http://www.musicindiaonline.com/l/27/s/movie_name.7816/
and i thot it was ARR track released in telugu??!!!??
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http://www.musicindiaonline.com/l/27/s/movie_name.7816/
and i thot it was ARR track released in telugu??!!!??
kbee, you have an excellent site.... Can i ask u a question. How come ARR albums are cheap whereas other albums seems to be little bit expensive? Any reason? And how did Desam go compare to Swades?
I will defintley place some others since you seems to be distributing in US. Thanks for the website. Hope people in TFM would start buying from ur site and recommeding it to other ppl. too.
Thanks a lot for the feedback. We do have lot of CDs in our collection than in our website. We are trying to add, but since the no. of products popup on daily basis is lot (between tamil, telugu, hindi, remix cds and dvds, we get about 10 new product / day, but only add the most import 3 or 4 to the site).
Why ARR albums are cheap compared to others - simple, because it sells a lot, so we buy in bulk, so we get cheaper rate.
Comparing Desam and Swades, we got 100 CDs at first lot of Swades vs 5 CDs of Desam. We still have 1 or 2 Desam, but we already placed repeat orders for Swades few times, not because hindi songs are better than tamil, but simply because the hindi market is more.
There is a new Shankar Hits Songs DVD from Ayngaran released. I am not sure how many times we will go out of stock, because this is THE expected DVD from thousands of Tamil ppl, because all Shankar movies so far are from ARR and Shankar-ARR have done magic in silver screen.
Thanks again for your feedback.
yo man..do u have arr's old releases such as Duet,uzhavan,pavithra,indira,etc etc???
I definitely have Indtra and Duet. I think I also have pavithra, but will confirm today. I dont have Uzhavan, but I do have ARR hits and will see if they have any uzhavan songs.
Will update the CDs with picture today.
yo man..u DUET cd has how many tracks???! is it original cd man??
Added Duet.
http://dvdunlimitedonline.com/shop/p...oducts_id=2330
This is original CD from Saregama.
Thanks
kbee
Bose - Definetely a nice album ....
But i feel Tajmahal has stolen the thunder from Bose -Of course the genre is different ....
to kbee...great :D:D .. but do u have the original cd which has all 13 tracks???im looking for taht! :(
I find it mystifying. The online reviews so far are excruciatingly noncommittal, the buzz here is limited to mostly one-liners, most of them from the indefatigable dinesh2002. Why is this?
Bose is not a Tamil film, that's one obvious answer. Benegal is no darling of the masses, might be another. Also an overall jadedness has set in, audiences today are spoiled for choice and their stimulation thresholds have risen too high. Only very potent star/director/composer combinations can hope to get a reaction out of them - and even then not invariably so.
Which is a pity, since the more I listen to Bose the more I think that this is a champagne and confetti occasion. Finally an album that not only fully satisfies at all levels, but, more important, successfully delivers a new template for Indian film music, a model that melds the Indian soundtrack with the Hollywood one. We get the best of both worlds: the songs and the score, both in one swanky package, something to blissfully decode over months of listening time. One hopes that The Rising, and other ambitious films, will further evolve this model, with perhaps Indo-classical suites, jazz fusion tracks....the sky is the limit.
Bose is not the first, Sandeep Chowta's Company was a stab in the same general direction, the same composer's Time even more so. The more recent Black also attempted something similar, but none of these felt as complete, generous and fecund as Bose does. Every track on this album glistens with the attentive care, thought and research that Rahman has obviously lavished on this project, every sound feels new and fresh. The Bengali flavour that Rahman expertly works into the score is so appealing that I'm convinced that he should immediately do a few all-Bengali albums, perhaps with Rituparno Ghosh. And as always Rahman keeps the best, most rousing, songs for himself :-), delivering them with that combination of passion and glamour that is inimitably his. On a side-note, whenever I hear him sing I wonder when oh when will he work with Youssou N'Dour, the two being, for me, the best (not so much technically, as emotively) male singers in the world today.
So is this an all-out rave, do I have no reservations? Well, I must lament the lack of an Indian instrument in the orchestral passages, an indigenous thread woven through their Western fabric would have greatly added to the already high stature of this accomplishment. If we're to make our contribution to the body of Western-influenced filmmusic, then bold fusions must be attempted. But I'll note that this observation is based on poor-quality online audio, and there may be a subtle Indian presence there that I'm not discerning now.
Some months ago on this forum I argued that Rahman's commercial and artistic success were plateau-ing. What is my take on this, post-Bose? I've been pondering this ever since I heard the first thrilling sample of Azaadi online, and I think I'd say now that Rahman-fans should cautiously rejoice. Commercial success may still not be forthcoming (thanks to the jadedness that I mentioned above), but Bose successfully staves off the spiralling commercial/artistic decline that besets most great composers at some point or another. On this evidence Rahman's energy is in fine fettle. I'm not backing out on the claims I made for competing composers like YSR/VS/HJ in the South and Amar Mohile and others in the North, all of whom, I believe, are doing fantastic work (do listen to Mohile's exquisite Tanha from Gayab, the flute solo at 4:08 is the most achingly beautiful in recent memory). But, happily, Rahman continues to show what he's made of. In the end it's not so much about personalities, it's about music. If all these composers can goad each other to greater heights then music is the ultimate winner. We have some exciting times ahead of us, hold tight!