Saturday, July 24, 2010

Khatta Meetha, Udaan - Music Preview

I had been waiting for a while to write this review. Well, you would understand my enthusiasm if you are up for some nutty, Ganpati-style songs. Well let's dive in....

Khatta Meetha (2010)
Music: Pritam

1. Nana Chi Tang---------------------------------------------- 7/10
I liked the song, I think it is pretty funny and has good beats. Now, you need to take this into perspective. You need to know the phrase Nana Chi Tang to really enjoy the song, and song uses the phrase in a perfect context in the song. The lyrics around Nana Chi Tang support the phrase well. Besides that, the song has good beats and I can totally see this song being used this Ganpati festival in India.

2. Sadke, Sadke (Remix) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7/10
Another good track by prolific KK. This song is an oddity in an Akshay Kumar flick, but Pritam does a good job in composing a more normal romantic track.There is hardly a difference between the original and the remix, so if you like one, you would like the other.

3. Aila Re Aila ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6/10 
This is totally horrible song if you listen to it just like that. But when you think, it would be so much fun to dance on this song during this Ganpati festival, it makes the song so much more fun to listen to. Plus, this song harks back to Kala Kawwa by Daler Mehndi. If you loved that song, you will love this one.

Final verdict: Not a good album, but are you up for some fun?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Udaan (2010)
Music: Amit Trivedi

Amit Trivedi has got a unique style of himself. If you listen to this album, and think about his previous compositions, it is hard to miss the pattern. He starts out his songs slow and leads up to rock style music. This album again has the same pattern, but again, does not do enough to impress anyone. In case you are a Amit Trivedi fan, you would like to listen to this album and find out for yourself.

Final verdict: No good.

Brownie point: Motumaster is a funny song. A lot of effort has been put in this song to do justice to it's lyrics and the lyrics are funny too. I do think this song has been composed very similar to Maharashtrian style devotional songs. If anyone could second my opinion, it would be cool to know what you think.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Lamhaa, Tere Bin Laden - Music

Lamhaa (2010)
Music: Mithoon

Considering the genre of the movie, the music is accordingly chosen for this film. There are no energetic and casual tracks. Most of the tracks are heavy in meanings and emotions. So, if you are looking for some soul-touching and 'serious' music, whether it be romantic or sad, this album is for you. Overall, a 6/10 album.

1. Rehmat Zara ------------------------------------- 6/10
This is a song, as far as I can tell, for guys only. It is more a 'call for help' kind of a song with good use of bass guitar and good rhythm. Cuteness factor or melody quotient is zero.

2. Madhno, Sajnaa --------------------------------- 6/10
Two exactly identical tracks. The only difference is the lyrics, the specific words used for the love interest. I am assuming Madhno uses more Kashmiri/native-language words and Sajnaa is a 'Hindi' version. The songs are really slow, but melodious and very long. If you liked Maula Mere Maula from Anwar, you might be in for some treat here.

3. Main Kaun Hoon ------------------------------------------------- 6/10
This is again a decent song which has a great resemblance to Strings kind of music, especially the title track of Zinda. It has not been sung by Strings though. If you dont know who sung it, and are up for some trivia, listen to the song and post who you think the artist is in the comments. I would say, somewhere in between the song, the singer's style is very evident, so it may be simple. Hint: Dr. ***** ***
Anyways, back to the song. The song is a little too long, and I think it takes a bit too long to get to the good part. By that time, the song has lost you.

Final verdict: Only the ones mentioned above have some potential of being liked. Can safely ignore the rest. The album borders on being good, without actually being one. In all the aforementioned songs, there is a common style: the songs pause for a second before the final encore, which is kind of cool.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tere Bin Laden (2010)
Music: Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, Dhruv Dhalla

A not-so-much-of-a-mainstream movie with goofy songs. Since the movie is supposed to be a comedy, the songs don't lend themselves to being much serious either. Nothing of great value here.

Brownie points:
  • Welcome To Amreeka, I Love Amreeka and all of it's remix versions are pretty much the same song. But it is a fun-can-listen-to-it-once kind of a song. Shankar Mahadevan's version is better of the lot. Further, the tune created out of telephone beeps is cute and Akriti Kakkar singing it out is even cuter. Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy have done this before in Karthik Calling Karthik.
  • Ullu Da Pattha - Ditto for UDP. Funny.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

One Bedroom Flat

One Bedroom Flat
Written By An Indian Engineer

       It has been a while since I have been moving around and been away from my dear ones. There are millions of such people out there. Owing to this fact, a few sappy and really weak emails make the rounds on the world wide web describing 'how pathetic our lives are away from our family, friends, society, culture, country'...depends, which version you are reading (We are somewhat to blame for this, since we always crave for sentimental, sensational stuff and plainly ignore the normal, good stuff). So here is my version, One Bedroom Flat, which hopefully will not be touching and kissing, but instead will be something which will help you forget the touchy-feely-clump-in-the-throat sadness.

Here it goes:

THE reality, that's it, reality has no adjectives.

     Suresh, a common guy, was the elder brother amongst the brother and sister, to his parents living with their parents in India in their single bedroom flat. A young and resourceful boy, like millions others around him and around the country, he was a recent engineering graduate. His parents were naturally proud of their son who had become an engineer with flying colors.
      Of course, Suresh and his parents had their worries over his education put to rest. Suresh was coming out of the academic bubble and entering the fierce arena of job hunt and earning decent wages. Suresh's parents were slowly aging and retirement was only a few years away. Suresh had to find a good job soon, or may be start a business. In either case, get on with money making.
      Being a decent engineer, he landed a job in a nearby factory as Engineer Trainee and began working on a shop floor, dealing with the machines and grime. Dirt, sweat, heat and long hours dominated his time at work. But a decent wage and the happiness of applying what he always had been dreaming to do, numbed his troubles.
      His parents were happy. He was not unhappy for sure. Life was going smooth. Then one day, one of his friends, Manish, called him up,
Manish: Hi Suresh, Manish here. Listen, what are you doing Friday evening.
Suresh: You know, my job, goes on till late, plus go to go work on Saturday.
Manish: Oh crap! You guys suck! Software industry rocks, we get the weekends (Blow# 1). Anyways, I will postpone my treat to you guys till Saturday evening. But listen, I got a chance to go work 'onsite' for my client. To New York. Can you believe it? (Double whammy)
Suresh: That's awesome dude! Congrats. Your treat better be a splurge. US tour, plus you'll be printing money, in dollars.
Manish: Sure! See you then.
       Suresh is happy for his friend. He realizes that one of his best buds will be not just out of the city, but out of country. But this is a temporary assignment. He tells his parents about it. They are happy for his friend. Weeks go by, Suresh continues with his life and then another of his friend flies out.
       As time passes by, Suresh makes progress in his career, but nothing too dramatic. Meanwhile, his friends, cousins, distant friends and not-so-much-friends keep on flying out like a flock of birds, as if sensing it is time to move on to better, warmer regions.
       Fast forward here: Suresh gets married, has two kids, his sister got married and moved to UK. Parents are aging.
       Friends are flying in and flying out of the country in the meantime, as if it was a commuter journey within the city. They are all posting incredibly beautiful pictures of Statue of Liberty, the Golden Gate bridge, Niagara Falls and the stunning natural and man-made landmarks of the western world. Girlfriends, wives, kids are hiking around, merrying at parties, in casinos, at bbqs. Some friend is biking in the woods, other showing off his Audi. Third shooting pictures with his Nikon "Ultra-Cyber-Blast ZX150" camera and so forth. On their frequent trips to India, they bring Suresh, caps and tees of the cities they were living in. Perfumes, body lotions, watches and what not.
        On the other hand, Suresh is still in his same job after many years, at a higher post than he originally started out still living in his one bedroom flat, unable to afford a better, slicker one and is continuously fighting off inflation. His parents pass away thinking their son didn't really make much out of his life. He feels he did not achieve much in life. His close ones write him off as being unambitious. Suresh is really sad in his life. He feels he did not fulfill the dreams of his parents of being richer than they were. But now it is too late to change the course. He is burdened by his responsibilities. He is deeply sad and trapped in his own life.

         Now, the million dollar question: Was Suresh's life worth at all? He started out in a single bedroom flat and ended up in a single bedroom flat. Most of his friends went on to better lives. He was not able to provide the comforts his friends achieved to his family. He got mired in his job and familial responsibilities. He was unhappy.

         This is my alternative story as a response to all the nostalgia-laden, emotional, Swades like stories that try to make us feel bad after many of us achieved their dream of coming to US or elsewhere in the western world. Who would want a life Suresh lived? Any takers here?

The Pursuit of Happyness....
Now, this is something that would have comforted Suresh and would have kept him happy. This is just a perspective on happiness.
1. Suresh never CHOSE to get a job that would have gotten him abroad. This was not going to happen for him. He had to DO something about it.
2. He had a loving wife and really nice kids. He was one of the rare people, who had a perfect and happy family. His wife never gave him a hard time over their fortunes.
3. Suresh was making steady progress in his career. Alas, his life in comparison with his friends, marginalized his hard work in his own eyes.
4. Little did he know, that the gifts his friends got him was all cheap stuff. Bought in bulk at Walmart, Costco and the like, despite being of poor quality and at a cost which Suresh could have afforded even in India, it's perceived value went up ONLY because it was a foreign label.
5. All the amazing snaps on the internet only made him FEEL less happy. In fact, most of his friends, even after living abroad and boasting about it in India, were only marginally happier than him. Because, we consume whatever we get. Once we are satisfied with something, all of us are at the same level of happiness.

The Moral of the Story is: Grass is always greener on the other side. Either you understand that it is a mirage, or BELIEVE that it is for real and move your butt to achieve it. Don't get sappy. Don't compare your life against others lives. There are millions of ways to be unhappy and an awful lot of people will help you stay unhappy by their consumerism and/or ambition. Happiness is just a perception away. ANYWHERE!

Hopefully you made it to the end! :)

Monday, July 5, 2010

Himesh is back! ...and then some more..

Milenge Milenge (2010)
Music: Himesh Reshammiya

Finally! The wait is over. Himesh is back with his original, nasal-twang laden music. Take it sarcastically, take it as his fan or loathe it. HR brings to us what he does best: music full of 'dard' and cheesiness. Of course, Milenge Milenge is for Himesh fans goes without saying, but watch out for a few other tracks with Sonu Nigam.


1. Milenge Milenge ------------------------------------------------------ 7/10
There are two versions of the same song .
Version 1 - Sung by Jayesh Gandhi, HR's disciple. This one has better beats and rhythm compared to the other. It is really difficult to discern Jayesh Gandhi from HR as they sing in exactly the same fashion. Good one. The female lead voice really doesn't matter, but it would have been good if Shreya Ghoshal had sung version 1 instead of version 2 and vice versa for Alka Yagnik.
Version 2 - This is good too, the only difference being it is sung by Himesh, which is not a bad option either.

2. Kuch To Baaki Hai --------------------------------------------------------- 7/10
This is the typical HR we all have come to know. Himesh comes back with his original howl and 'dard' in this song. There are 2 remix versions of the song. Both are bad compared to the original track

3. Tum Chain Ho --------------------------------------------------------------- 7/10
This one is definitely for Sonu Nigam fans. Pretty soft and soothing. Well, this is Sonu Nigam after all, we are talking about. The song begins with a very modern, chic tone followed by a melody by the one who sings it the best. Don't listen to the Unplugged version. That one is pretty boring.

4. Ishq Ki Gali ----------------------------------------------------------------- 6/10
In spite of being a Himesh track, this one misses the mark. Not that great. But if anyone out there is a die-hard fan of Himesh, not too bad of a track. Skip the remix.

5. Hare Kaanch Ki Choodiyan ------------------------------------------------  5/10
This track doesnt really deserve much attention, but I cannot help talking about it. This is a really, really cheesy track. Write it down: This track WILL be played in all the rickshaws, commuter SUVs, dhabas and Ganpati festival.

Couple of fun points:
I was very curious about this album, since it features HR's music during his heydeys a couple of years ago. It has Sonu Nigam and Alka Yagnik as playback singers. Who employs them now-a-days? All the loose ends come together, with the fact that this movie has been in production for over 5 years.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Raajneeti (2010)
Music:  Aadesh Shrivastava, Shantanu Moitra, Pritam, Wayne Sharpe

An eclectic collection of music, this album as a whole is passable. Not to say all the songs are boring but nothing too big to miss.
1. Bheegi Si ------------------------------------------------------- 8/10
This one by Pritam is the best one. It is pretty nice and romantic, and I would dare say, perfect for a romantic drive.

2. Mora Piya, Mora Piya (Twilight Mix) ------------------------------------------- 6/10
This is a sad song by Aadesh Shrivastava. Not great and requires at least a minute into the song to get into the soul of the song. If you last till then, you might end up liking it. There are two remix versions: Trance Mix and Twilight Mix. Trance is good. Twilight not.

3. Ishq Barse ------------------------------------------------------------- 6/10
This is an energetic song by Shantanu Moitra. It sounds perfect for a Holi party, the only difference being it has been shot as a discotheque song in the movie. Again, a borderline song, which may or may not please you. Skip the remix of this song.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And now it is the turn of music, that you feel like ignoring and you are so right about it.


Ek Second ..Jo Zindagi Badal De... (2010)
Music: Gulam Khan, Arvinder Singh, Anand Raj Anand, Sawann Donirya
Ooh! So 90s. Zindagi to nahi badli, par bore to bahut ho gaye!

Raat Gayi, Baat Gayi? (2009)
Music: Ankur Tewari
Aah! Jazz! But who listens to jazz?

Bolo Raam (2009)
Music: Sachin Gupta (Prince fame)
Ouch! A little more than ouch. Tere Ishq Mein is a decent song, but not great. Overall, this album does have a stamp of a better musician. But still, Ouch!

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Raavan, Krantiveer, Kushti, Road To Sangam - Music Review

Raavan (2010)
Music: A. R. Rahman


ARR is back. But not quite with a bang. The songs do carry his signature and only a few songs are just good enough.

1.  Ranjha Ranjha ------------------------------------------- (7/10)

Out of all the songs, Ranjha Ranjha is the only one that sticks. Has good beats throughout the songs. Javed Ali shines again for ARR.


2.  Thok De Killi, -------------------------------------------- (6/10)
It feels bad to not give a nod to these songs. So close to being really good.
Thok De Killi is very energetic with bass guitars and high tempo. Add Sukhwinder Singh to add additional spice to it. Also, this song has an interesting patch where it totally sounds like the instrumental from Rangeela.


3.  Behene De, Khilli Re ------------------------------------- (6/10)
Behene De is again a good song, except the part where the best part of the song comes a little too late and very briefly. This makes the whole song a tad too silent and slow.
Khilli Re on the other hand is an out and out melody. So this one is really only for those like truly melodious, classical style songs. It's peppiness quotient is zero.

Final verdict: After having coming up with gems like Roja, Bombay and Dil Se... for Mani Ratnam, ARR decided to take a break here. Not a memorable album.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Krantiveer - The Revolution (2010)
Music: Sachin-Jigar

Nothing is perfect and there was not much to be expected from this album anyways. Furthermore, debutant music duo Sachin-Jigar get only a slight opportunity at what they could do, since this album has just 4 tracks.

1. Khuda Mere Khuda ------------------------- (7/10)
The best song of the album and pretty good too. Not surprising when the leading singers of Bollywood are lending their voice. KK and Shreya Ghoshal do the job and do it well. Good track.

Another rock track in Bollywood: Lau Jali. But not good.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Kushti (2010)
Music: Tauseef Akhtar, Srinivas K.

Should anyone care? Of course not! But you can still check out ONE song from this album.
Dangal - Shreya Ghoshal's magical voice makes it worth an ear (Alright, I just made up the idiom). Decent enough. And not to forget, whoever this Sreenivas, the male lead playback is sounds an awful lot like S.P. Balasubramaniam. Nostalgic.

Another fun factor. Dekho Mere Gaon Mein by Abhijeet is so 80s, where it paints a picture of a serene town somewhere in oblivion.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Road To Sangam (2010)
Music: Vijay Mishra, Nitin-prem, Sandesh Shandilya

No clue what the theme of the movie is, the album is an incredibly big yawn!
Roll up your windows. Don't stop or look anywhere and hit hard on gas! Save yourself.