Tag Archives: carnatic

“City Interlude” from Morning Raga

This is the second song from the Morning Raga I am going to write about. I am totally in love with the music, even some 4 yrs after I heard the music for the first time. And pretty sure, this music is always going to live close to me.

The track:

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This song, largely a keyboard solo. Its an instrumental piece, solidly backed by a faithful rhythm section that is very groovy, and continuous. Guitar does a little, but very effective, in providing counters and some interesting rhythm patterns. Otherwise, largely the bass and drums holds the song together.

Morning Raga

Morning Raga

The structure of the song is very simple, so probably doesn’t have the intricacies of few other songs from this album which is colored with Jazz palette. Its a standard verse-chorus-solo-verse structure, but for the nice keyboard solo, the tune rocks!

Released in 2005, this album remains one of the finest of the decade in terms of experimentation, musicianship, and unorthodox treatment.

Music credit:

Amit Heri & Mani Sharma

I believe they do guitars and keyboards, respectively. Yet to find out the other instrumentalists on the band, as soon as I find, I will update here (if you, the reader, know, please write in the comments section below).

“Alaap Jam” from Morning Raga

This is going to be the first of a series of song reviews of “Morning Raga”, I am going to write over next few days.

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Morning Raga is one of my most favorite Indian jazz albums. Its one of the finest experiments to come out of the Bollywood music industry for sure. Purists of Indian classical may not accept it, but I think it is always cool to mix genres. And they have done an excellent job in putting in elements as far apart as Jazz and Carnatic classical into Morning Raga tunes.

All blame goes to Amit Heri and Mani Sharma to create this most innovative sound of this movie. Amit Heri (can be found here on youtube) is a jazz guitar player, and hails form Bangalore. Mani Sharma is a music director, lesser known outside telugu film industry.

Keeping with the theme of the movie, where an Indian classical singer revisits her classical roots with the help of a younger generation band influenced by western music, the music director duo has done justice to both genres (in some tracks at least, while few other tracks are pure pure semi-classical Indian tunes).

The instrumentation on this track creates a solid backing for the vocals improvisation on the top of it. There are no words, but just alaap (hence the name Alaap Jam). The rhtyhm section is all about its groovy bass. Its sad that the song is really short.

If you look at the attached picture, the song is a perfect sound for this image.

If there is a term called Parallel music as in Parallel Cinema, then the music of Morning Raga has to be it.