|
Holiday Music
Review
'This holiday, come fall in love....with
yourself'
This is what producer-director Pooja Bhatt
conveys through the tagline of her latest
venture 'Holiday'. Set in Goa, this
'musical' is co-produced by Sujit Kumar Singh
and stars Dino Morea in the lead who is
surrounded by females all around ranging from
debutant Onjolee Nair to Kashmira Shah and
Nauheed Cyrusi. Gulshan Grover and Anahita
Oberoi form rest of the starcast of 'Holiday'
that has music by Ranjit Barot. When Neelesh
Misra and Mehboob are at the helm of lyrics then
one expects some out of the ordinary and
'different' kind of songs.
Since 'Jism', it has been no looking back
for Shreya Ghoshal. In 'Holiday' too she comes
behind the mike for as many as 5 tracks starting
with 'Khwahishon Se'. Caribbean music is
the base theme for this love song written by
Neelesh Misra that begins with Kunal Ganjawala's
voice. There is a beach-n-calypso feel
throughout this haunting number that qualifies
as a soft number in spite of its Caribbean feel.
For a change Kunal sounds different from his 'o
o oyoo' mode that has been so prevalent in
some of his numbers post 'Murder'. A
lyric heavy number it is decent hear, though not
the kind of material that breaks into the Top 5
charts.
Shreya Ghoshal pairs up with Vijay Prakash for
the second song in the album, 'Neele Neele'
that again begins on an extremely soothing note.
Just like 'Khwahishon Se', 'Neele Neele'
too revolves around the blue-sky, and why not
when the movie is set on the beaches of Goa.
Once again Neelesh Misra's lyrics are poetic and
credit should go to Ranjit Barot for coming up
with a tune and musical arrangements [look for
the mesmerizing chorus] that make this
unconventional number come quite easy on ears.
After hearing a couple of songs, one gets a
feeling that 'Holiday' is not going to be
one of your conventional Bollywood albums and
would instead have a musical score that would be
one of its kinds.
Ranjit Barot himself comes behind the mike for 'Aashiyan'
with Shreya Ghoshal scoring a hat trick. Written
by Mehboob, the song is a soft romantic number
with an Indi-pop feel to it. In fact those who
love Indi-pop genre would simply freak out on
'Aashiyan' but for those who have been bred
on 'pyaar-mohabbat-Bollywood-ishtyle-music'
would need some time for the track to grow.
Continuous use of guitar throughout the song is
of the kind that one hears so often in the pop
numbers! Though the track by itself has been
sung in a slow and subtle manner, it is the
musical arrangement that gives it a racy appeal.
That's the reason one is hardly surprised to see
an even more entertaining 'Remix' version
by DJ Nasha to come up towards the end.
Thankfully the remix never turns loud and
maintains the essence of the number.
Neelesh Misra written 'Tu Hai Bhatakta Jugnu
Koyi' may not have the kind of lyrics that
would attract the hoi polloi by dozens due to a
classy feel, but it is Shreya Ghoshal's
seductive appeal that pulls the number through.
A soft melodious number with music by Nandini
Srikar and Ranjit Barot that completely rests
itself on Shreya's vocals, it is situational but
should get some fire igniting on screen when
played. There is an English chorus in the
background that should have some impact when the
number appears on screen.
First song in the album that doesn't feature
Shreya Ghoshal is the dance track 'Move With
My Body' that has a mix of Hindi and English
lyrics. When Dominique Cerejo croons a track
then one can be sure that it is going to be a
highly westernized track. That indeed is the
case as this song by Neelesh Misra is full of
rhythm and attitude. Great choreography is the
call of the moment as it can elevate the effect
of the song exponentially. Expect a passionate
outing with 'Move With My Body'.
Graph of 'Holiday' continues to show an
upward trend with 'Raqs Kar Le' that is a
treat for all Shaan fans. Just like most of the
tracks of 'Holiday', even 'Raqs'
has an Indi-pop feel to it. One of the best
tracks of the album so far, even this number has
a mention of 'aasmaan' [is it intentional?].
There is a brief interlude by a female voice
also but there isn't any mention about the
artist on the album cover. The track [as most of
Shaan songs] has a campus feel to it and would
be identified by youth instantaneously.
Such is the effect of all the tracks in the
album so far that one expects nothing less than
good from the remaining songs of 'Holiday'
too. the song that follows, 'Tauba', needs to be
heard extremely carefully to catch its various
nuances. Rendered by Ranjit Barot, 'Tauba'
is a painful number that runs on an extremely
slow pace and gets into a retrospection mood.
Written by Mehboob, it is a difficult
composition to be created and hats off to Ranjit
Barot for playing the dual role of
composer-singer effectively. There is a faint
sound of flute accompanying the song throughout
and makes you go along with the song's flow. A
good situational piece!
In the end comes the 'Salsa' piece 'Sound Of
The Future' that is as authentic as it can
get and should look quite good on screen. Ranjit
Barot and Caralisa Monteiro come together for
this passionate piece that should definitely
turn out to be one of the highlights of the
movie.
'Holiday' is truly an unconventional
Bollywood musical score that scales new
boundaries. Hats off to Pooja Bhatt, Ranjeet
Barot, Neelesh Misra and Mehboob for coming with
a score that brings with it a new sound. Don't
be surprised if this becomes a hot 'Lounge'
favorite soon!
|