Straight qn to ARR?
Should there be only one 
tune, when a lady is praying to the God? Why does Rahman repeat the same
 tune be it in Lagaan, Swades, Jodha Akbar (interestingly all Ashutosh 
Gowarikar films), Connections and now in Komram Puli? 

--- On Thu, 15/7/10, Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] Blog review of Puli
To: "arrahmanfans" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, 15 July, 2010, 4:24 AM







 



  


    
      
      
      http://life- n-coda.blogspot. com/2010/ 07/komaram- puli.html



It’s been a long time since Rahman played to the gallery. He tried it in Blue 
and other recent ventures of his only to be caught between experimentation and 
cacophony. With S.J. Suryah, Rahman did get back to the balance that he used to 
maintain in his hay days of commercial cinema where the songs regardless of the 
experimentation were always foot tapping and catchy, pleasing everyone. Though 
the audacity of the director to don the grease pant was frustrating, it was 
sheer pleasure to witness them on silver screen with all the gloss and not the 
mellowed down situational ones where the songs were pushed to the background. 
But with Komaram Puli we will get to see Pawan Kalyan so the visual segment of 
the song will surely be entertaining. And the songs? Lets get to them one at a 
time.

Power star (Vijay Prakash, Tanvi Shah)
Techno songs are always not easy on ears. With Rahman at fore we know with the 
kind of experimentation (ring tones, car crash et all) it is bound to be 
bizarre. It starts with the drums beating to the well known police theme in 
Arabic influence fused with synthesized sounds creating and eery feel 
whispering ‘power star’. It’s a cocktail of sorts after that, when the ream of 
lyrics patronizing the ‘Yuva star’ moves from the electronic feel to folkish 
style, backed by the genre trademark ‘organ’. Any hero worship song from Rahman 
is not complete with the “hai hai” sound and here it is combined with “blue 
blue” cry, reminiscing us of the blue theme. The beauty of this cocktail is 
that after getting the grasp and when the familiarity sinks in, the peppy 
adulating lyrics and the intricate modulations especially whenever Vijay 
intensifies the mood as he acclimates to the top scale, grabs our attention.

Amma thale (Naresh Iyer, Swetha Mohan)There is the celerity and then the 
melody. It seems to be repeating in loops. So what is this song? Doesn’t it 
sound like it was poorly tacked together? If you stop right there, then you are 
going to miss something special. As we take that notion away, the celerity 
becomes a breathless travel into the nooks in whips, pacing our heart only to 
be soothed by the melody. But the melody now doesn’t remain only that; it 
becomes more of a funny retaliation to the rambling antecedent and the fun 
increases with the curt notes of the violin & trumpet. So what if the celerity 
is borrowed by “thee kurugiya” song from Kangalal Kaithu Sei with heavy accent 
from “markandeya” of New; when each complete note of that saranam layered using 
different instruments, attention turns to the variation that Swetha brings to 
the note joined later by Naresh. Though Naresh intensifies the tune to a great 
level, the “na nana na”
 hampers the flow, only to be saved by the faithful trumpet with which Naresh 
swiftly transforms the song into a classical one at the coda.

Maaralante (A.R.Rahman & KMMC Choir)
Maaralante is a double treat in that it will become the anthem of Andhravalas 
and as a song that will become the identity of Power star for the rest of his 
life. What is with Rahman and patriotic songs? When he sings them, even the 
average tune raises goosebumps and with lyrics which highlight the importance 
of change, the impact is even higher acclimating to greater heights when he 
touches the top note for rendering “maa telugu thali” backed by the cherubic 
choir; reminding us the “mannipaya” of VTV effect. Rahman takes the song to the 
next level when he increases the tension using carefully arranged instrument in 
the other half of the song, which when we thought was the best it could get to, 
knocks us out with the superb placement of Chandrabose’s punch line as the 
finale.

Maham Mahamaye (Javed Ali, Suchitra)Sometimes we just have to hand it over to 
the guys behind the microphone and let them enthrall us. Even though Maham 
Mahamaye seems to be Shankar Mahadevanish, Javed Ali gets into the groove and 
comes up with a rendering that is packed with passion and gusto. The 
consistently flat Suchitra is beautified with disciplined singing that falls 
between zeal and childish joy. The alternation between staccato and the melodic 
note of the pallavi that the singers perform in the later part of the saranams, 
the majestic symphony in violin and the confluence of these two towards the 
finale ends the song in a content note.

Dochy (Shreya Ghoshal, Lady Kash 'N' Krissy)
Gangster blues seems to have become police blues for this club number. The 
rustic & erotic mood initiated by Krissy carries over to Shreya Goshal which 
she blends well with the wiggling setup of the notes leaving us in trance. The 
way she renders lowering notes of “aashalatho anveshanatho aapai aapai adigai” 
and then climbs higher only to touch down safely into our heart, makes us 
forget that this is just an item number. The Arabic orchestration with organ 
sneaking in between at equal intervals under the aegis of synthesizers takes us 
to an elevated state; not to mention the firing sounds and the prickling guitar 
that fills the entirety of the song.

Namakame (Chitra, Madhushree, Harini)Should there be only one tune, when a lady 
is praying to the God? Why does Rahman repeat the same tune be it in Lagaan, 
Swades, Jodha Akbar (interestingly all Ashutosh Gowarikar films), Connections 
and now in Komram Puli? Lack of novelty apart, the choice of different voice 
whenever there is a change in the notes and different combinations of them 
makes the age old song intriguing and when Chitra takes over with an alaap 
backed by mouth organ like sounding trumpet we are sent back to the Duet days.



    
     

    
    


 



  





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