Humko Tumse
Pyaar Hai Music
Review
Till about a few years back long titles were in
a vogue and every second movie belonged to the
romance genre. 'Hum Ko Tumse Pyaar Hai'
belongs to the same category. Launched a few
years back, its production came to a standstill
due to the sudden demise of its director Bunty
Soorma. Vikram Bhatt took over the reins of
direction to complete the remaining portions for
this Ali Morani, Bunty Soorma, Karim Morani
production that is now ready for release and
stars Bobby Deol, Arjun Rampal and Amisha Patel
in lead roles. The musical 'jodi' of Anand Raaj
Anand and Dev Kohli come together again for HTPH.
If you have loved the mushy romantic 'shuddh
bhartiya' tracks in the 90s and the early 2000s
then you would also love the title song 'Hum
Ko Tumse Pyaar Hai' by Kumar Sanu, Alka
Yagnik and Anand Raaj Anand. The song doesn't
try to break any new grounds and sticks to the
basics with melody holding center stage. Yes,
you have heard such tunes at least 1000 times
before, so why not make it 1001. After all, it
works! And when there is love then there is
sadness as well, especially when the title song
itself belongs to the romantic genre. That's the
reason why [as expected] a sad version too
follows suit, this time without Kumar Sanu.
A song reminding of the Nadeem Shravan
compositions from the early 90s, 'Chori Se
Dil Ko' is the second romantic track in
succession and makes for a decent hearing. It's
Kumar Sanu again doing the honor and what
strikes about the song is its smooth
arrangements that maintain a good tempo without
making too much noise. The song won't be lapped
up by the 'cool' generation of the youngsters
who have been living on Kaals and
Salaam Namastes and Dhooms and
Chocolates, but those who still like the old
world romance would not mind giving it a
hearing.
Third track in the album goes a few years
further behind in terms of treatment and rhythm
and from the first note itself is a bore. One of
the rarest of rare songs to have Udit Narayan
completely disinterested in the proceedings, the
duet completely lacks fire and just doesn’t rise
up the occasion. Inspite of Alka Yagnik joining
for the duet, 'Kaise Tumhe' is about a
guy trying to tell his lady love about his
feelings for her. Well, this number is not
exactly the best way to woo a girl!
Rajasthani music fused with Bollywood melody
[that takes inputs from the song 'Kaise Tumhe']
forms the nucleus of the 'Music Part'
that appears next and by the look of things
should appear good on screen. Surprisingly when
the base music of 'Kaise Tumhe' didn't
sound too exciting in the vocals of Udit Narayan,
it works well when it comes as a background
chorus!
Udit Narayan and Alka Yagnik come together again
for 'Bajne Lage Hain', an old fashioned
love duet that is sure to make way for a popcorn
break when it appears on the screen. OK, so Udit
Narayan is better this time around but the tune
and lyrics just do not have in them to keep a
viewer seated on the screen while it is on.
Nope, this is the second song in a succession
that bores you out while threatening to make you
loose interest in the remainder of the album as
well! Skip this one!
The singing couple unites for the third time in
a row for 'Ye Mehandi Ke Boote', that
doesn't sound too encouraging at the inlay card
level itself. Listening to the song brings the
worst fears come true with the track belonging
to a genre that has been forgotten long before.
A situational track about a lady in a dilemma
while deciding about her love, it just doesn't
gel well with the current taste of the audience.
Babul Supriyo too joins the fray with his
rendition of 'radha-shyam', 'vrindaavan'
and stuff alike but not to much avail.
When there are artistes like Sukhwinder Singh
and Sapna Awasthi credited on the covers, one is
sure that a folksy number would follow. Based on
Rajasthani folk music, 'Dhola Aayo Re' is
exactly what one expected and is a kind of
number that does get popular in the interiors.
The album ends with 'Tere Ishq Mein Pagal',
a 100% conventional routine composition that
brings the album to a jerky halt. Udit Narayan,
Alka Yagnik and Sapna Awasthi come together for
this supposedly romantic track that fails to
evoke any feeling of love whatsoever. Ignore it
at your convenience!
In the start one could listen at least a couple
of songs from 'Hum Ko Tumse Pyaar Hai'
while enjoying the old world charm but the
subsequent songs didn't have enough ammunition
even while considering that they were composed
years back. Not a great musical followup for
Bobby Deol whose Barsaat's music has been
selling well even today, HTPH is avoidable.
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