We will
continue the PolyCaRe journey of Raja and will continue to focus on his interlude compositions in the
198x. As we made it very clear in the definition, the PolyCaRe arrangement not
only requires a background guitar melody, it also requires two call and
response melodies in the foreground played according to our rules of CaRe
arrangements.
Let’s first
start with the interlude of a very rare song Vaai Thiravaai from Nee Thodum
Podhu (Tamil 1984). This segment, which
is part of the interlude has guitar as its background instrument. Here is how
the segment is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Vaai
Thiravaai
|
Nee Thodum Podhu
|
1984
|
Guitar
|
Clarinet
|
Flute
|
- For the first two seconds, it is pure guitar plan and as the melody lines get fixed for the rest of the clip, as the background melody
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the 9 seconds, where for the two calls made by the clarinet for which the flute responds. This is a very strange combo for a CaRe arrangement and it appears experimental by Raja in this rate song. You will notice that the guitar melody in the background plays throughout the 9 seconds.
The
foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The
background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 4
foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background melody in these 9
seconds.
Let’s hear
the interlude of the song Vaai Thiravaai…
Let’s next
analyze two interlude segments from one song , Jilibili Palukula from Sitara
(Telugu 1983). This segment, which is part of the interlude has guitar as its
background instrument. Here is how the segment is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Jili Bili Interlude 1
|
Jili Bili Interlude 1
|
1983
|
Guitar
|
Synthesizer
|
Guitar
|
- This is a tricky composition to identify the parts. As the clip starts, you will notice that the Synthesizer and the guitar are busy playing their different melodies simultaneously, till you hear the guitar response to the synthesizer at 2 seconds.
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the 10 seconds, where for the four calls made by the synthesizer for which the guitar responds. You need to hear this segment a few times and take your mind off the foreground CaRe arrangement and you will be able to see the repetitive guitar pattern in the background . My guess is that Raja has packed so much that this is a tiny segment which he wrote and could not accommodate a few seconds of only the background guitar melody
The
foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The
background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 8
foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background melody in these 10
seconds.
Let’s hear
the segment from the first interlude of the song Jilibili Palukula…
Let’s next
analyze another interlude segments from the song , Jilibili Palukula from
Sitara (Telugu 1983). This segment, which is part of the interlude has guitar
as its background instrument. Here is how the segment is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Jili Bili Interlude 2
|
Jili Bili Interlude 2
|
1983
|
Guitar
|
Synthesizer
|
Guitar
|
- The first two seconds plays a guitar melody that will be the background melody for this segment.
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the 10 seconds, where for the two calls made by the synthesizer for which the guitar responds. The length of the call is quite long compared to the electric guitar response.
- What follows the 10 seconds is a typical Raja counter point between the synthesizer and the background guitar (you cannot anymore call this guitar play as a background instrument)
The
foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The
background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 4
foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background melody in these 10
seconds.
Let’s hear
the segment from the second interlude of the song Jilibili
Palukula…
Let’s next
analyze a famous interlude segment from one song , Neethane enthan pon
vasantham from Ninaivellam Nithya (Tamil 1982). This segment, which is part of
the interlude has guitar as its background instrument. Here is how the segment
is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Neethane enthan pon vasantham
|
Ninaivellam Nithya
|
1982
|
Guitar
|
Violins
|
Solo Violins
|
- The first three seconds plays a guitar melody that will be the background melody for this segment.
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the first 12 seconds, where for the two calls made by the Violins for which the solo violin responds.
- What follows the 12 seconds is a typical Raja counter point between the violins and the background guitar (you cannot anymore call this guitar play as a background instrument)
The
foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The
background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 4
foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background guitar melody in these 12 seconds.
Let’s hear
the segment from the interlude of the song Neethane enthan pon
vasantham …
Let’s next
analyze a famous interlude segment from one song , Rum Bum Bum from Michael Madana Kamarajan (Tamil 1989). This segment, which is part of
the interlude has guitar as its background instrument. Here is how the segment
is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Rum Bum
Bum
|
Michael
Madana Kamarajan
|
1989
|
Guitar
|
Synthesizer
|
Trumpet
|
- The first five seconds plays a guitar melody that will be the background melody for this segment.
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the first 10 seconds, where for the two calls made by the Synthesizer for which the trumpet responds.
- The foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 4 foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background guitar melody in these 10 seconds.
Let’s hear
the segment from the interlude of the song Rum Bum Bum …
The last
interlude in this post will be the song Senorita from Johnny (Tamil 1980). This segment, which is part of the interlude
has guitar as its background instrument. Here is how the segment is structured:
Song
|
Film
|
Year
|
Background instrument
|
CaRe - Instrument1
|
CaRe - Instrument2
|
Senorita
|
Johnny
|
1980
|
Guitar
|
Synthesizer
|
Violins
|
- The first four seconds plays a guitar melody that will be the background melody for this segment.
- This is a simple clip and our focus is on the first 8 seconds, where for the two calls made by the Synthesizer for which the violins respond.
The
foreground melodies can stand on their own feet as simple CaRe arrangement. The
background guitar melody makes them polyphonic and hence PolyCaRe. There are 4
foreground melodies playing on top of the constant background guitar melody in
these 8 seconds.
Let’s hear
the segment from the interlude of the song Senorita
…
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