When tamil film director Gautham Menon (whose last film was Vinaithaandi Varuvaaya)
roped in Ilaiyaraaja for his next urban romantic flick, it triggered many expectations. Then, photographs
of his recording sessions in London with symphony orchestra musicians there
were all over facebook, which fuelled them more. When the first teaser of song Saindhu Saindhu released, the expectations half-crashed (for some people like me). But when the album is finally out, I realize that Ilaiyaraaja has other plans - of taking the audience on an enthralling journey. The director, Gautham Menon, must be commended
for giving so much leeway to Ilaiyaraaja (in terms of budget etc.) that
ilaiyaraaja could accomplish his vision for this score with such finesse. Telugu version (Yeto Vellipoyindhi Manasu) songs are also out although the lyrics are nothing great to write about. Here
is my take on album:
1. Kaatre Konjum/Koti Koti – Easily my most favourite composition of the album.
Reminiscent of the melodies Ilaiyaraaja belted out in 80s, this song belongs to
‘evergreen’ genre, though in reality, its genre can be called as
jazz+western-classical. Karthik’s rendition is top notch. Ilaiyaraaja fills up
the composition with lush orchestral counter-melodies, chord progressions and
punctuations. The unpredictable flow of instruments in 1st interlude, the saxophone, the gliding down from the stanza, the special flourish that the string
orchestra adds after 1st stanza – every moment has lot of meat.
The song completely demonstrates what Ilaiyaraaja can do when he is given a
philharmonic orchestra. Classy, modern and melodious!
2. Mudhal Murai/Atu Itu – Sunidhi Chauhan’s rendition is good. The tune sounds more
international to me. Ilaiyaraaja elevated the composition with marvelous
orchestration. I’ve been told Ilaiyaraaja used 10 cellos and 5 double basses in
this song. The World Music evoking interlude piece has a nice electric violin
by London based violinist Jyotsna Srikanth, while the stanza rides on
synth-bass. Ilaiyaraaja conceiving this kind of tune is a surprise for me and
he pulls it off with panache! Experimental song brilliant executed.
3. Saindhu Saindhu/Yedhi
Yedhi – The teasers of this
song sowed seeds of doubt about this album. While Ilaiyaraaja flings those
doubts out of the window with this delectable melody, yuvan’s voice sticks out
like a sore thumb for me. The Telugu version, by Shaan, is much better. But
Ilaiyaraaja weaves magical dreamy interludes on piano and string section. One
of the pleasant melodies, the pleasant-quotient depending upon how much you
enjoy Yuvan’s voice which, by the way, was Gautham Menon’s choice.
4. Pudikele Mamu/Nachaledhu
Maama – The
progressive-rock feel in the prelude made me wonder if this is indeed by a 70
year old man. If the theme of “class bunking students, college fun” made
Ilaiyaraaja do a “Botany Paatamundhi” in Shiva in 1989, then the same theme
gets updated into this composition in 2012. Exactly one-half of the song was
enjoyable for me – thanks to goose-bumpy guitar riffs and the tune. The song,
however, goes downhill in the 2nd half.
5. Ennodu Vaa Vaa/Enthentha
dooram – A trip back into
80s, this is a melodious composition set to a nice swinging rhythm. Karthik
again shines bright with his rendition while Ilaiyaraaja laces the song with
violins, clarinets, trumpets, cellos, metal-flutes – all creating a peppy riot.
Watch the way instruments take flight during 1st stanza –
delight! Ilaiyaraaja changes the canvas
altogether in 2nd half when synthesizers completely take over,
but keeping the melody of the song intact. However, the ‘type of synth
elements’ (kind of sounds) used could have been much better – sounds that live
up to the playfulness of the tune. Raaja had given such funky sounds earlier.
Nevertheless, it is a very catchy and playful composition that will reach the
masses.
6. Sattru Munbu/Intha
kaalam – An operatic melody,
this is another surprise that Ilaiyaraaja throws at us. Beautifully sung by
Ramya, this song has Ilaiyaraaja changing scales in main melody like only he
can. I really couldn’t predict where the song was heading to and yet, when it
completed the whole crescendo, everything sounded so much in place and perfect.
The usual orchestral embellishments charm us. Particularly, as the song
approaches its end, the choir slowly ascends in intensity competing with the
string orchestra, giving a great pathos effect.
7. Vaanam Mele/Laayi Laayi – This song begins like some of 80s Ilaiyaraaja songs – on
chorus. A warm melody wrapped in orchestral delight, one cannot stop marveling
at the scintillating arrangements in this song. The tune of the song itself
follows a fugue like formula – a motif keeps repeating. The interludes are
Grand! The stanzas however, are slightly predictable, if you have been
following Ilaiyaraaja’s work. Also, I felt this song could have been much
better if Ilaiyaraaja used the vocals of any other singer. Breezy this song
might be and soft his vocals might be – but still they don’t seem to add up as
1+1 =2 for me. Even Bela Shinde’s voice feels slightly discomforting when she
touches the high notes in the stanzas (Shreya Ghoshal missed). Nevertheless, as
a composition, it’s a beauty.
8. Pengal
Endraal/ardhamayyindhinthe – Another non-typical
Ilaiyaraaja song that spews lot of angst and Ilaiyaraaja used electric guitar
(I think) as his primary-instrument here. Ilaiyaraja goes completely rock in
this song. I have never seen him put in this much of into-the-face (metallic)
rock quotient in any of his songs and it indeed shows that Ilaiyaraaja is genre
agnostic. He just imports the genre, domesticates and leaves his stamp on it.
Listen to this song as “Ilaiyaraaja song” and chances are that you might
dislike it. But if you do have a flair for rock/progressive-rock genres, this
might be for you. This song took some time to grow on me. But, Yuvan’s vocals
did not impress me although the stanzas do sound better. I loved the guitar
riffs a lot. Adding this after writing the review and listening to this song a lot: This song is perhaps Ilaiyaraaja's tribute to Mahavishnu Orchestra and the likes. Just remove Yuvan's vocals and replace with a solo violin - it can become a classic. Compared to the romantic-ballad feel the other songs carry, this song comes across as unimpressive because of the culture shock but don't dismiss it. The guitar riffs, the fleeting raag pathdeep+keeravani-ish traces and classic rock elements tease you as you listen along. This song is probably the most envelope-pushing song in this album where Ilaiyaraaja defies himself.
This album has Ilaiyaraaja
going full-throttle on symphony orchestra. he uses instruments such as violins,
clarinets, bass, cellos, trumpets, oboe, Piano, French-horn, harp etc. to weave a rich fabric of musical canvas on which he skillfully paints his melodies of both eras – his ‘80s brand of melody’ as
well his current form of experimental-self. There are few sore thumbs such as the choice of Yuvan as singer etc., but the positives far outweigh the negatives. Wonderful tunes, eclectic mix of genres (rock, jazz, romantic,
fun, etc.), sweeping orchestrations are few of the many high-points of this
album. This album is not Ilaiyaraaja’s come-back, for he has always been
consistently giving good music. But it is one of those special albums in which
gets to do a bit of everything – please his fans, experiment with newer
melodies, bend genres, work with philharmonic orchestra, excel at arrangements
and impress the wider audience.
At an age when he no longer
needs to prove his genius, this 70 year old composer is still writing great
music replete with melody, orchestral richness, and intensity and is still
eager to try something new. Neethane En Ponvasantham is an accomplishment of
Ilaiyaraaja that vindicates this fact.