Music Review: Jil Jung Juk (Tamil)
Composer(s): Vishal Chandrashekhar
Listen to the songs online here: Saavn
Anirudh Ravichander seems to be tailor-made for Shoot the Kuruvi, the quirky melody's tune almost evocative of something Anirudh would have himself composed. But Vishal Chandrashekhar makes up for it in its punchy hard-rock variant Shoot the Kili, with Siddharth confidently leading on the vocal front with aplomb. Violins rule the roost in Red Road-U, a bouncy rock 'n' roll number that's given a slightly Chaplin'esque treatment, and having composers Santhosh Narayanan and Sean Roldan croon the peppy song is easily its other major highlight. Domer-U Lord-U goes full on wacky, throwing in everything imaginable into the mix, but only works to some extent, despite a power-packed rendition by Kavita Thomas. Casanova's retro'ish scratchy prelude (as if played from a record player) paves way for a smooth jazzy ride, but not before shifting gears and treading into dubstep territory. Jil Jung Juk's music stays true to its outlandish title, very unconventional but appealing all the same.
Listen to the songs online here: Saavn
Anirudh Ravichander seems to be tailor-made for Shoot the Kuruvi, the quirky melody's tune almost evocative of something Anirudh would have himself composed. But Vishal Chandrashekhar makes up for it in its punchy hard-rock variant Shoot the Kili, with Siddharth confidently leading on the vocal front with aplomb. Violins rule the roost in Red Road-U, a bouncy rock 'n' roll number that's given a slightly Chaplin'esque treatment, and having composers Santhosh Narayanan and Sean Roldan croon the peppy song is easily its other major highlight. Domer-U Lord-U goes full on wacky, throwing in everything imaginable into the mix, but only works to some extent, despite a power-packed rendition by Kavita Thomas. Casanova's retro'ish scratchy prelude (as if played from a record player) paves way for a smooth jazzy ride, but not before shifting gears and treading into dubstep territory. Jil Jung Juk's music stays true to its outlandish title, very unconventional but appealing all the same.
Comments
Post a Comment