has a way with his reviews- just love reading Qalandar! Miss him in NG. 



________________________________
From: Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]>
To: arrahmanfans <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, 5 May, 2010 4:31:40
Subject: [arr] Qalandar reviews Raavan

  
http://qalandari. blogspot. com/2010/ 04/music- review-raavan- hindi-2010. html

Music Review: RAAVAN (Hindi; 2010)



The music of "Raavan" -- supposedly a modern day re-telling of The Ramayana -- 
wasn't what I was expecting. Instead of a self-contained album confining itself 
to the world of the film like several other collaborations between composer 
A.R. Rahman and director Mani Rathnam (such as "Alai Payuthey", "Yuva", or 
"Kannathil Muthamittal"), this album hearkens to the music of the greatest 
Rathnam film of all, "Iruvar", in its anthologizing of almost an entire film 
music tradition. But whereas Rehman's mode in "Iruvar" was history, with each 
song representing a different Tamil film era (Rehman's genius ensuring that 
none of the songs seemed derivative or stale, as merely nostalgic numbers would 
have), the "Raavan" album cannot imagine such continuity: the Hindi film 
musical tradition is here, but in shards as it were. The cumulative effect of 
the album is thus somewhat disorienting, as musical moments from Bollywood's 
past -- a 1990s song here, a Punjabi beat
 there, a tapori jig elsewhere, even strains reminiscent of some who have 
followed in Rahman's wake, such as Mithoon -- occur when least expected. 
Fitting: for nothing so linear as chronology (even where history is refracted 
through Rathnam's eye) makes sense in the realm of myth (and the power of 
myth), even if, in the case of Rathnam's Ramayana, by virtue of being a 
contemporary tale, the myth is itself is heir to several histories...

The first song on the CD, "Beera", would have been more at home in "Yuva" than 
at least one song in that Rahman/Rathnam/ Abhishek Bachchan film (think of 
"Kabhi Neem Neem"): the soaring, clean instrumentation, the in-your-face 
lyrics, the urban vibe (that is to say, not music targeted at the 
self-consciously urbane, but music that takes its bustle and restlessness from 
cities) that was practically invented in Hindi and Tamil cinema by Rahman -- 
"Beera" shows that six years on, the Master still has it, and he doesn't need 
to repeat himself to show it. Gulzar's lyrics owe more than a few debts to his 
earlier work on the title song of "Omkara", but musically the two are as 
different as can be; and if the lyrics of "Beera" are nowhere near the equals 
of those in the earlier song in terms of epic grandeur and the sort of 
myth-making this sort of "hero" song cries out for (although Gulzar shrewdly 
uses the word "Beera" ("brave"; or "warrior") as a refrain for
 entire lines of song, almost seeking to obviate the need for any other 
poetry), musically the solid and assured "Omkara" cannot match "Beera" in 
fleetness of foot or deft touch. And if this emphasis on charm seems a bit 
incongruous in a film named after Hinduism's most famous villain (or, from the 
perspective of Dravidian nationalists, its most vilified hero), perhaps it 
tells us something about the film: virtually all of the album's quintessential 
"hero" songs are lighter, more upbeat, than its dark, fretful love songs. A 
quibble: at just a shade over three minutes, I wish it were longer -- Keerthi 
Prakash, Vijay Prakash, Mustafa, and Rahman's vocals didn't begin to satisfy 
me, giving this song the air of a tease.

Its opening fifty seconds are reminiscent in tone of Anwar's "Symphony in 
Blue", but "Behne Do" then veers back into a more traditional direction (this 
track is about transporting love; not the victim of society at Anwar's core), 
combining a conventional tune-structure with the mood of "Dil Se Re" (Dil Se). 
Over a decade on from that unsatisfying number, though, Rahman is now more 
adept at composing testimonials to hopelessly overwrought desi love in a 
semi-Western orchestral setting. Think of it as the frontier between "Dil Se 
Re" and "Satrangi" from the same film (certainly singers Mohammad Irfan and 
Karthik seem to think so, with their Sonu Nigam-inspired vocals) -- while I 
doubt "Behne Do" will ever rise to the level of the best neo-Sufi love song in 
Bollywood history, Rahman's integration of the Western orchestration into a 
completely Indian emotional landscape bodes well (in the past, his attempts 
along these lines have more often than not been
 unsuccessful) . Ultimately, though, the song, splendid in itself (except for 
the fact that not for the first or last time in the album, Rahman relegates his 
own vocals to the background), suffers from the presence of "Ranjha Ranjha" in 
the same album, almost as if two different attempts at fulfilling director Mani 
Rathnam's brief have been preserved in the same album. "Behne De" isn't 
completely subsumed by the later song's spell, but what is its own is poorer. 

With respect to "Thok de Kili" a real pity that the album's most politically 
daring lyrics -- turning on childish rhymes between nails (killi), a common 
Indian street game (gilli), and of course, the national capital (in lines 
reminiscent of the 1857 battle-cry "Delhi chalo!", itself appropriated decades 
later by Subhash Chandra Bose for his rebel Indian National Army) -- should be 
housed in the least impressive musical number. Its certainly early days for me 
and this song yet, and it is perhaps the most inaccessible (and deceptively so) 
of the album's songs. But while the instrumental portions have a chocolate 
velocity to them that is hard to resist, the vocal portions (by Am'nico, 
Sukhvinder Singh, and Rahman himself, although one is hard-pressed to make out 
anyone but Singh) drone on without getting anywhere. Gulzar's daring 
appropriation of the rebel trope for some of contemporary India's least popular 
political militants (Abhishek's "Raavan"
 character has long been rumored to have Naxalite antecedents; the stinging 
criticisms of Delhi's neglect, and references to the color red, appear to 
provide confirmation) , deserved better. I'm curious to see if the Tamil 
version will showcase this song's music to greater advantage.

The folly inherent in predicting which number in a Rahman album is going to 
stand the test of time in my iPod playlists is not going to prevent me from 
nominating "Ranjha Ranjha" as my favorite song from this album. Rekha 
Bharadwaj's chorus-refrain is addictively catchy, but insistently and urgently 
so, and no less mournful for it -- a worthy metonym for a song that re-treads 
old ground about love being both blessing and curse, loss of identity and 
derangement, slave and master, and -- not coincidentally given Raavan's theme 
-- kidnapper and captive. Thanks to Gulzar, who is at his best where, as here, 
he borrows bits of folk songs and poetry to use as a springboard, the lyrics 
are that rarest of things in Hindi romantic numbers: fresh. The song's urgency 
-- devoid of aggression -- is crucial in rescuing the song from the merely 
conventional, far removed from the strains (too familiar to place with 
precision, in too unfamiliar a setting to be placed),
 left over from other songs, other musical moments wafting in and out of this 
seductive yet unsettled number. Who knew that a khichdi everything from 
Nadeem-Shravan's mediocrity (often by means of Javed Ali's callow-sounding 
voice); Sufi-kitsch the Bhatts specialize in; the generic urban sound of 
countless "male bonding" songs; held together by the promise of intimacy always 
suggested by Rekha Bharadwaj's voice; could combine to yield an ambience so 
compelling?

I'm not a huge fan of Rahman's very slow Hindi numbers, but "Khili Re" is the 
way Goldilocks would have liked it: just right. Rahman gets it right, first, by 
using a female solo (most of his slow misfires are male solos, such as Bombay's 
"Tu Hi Re" (Hindi)/ "Uyire" (Tamil); and second, by keeping things simple for 
the first minute and a half with restrained instrumentation accompanying Reena 
Bhardwaj's delicate voice. Just when you begin to think the song might have 
trouble sustaining interest over five minutes, tabla beats (of a decidedly 
traditional dance bent) break into the song, inflecting this song with a 
structure and balance it might not otherwise have had, even after it has 
returned to Bharadwaj's vocals. Over all, the purity of this song is 
reminiscent of some of Rahman's earliest works (such as "Dil Hai Chota Sa" from 
"Roja"; or "Karuthamma"), and while it is too polished to completely blend in 
with that company, it is heartening to encounter
 Rahman's continued readiness to compose work in a decidedly minor vein, 
especially nowadays, when the combination of the Oscar for "Slumdog 
Millionaire" and the fact that (unlike in Tamil, as even the far-from-great 
Vinaithaandi Varuvaaya will attest), he makes music in Hindi mostly for Big 
Films, threatens the mellower pleasures his music affords. 

"Kata Kata Bechaara Bakra" has to be the most rambunctious, fun, Rahman number 
in quite some time, a wedding-song that reminds the audience there was one (far 
more lewd) in the album that brought Rahman India-wide renown ("Rukmini Rukmi" 
from Roja). Despite all the throwback fun -- the backup vocals, the percussion, 
and the speed all might have been transposed from the era when Rahman unleased 
Kathalan on us, while the lyrics are clear kin to those in "September Maatham" 
(Alai Payuthey)/ "Chori pe Chori" (Saathiya) -- this song is not fluff. In any 
film that purports to engage with the Ramayana, the question of marriage has to 
loom large; and while I don't know if this song is set at the wedding of the 
purported Ram and Sita-characters, the conch shell-sounds that punctuate this 
track never allowed me to forget that this film is supposed to re-imagine an 
epic, that something cosmic is in the air. That extra dimension, unncessary in 
the analogous songs
 from Roja or Alai Payuthey, is also expressed in Ila Arun's vocals, which take 
this song into a more traditional (and surprising) place, the North Indian 
"household" women's songs that are now virtually extinct in urban India (but 
not, apparently, for Rahman, whose "Genda Phool" (Delhi-6) is also in this 
vein). In a little over five minutes, distinct Indian spaces -- the urban 
South, the North, and the western deserts it is impossible not to think of when 
confronted with Arun's voice -- bubble up and vanish. This song (like its 
mythical progenitor) has geography on its mind. [My one reservation: while my 
non-existent grasp of Tamil will mean that I'll miss Gulzar's lyrics in the 
Tamil version, I can't help feeling that language's more definite consonants 
and springy rhythm will do greater justice to the mood of this number than 
Gulzar's playful lyrics; I mean, could "Kummi Aaadi" (Sillunu Oru Kaadal) have 
been nearly as much fun in any other language?]
 


      

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