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Kannal Pesum Penne – A Playful yet … Moving Apology!

May 26, 2007

Song: Kannal Pesum Penne
Film: Mozhi
Lyrics: Vairamuthu
Singers: S. P. Balasubrahmanyam
Music Director: Vidyasagar

Mozhi is possibly one of the best movies to come out of Kollywood recently. With a refreshing story line and amazing talent from up and coming artists, it definitely made a lot of people take notice. My next selection is from this movie.

The situation goes as follows: Prithvi falls in love with Jyothika (who is deaf and dumb). In a casual remark, he mentions that he has a “imagined” voice for her. Hearing this Jyothika becomes furious and Privthi tries to cajole Jyothika to forgive him. A very sensitive and touching situation…

Vairamuthu has penned the lyrics well. He could have avoided the unnecessary “I’m sorry…” interludes, which become quite repetitive and kill the melody of the song. If some people find it cool, IMO, it is only because of our dear SPB… who renders each I’m sorry with such emotion and aplomb. But, still, could be avoided…

But if lyrics are akin to the body, the vocals are akin to soul. They bring a song to life. If so, it is little wonder why Vidyasagar chose SPB to sing this song. I think ONLY SPB can deliver this song with such a great emotion and elan… The man’s voice is sheer magic! I have heard singers who sing melodiously… but SPB sings melodious-er (for the lack of a better term). Top notch!

Vidyasagar has re-used his tune from a song that he composed for a Malayalam movie: Yellamaan in Sathyam Shivam Sundaram. That track was sung by Hariharan. Frankly I like that version “slightly” better (as it sounds much softer… which is how an apology should be made :P ) and Vidyasagar could have kept the same style in Tamil as well… Oh, well…

The tune has a very distinctive jazzy arrangement and has a blues touch to it — stylistically speaking. Well imagined! It is quite unique for most parts: very nice use of piano, has a great jazzy feel to it, fantastic arrangement on the trumpet/sax — totally cool. However, the rthym sections reminisces me of May Madham’s opening percussion arrangement in the song Margazhi Poove. A typical funk-style beat… Nothing original.

Technical:

Nothing specific to comment on. Good clarity on the Pianos and the trumpet/sax tracks.

Singer:

I said it above and I will say it again — SPB is THE best choice for delivering this song. No one else in the industry right now has the depth, emotability, clarity of his voice. S.P.B’s voice is still in form and has refused to age along with him. His voice is is truly a blessing!

Check out these sangathis/brighas @: 1:53, 3:14. Like I said, class!

In one word:

Totally forgiven! :)

+s : Good tune, nice jazz/blues interludes, good lyrics, emotive delivery
-s : so-so percussion arrangement, could have avoided repetitive bridges between stanzas

Rating:
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Equipment and Listening…

May 17, 2007

101s:

No, it is not about highway 101, but rather a gentle introduction to audio/recording technology… Well, not so gentle, but read on, read on….

I assume that you have heard the term “Multi-Track recording”. This is 50.5 for understanding current music recording technology… (101/2 he he…). Otherwise, Google is your friend.

OK, on to the 101…

To tell it like Sivaji… Andha Kaalathhula, naanga ellarum tapela thamma record pannuvoummmmmm…. In those days, recording was done in a fairly sophisticated studio directly to tape. Yummy, analog recording… those were the days… anyways, it had its own pluses and minuses. Tape had a natural warmth, saturation etc., but you couldn’t seek it randomly. You had to re-wind to re-do takes, etc. etc. There are still folks recording to tapes and say “You can pry my old’ creaking Tascam Tape recorder out of my cold, dead hands”. For them, Digital Recording sounds cold and lifeless.

Anyways, slowly we entered the Digital age, where Mr. Computer became our best friend and we entered Digital Recording era. So, ippo enna pandranganna, analog recording is digitized (convereted to 1’s and 0’s using sophisticated algos) and then stored in the hard disk. This way, it can be mangled^w treated using various plugins and make your voice and mine sound like SPB’s in a non-destructive fashion — well not exactly, since NONE == SPB :)

How do we sample an analog signal to digital 1’s and o’s. Idhula neraya per PhD ellam pannikirango… So, to put it short, one Mr. Claude Shannon suggested that we need to sample a wave of freq f by atleast 2f to re-construct the wave form, nnu. Purnichikiniya? Adhavathu, human ear 20Hz-20KHznna, we need to sample at least 40KHz… Adhu eppadiyo, 44.1KHz ayidichhi… OK, va?

So, we have our current CD standard 44.1KHz digital signal sampled at 16-bit resolution.

Modern studios (like our Rahmans‘) would be working with even higher sampling/bit-rates — more like 192KHz / 24-bits and then during mastering it will be down-sampled to 44.1KHz to CD Audio Standards. Hope you’re not asleep by now…

Hence, I say…

#1:
A good source is a MUST for critical listening… Forget the crappy low-bit rate MP3s that you boot-legged from CoolToad… I am talking 24-bit, 192KHz sound samples, people… Well, not exactly, 16-bit, 44.1KHz is good enough… You may have heard of this otherwise as “Audio CDs” What a cheap way of referring to it… :)

This MUST be complemented by a good CD player (I recommend Sony).

So, now that we have a good source to listen to, we need to “feed the bits to our ears” :)

Hence, I say…

#2:
We need a good set of cans. No, not the petrol can… Headphones. You cannot skimp on this. You absolutely need the 1000$ plus headphones… (yes, such headphones do exist). No not really, but (he he fooled you… serves you right for sleeping through the earlier half of the blog…) but the 5$ ones are definitely off the list.

You need a set of good head phones that will not “color” the music as much as possible and be faithful to the original signal. This kinda hard to do right (hence, the above 1000$ headphone). But a good place to start would be here: Headwize

My personal recommendation: Get a Sennheiser HD-280 or a Grado SR-60. Both are great and won’t cost you that kidney…

OK, so we settled that: Good Source, Good cans next…

#3:
Good listening environment. Avoid noisy tea kadai’s and loud friends’ houses. Find a good calm, spot, turn on your CD player, plugin your headphone and then …

…. Aduthha Varam Ethe Neram :)