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Thread: IR News and Other Titbits

  1. #21
    Senior Member Seasoned Hubber
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    Here's another link saying "Cheeni Kum" is complete and ready for release:

    http://www.b4utv.com/showtime/gossip/061109ab.shtml

    thanks,

    Krishnan

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  3. #22
    Senior Member Veteran Hubber rajasaranam's Avatar
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    Krish,

    Can you please remove the google link in ur post. the page has stretched horizontally due to it

    I saw the full song 'Ethetho jenamathil' from TTLS in Surya TV yesterday. Have they released the movie in Kerala The picturisation and visuals were pretty decent.

  4. #23
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    Done Rajasaranam!

    thanks,
    Krishnan

  5. #24
    Senior Member Veteran Hubber rajasaranam's Avatar
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    Harmony magazine Article/interview of Raaja
    http://harmonyindia.org/hportal/magazine/magazine.htm
    Entire Article and interview from Raaja.com site
    http://www.raaja.com/latest.html

  6. #25
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    Rajasaranam, I dont see the entire article in http://www.raaja.com/latest.html. Where it is? Can you please post the entire article in this thread?

    Also, www.raaja.com site says "Cheeni Kum" audio is released. (under link "Film Projects - 14.09.06 " (contents of that page is last updated on 29/11/06)).

    thanks,

    Krishnan

  7. #26
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    krish, here it is. Dont forget to see the rare pic of Maestro with Pavalar (I'm seeing it for the first time).

    The inimitable musician Ilaiyaraaja - Interview by Harmony Magazine

    Melody Raaja


    If you’ve forgotten how love, the sensual languor of it, feels like, listen to the music of Cheeeni Kam. Three of the four song sequences form a seamless, musical dialogue, a throbbing blend of 1970s cabaret, jazz and symphony.

    Inimitable Ilaiyaraaja. He’s scoring for Hindi Films again after a hiatus following Hey Ram in 2000, for Ram Gopal Varma’s Shiva 2006, and ad filmmaker ‘Balki’ Balakrishnan’s Cheeni Kam. The film stars Amitabh Bachchan as a 60-something man who falls in love with a younger women. Ask the 63 year old Tamil composer how he feels about the concept, though, and all you get is a non-committal shrug. Nothing more.

    You really can’t count on Ilaiyaraaja for tasty sound bytes. If you get through the front door of his spacious house in the Chennai suburb of T Nagar, you meet a monkish man who is courteous – but not in the least forthcoming. Slight of frame, he is dressed in starched white Kurta and Veshti and sports a shaven head. The prasad he has just received from a temple evidently animates him much more than the interview, where he speaks in quizzical manner which conceals more than it reveals. Listen to this: “You have to make people thirst. You don’t have to give them water.”

    Perhaps words are superfluous to this austere man whose life is defined by music. In a career spanning 28 years, Ilaiyaraaja has composed over 4,500 songs and provided background music for more than 840 films in various languages. He has won three National Awards for Best Composition (for Tamil film Sindhu Bharavi in 1986, and Telugu films Saagara Sangaman and Rudra Veena in 1984 and 1988). He was the first Asian to compose a full symphony for the RPO in 1993, called Symphony No. 1. Ilaiyaraaja has also composed three fusion albums blending western classical music a with carnatic ragas – the most recent, Thiruvasakam in Symphony (released in 2005), presents verses from Thiruvasakam (ancient Tamil shloka by sage Manikavachagar) in musical form, synthesizing Indian and Western classical traditions.

    Quite a journey. Rasayya (Ilaiyaraaja’s real name) was born in Pannaipuram village in Theni district, Tamil Nadu. When he was just a child, he began making music on a talc box with strings, with his stephrother Pavalar Varadarajan. After he finished class eight, he dropped out of school and continued singing with Varadarajan, a member of Communist Party. Along with elder brother Bhaskar and younger brother Amaran, they would travel through villages, singing propagandist lyrics.

    In 1968, at the age of 25 Rasayya (now calling himself Raaja) set off for Chennai to find work. There, he took lessons in Carnatic classical music, and was introduced to Western composers. Eventually, Raaja got his break with producer Panchu Arunachalam’s new film, Annakili. He also got a new name – Ilaiyaraaja (Youthful Raja) – as Arunachalam thought ‘Raaja’ was too old-fashioned.

    The music of Annakili, released in 1976, was wildly successful, with Ilaiyaraaja melding Tamil fold with rich Western orchestration. “Bach’s influence is all pervasive in his music,” Bombay – based musicologist Sheryar Ookerjee once said. “Ilaiyaraaja so integrates Indian and Western idioms that the seams can hardly be noticed.” He also started the practice of composing the tune first, and letting the lyrics come later. Stories and themes were changed to fit his music. Though detractors claimed this process contributed to the downslide in quality of lyrics, it didn’t stop filmmakers flocking to this door. For his part, despite insider talk about his ‘bluntness’, Ilaiyaraaja likes to steer clear of controversy. He has nothing to say about filmmakers like Mani Ratnam (for whom he composed the landmark scores of Nayakan and Dalapathy), veering to the younger A R Rahman, who got his start in the music business playing keyboards in Ilaiyaraaja’s orchestra and has acknowledged Ilaiyaraaja as a ‘clean-living’ role model. But comparisons between Rahman and Ilaiyaraaja still abound. “He is very talented,” Ilaiyaraaja says about Rahman. He adds, “success or failure is not connected with discipline or sacrifice. Without sacrifice, there is no discipline or achievement. You have to spare time for practice every day.” A question about a typical day in his life is parried with, “What is a day? Sunrise and sunset? No one can live their life on their own routes; life is given to us and will take us on its own route.” Such observations are found aplenty in Ilaiyaraaja’s eight books – Sangeetha Kanavugal (Musical Dreams), Vetta Velythanil Koti Kidakkuthu (Thrown in Bright Sunlight) and Vazhiththunai (Wayfarer’s Companion) are the most popular. Spiritual in tone, they are a guide to living using venba, couplets in the old style of Tamil poetry. A disciple of the 20th century sage Ramana Maharishi of Thiruvannamalai (where the Sri Arunachaleswarar Temple is located), he nevertheless says: “God or Guru, world or nature, all these matter only in a superficial sense. Inspiration is inside everyone; it just needs to be tapped.”

    Photography was an inspiration – once. Owner of five Leicas, Ilaiyaraaja has an impressive collection of still-life, portrait and landscape photographs. But he put away his cameras with the advent of digital photography. He’s also stopped reading newspapers as they have “nothing new to say, except violence and more violence.” Ask him about other interests and you get a terse “I really don’t need to seek hobbies.”

    It’s not like he has the time. Ilaiyaraaja is in his studio every morning at 7.30 am and doesn’t leave before 9.30 pm, sometimes working till midnight. A non-smoking, vegetarian teetotaler who likes simple, non-spicy food, his meals come from home; his only vice, glucose biscuits! At the studio, he works at a blistering pace – writing music, working with his orchestra, recording and mixing lyrics.

    After each assignment, Ilaiyaraaja likes to take off to the Thiruvannamalai temple to recharge his spiritual batteries. Another favorite destination is Tirupati. But even when he’s traveling, music is never far away. Once, when he was on the road, inspiration struck. Ilaiyaraaja got down from his car and sat under a tree to write music – the result was the score of Chinna Thambi (1991), which went on to become the highest grosser in Tamil cinema.

    “In the end, it always comes back to music,” says the composer, sitting staidly in an antique chair in his living room. A large swathe of studded cloth, a traditional decoration for elephants during festivals, hangs high on a wall; a statue of Devi draped in silk sari sits in a corner. Pride of place goes to the grand piano that gleams ebony and ivory; an altar where the family can worship.

    Indeed, the music has become a legacy. Wife Jeeva, a simple, shy woman, and Ilaiyaraaja have three children – all have made music their career. Sons Karthik Raja and Yuvan Shankar Raja, who live with him, compose for Tamil films and daughter Bhavatharini, who just got married last year, is a singer and composer. “My father is the one who made Tamil music famous worldwide,” says a proud Yuvan shankar. “Such a man is an inspiration to any new composer.” Ilaiyaraaja couldn’t be happier. “God has put my children in the saagar of Sapthaswaraas [the ocean of music],” he says. “They are blessed.” Another blessing is five year – old grandson Yatheeswar [Karthick’s son], “a wonderful gift from God”. Ilaiyaraaja is an indulgent grandfather, playing the Harry Potter theme patiently for Yatheeswar on his piano.

    Harry Potter? Yes. From contemporary Western music to Eastern melodies, Hindustani classical to techno, all kind of music moves him- but he can’t abide remixes. “I liken remix to test tube baby,” he says, uncharacteristically scathing. “Who does the music really belong to?” He’s also unimpressed with most ‘modern songs’. “If a song cannot remain in your head and in your heart, what kind of song is it?”

    You can’t say that about Ilaiyaraaja’s compositions. “He has achieved a hundred times more than any of us,” late composer Naushad once said. Despite such praise, Ilaiyaraaja claims he feels no joy when he listens to his own work. “I find mistakes I have inadvertently made,” he confesses. “If I was satisfied with my work, I would be sitting at home.”

    - with Arati Rajan Menon and Amita Amin-Shinde. Harmony magazine - November 2006.

  8. #27
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber MADDY's Avatar
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    saw the starting pooja for a film called "Dhanam" on KTV.......

    Cast - Sangeeta(Uyir fame), Prakash Raj, Ramesh kanna
    Director - G.Shiva
    Cinematography - Jeeva
    Music - Ilayaraja



    best part was, in the function K.Balachander putting Garland on IR and IR putting Garland on K.Balachander .........

  9. #28
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    Maddy, age reduces ego

    The story of Chinnathambi's music is new to me. Previously, I had heard that he composed all songs in 20 minutes in the studio.

  10. #29
    Senior Member Veteran Hubber rajasaranam's Avatar
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    First 3D animation movie in Thamizh 'Inimae Naangathaan' is due to release soon from the Ad's in Thinathanthi. As usual IR would have taken the film to new heights with his BGM scores as he did in Pandavas. Success of this movie may pave way for more animated movies in future in thamizh.

  11. #30
    Senior Member Veteran Hubber rajasaranam's Avatar
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    aruvi,

    the news on Chinnathambi is a fiction from the writers mind i presume. AFAIK from the interview of P.Vasu i read at those times - IR was on the way to airport and he called up PV to come along with him in the car till ariport. The drive from his home to airport took around 40 to 50 mins and within that time as PVasu kept narrating the sequences and storyline of Chinnathambi Raaja came up with the tunes then and there and they were finalised.

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