Hi All
In youtube somebody has mentioned that the real MD for the film Athma is Karthikraja only and not IR.
is it true ?
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Hi All
In youtube somebody has mentioned that the real MD for the film Athma is Karthikraja only and not IR.
is it true ?
Only ninaikkindra paadhayil by Karthikeyan. Rest all IR only. Karthikeyan was "officially" rumoured to have done 1) ninaikindra paadhayil(awesome effort by thambi karthikeyan by the way) 2) pandiyanin raajiyathil 3) hev vanjikodi from ponnumani 4)amaidhi paai bgm and kaalapani bgm partly 5) sollli vidu from amaidhipadai.
Remember AV giving a glowing review for Aatma..it was sleeper hit..it also had a energetic commie song Vidiyum Pozhudhu by Mano..for some reason I tend associate this song with Jagada Jagada from the Geetanjali.
Prathap Pothan has to be one of the highly underrated director when it came to hit combos with Raaja.. MDM/Aatma/Vetri Vizha..some strike rate that.
Mumbai Ramki told me that Janu's stunning VILAKKU VAIPPOM... ATHMA is
karthik raja's work appadinnu!
1) Appadi paakarthu - Only orchestration
2) Enge en kadhalai - Devathai - Only orchestration
3) hichiki hichiki - Paa - Full ( and some pieces in Paa)
I feel Kr has done many under IR , which may never know - I suspect meetadha oru veenai entire orchestration is by him ..
Great,I am totally enjoying DHONI.
Hope to see Raja and GVM give me an album like mouna ragam or agninatchathiram or ninaivellam nithya type.
woke up this morning with agninatchathiram.
3 female solos in this album, plenty of piano, violin and guitar.
may be an album like AGNINATCHATHIRAM (though it has usage of synth).
I am dreaming of an album of that class, where lots of piano, violin, guitar, indian classical rags... 3 female solos, 2 duets, one male group song! Stunning work AGNINATCHATHIRAM.
Pakkalaam!
high expectations from GVM!
http://www.finderskeepersrecords.com/discog_fkr051.html
"Known by adoring fans and devotees, throughout South India, as Chinna Kuyil (Little Nightingale) on account of her expansive vocal range and crystaline sweet voice, the uplifting and surprising sound of K.S. Chithra is, for many, best exemplified by the early plugged-in-pop she made in the 1980s with the man/machine who first introduced her to the Tamil film industry, Maestro Ilaiyaraaja.
There are few records you will hear this year that combine the sounds of a child's choir, a DX7 bass line, three types of drum machine, a mariachi trumpet cry, a resampled forty-piece orchestra and an electronic bass line that takes the moog taurus by the horns and rides into the Indian summer. There is probably less chance of hearing a vocal performance so confusingly dazzling that it instantly detracts from the previously aforementioned wish list combination ofbizarre instruments but for those intrepid enough to dig a little deeper and take a detour due East, pick-axing right where Lollywood meets Bollywood - then prepare to be rewarded with a double, triple and quadruple whammy!
For odd pop fans with bad concentration spans, no musical staying power, or commitment issues then perhaps these schizoid A.D.D. arrangements will push the right buttons and recharge your batteries. For some of you, records like this only existed in your dreams.
Often locally discussed behind the limelight of her wider continental contemporaries such as Asha Bhosle and Noor Jehan it is almost impossible to find adequate comparison to K.S. Chithra. Try taking the yearning vocal energy of Turkey's Selda and the falsetto range of Morricone's best Italian choirs, add the playful existentialism of Poland's Urszala Dudziak and the cinematic pedigree of Asha then sprinkle some saccharine Jane Birkinisms on top and set your turntable pitch at plus 8 while you dream of Dots And Loops era Stereolab or a Malayalam Mantronix - alternatively just buy this first-time compendium and press play.
This compilation focuses on a small and select handful of Chithra and Ilaiyaraaja's developing collaborations from the formative years of their relationship between - 1986 and 1991- a vibrant time where analog recording techniques and digital technology first overlapped and Chithra, as a developing vocalist, adapted to the the sounds and arrangements of a classic maverick composer pushing the boundaries.
Following our previous compilation of the earlier Ilaiyaraaja film music with our Solla Solla compendiums Finders Keepers Records continue this relationship with the original rights holders, to bring these rare Tamil recordings the a wider global audience - never previously released on CD and considerably rare on their original vinyl pressings."