Writing
good harmonies takes a lot of hard work and practice. Most decent composers
have done harmony work in Indian film music. This starts from Salil Chowdhary
to many new composers of the 21st century. However, most composers
have reserved their harmonies for a predominantly monophonic Indian music to
select few films and top projects. The current generation music composers get
by with simple music composed using digital tools that are quite cheap today.
Most Bollywood music today lacks depth and commitment to create music that
requires a lot of formal education and training.
The primary
reason for harmonies taking this special treatment stems from the fact that it
takes enormous effort on the part of the composer to write them. As a result,
it is a technique that is delegated to the most expensive/prestigious projects
only.
Contrast
this with Raja, who considers writing harmonies and conducting them as everyday
business. At the extreme end of this equation is Raja’s harmonies for
completely undeserving films/songs. As this is a walk in the park for him, he
writes harmonies wherever he thinks that it is the best tool to elevate a
visual. The budget/prestige of the project is immaterial for him.
The goal of
this series is to shine the light on some of the brilliant harmonies that Raja
has written for films/songs that were disasters as the film got canned or did
not do well commercially and was forgotten. These are the hidden gems that
deserves research. It also is another facet of the mind of the musical genius.
As writing a harmony, or composing a song with a rare Indian raga is just about
the same for him.
Before we
start diving deep into these compositions, it is worthwhile to go back to the
post on harmony – ‘what’s the fuss about harmony?’ I will use terminology that
was introduced in this post some ten years ago. Please go through these 4 posts
to get a grounding on the basics of harmony.
http://geniusraja.blogspot.ca/2008/09/whats-fuss-about-harmony-part-14.html
We will
navigate Raja’s obscure harmonies in the chronological order and will cover
both songs and background scores. Special thanks to Venkateswaran Ganesan, who
created a special topic under his youtube channel to provide video clips for
this series of posts. These videos have high quality audio and the silly
dancing that go with the film videos will not distract you and the focus will
be on music. I have also used some of Navin Mozart (Ramdoss) background score
youtube clips of Raja he has created over the years.
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