Showing posts with label Nucleya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nucleya. Show all posts

Friday, 19 January 2018

Bollywood Song of the Week: Paintra / Mukkabaaz

Paintra: Divine / Nucleya / Vineet Kumar Singh   

Yes, for the second consecutive week, we pick Paintra, the anti-establishment, rebellious dance/rap addiction as the Bollywood Song of the Week. Check out why we chose the song last week at this link.

Catching Mukkabaaz this week at the theaters also helped me place the song in a new light. Ironically, though a notable, offbeat and catchy soundtrack, the use of the songs at key moments where silence would have done better undermines the film's key moments.

Rachita Arora's beautiful music does convey mood, but the repetitive use of the songs as the movie background score rankles. Just silence would have worked so well at key scenes. So this is in context of the film's audio-visual impact.

Do give the Mukkabaaz soundtrack a listen, an interesting experience for music lovers looking for something variant from the usual Bollywood template. 

Paintra fits right into the texture, mood, and context of the movie, placed at the right place and very astutely picturized. 

Friday, 12 January 2018

Bollywood Song of the Week: Paintra / Mukkabaaz

Paintra: Divine / Nucleya / Vineet Kumar Singh   

Listening in to the soundtracks of Padmavati,1921Kaalakaandi, Mukkabaaz, among others was an enthralling soundscaping experience this week.

Padmavati, Kaalakaandi & Others  
At the time of writing, the two released songs of Padmavati are further proof of Sanjay Leela Bhansali's incredible musical sensibilities. Ghoomar is probably the best of the Shreya Ghoshal-Bhansali collaboration. What festive spirit, rousing chorus, percussion, combined with vintage Ghoshal vocals! Ek Dil Ek Jaan in the same space as Aayat from Bajirao Mastani (2015), the touch of soul lingers in this brief, mellow turn.   

The 1921 soundtrack is one-tone despite irregular intensity, flowing in one melancholy, drawn-out, lovelorn, redundant Aashiqui 2 (2013) space, minus the latter's magic though.

Kaalakaandi looks to repeat the iconic ribald creative fountain of Ram Sampath's Delhi Belly (2011) with little success. Incidentally, debutant director Akshat Verma wrote Delhi Belly, deja vu is the norm here. There are sparks like the zany jazz trumpet loudness in Jive With Me and a scruffy fun male chauvinist statement in the Swagpur Ka Chaudhary rap, the rest misses the mark.


Social Statements & Wall Lizards 
The Mukkabaaz songs are relishingly odd, relevant, raw, engagingly reminiscent of Sneha Khanwalkar's Gangs of Wasseypur (2012) soundtrack.

Apart from Paintra, a Nucleya contribution, Rachita Arora's music impresses with the love disparity talk in Mushkil Hai Apna Meil Priye, the counterpunch outburst Bahut Hua Samman, beautiful classical heartburn in Bohot Dukha Mann and the intense scuffle chronicle in Haathapai.

Also, check out the unconventional take on the wall lizard in Chhipkali! Yes, that's how offbeat this one goes. A strong folk background and Director Anurag Kashyap's rebellious stamp give the songs a grizzled, rusty texture.

Paintra
Ravi Kishan's dialogues punctuate Paintra, a dance/EDM number that talks about how lobbying and leaning on influence goes a long way in India. In rapid chit-chatty rhythm, we get social truths rolled out one after another. It is a story seldom told in a Hindi film song. The barb on TV news channels is cleverly camouflaged:

ye TV waale bina jaane
badbad karna inka kaam hai
ladkar badhna tera kaam hai
udte jaa
udte jaa  

(these TV people blabber 
without reason,
their work is to destroy, 
to fight and get ahead is your duty, 
keep flying
keep flying)  

Sample the knockout lyrics at the fag end: 

aur gundagardi chal gayi jiski
wo neta ban jaata hai
phir desh mahaan chalayega
ye netaji kehlaata hai

(whose hooliganism pays off
becomes a political leader, 
then he will make the country great, 
he is called a supreme leader)

The pleasant surprise is the film's hero, Vineet Kumar Singh's lyric-writing talent here. Immediate, relevant and mashed to a pulsating dance pace, Paintra hits the right offtrack notes to individual revolt.