Английская Википедия:Avan Ivan (soundtrack)

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use Indian English Шаблон:Infobox album The soundtrack for the 2011 Tamil-language film Avan Ivan features five songs composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja and lyrics written by Na. Muthukumar. The film, starring Vishal and Arya, is directed by Bala and produced by AGS Entertainment. The soundtrack accompanies ethnic instrumentation with elements of folk and orchestral music which had been recorded live. The album was released by Sony Music on 18 April 2011 and met with positive reviews from critics.

Development

Bala's norm collaborator Ilaiyaraaja was initially considered to be scoring the film, but the former chose his son Yuvan Shankar Raja as the composer; he felt that since Avan Ivan was a "youth-centric film", Yuvan would bring the right feel to the music.[1] It is the second collaboration between Yuvan and Bala following Nandha (2001).[1]

Yuvan refrained from using Western musical elements such as synths and auto-tune, his usual style of compositions.[2] Instead he went ahead with ethnic Indian sounds,[3] and further disclosed that the entire album and score was recorded live.[4] Yuvan recorded the orchestral portions in one take, after few rehearsals, inspired from Ilayaraaja's work.[5] On Independence Day (15 August 2010), he recorded an intense pathos song ("Mudhal Murai") with vocals by Vijay Prakash,[6] while the following month, he recorded several different Indian folk drums with 40 people.[7][8] Yuvan revealed that he was given over two months time for composing each song,[9] while Bala later commented that his work was of "international standard".[10] Na. Muthukumar penned the lyrics for all the tracks. The song "Oru Malayoram" featured vocals by children Priyanka, Srinisha Jayaseelan and Nithyashree, who were participants in the second season of the reality-based singing-competition Airtel Super Singer Junior.[11]

Release

The soundtrack rights were acquired by Sony Music.[12] Yuvan handed the master recording of the album on 18 March 2011.[12] The soundtrack album was released exactly one month later, on 18 April 2011 by Bala's mentor Balu Mahendra in a grand event held at the Residency Towers, Chennai.[9][13] However, the songs had been leaked to the internet few days before the official release, after Sony Music had sent the master copies to abroad earlier.[14][15] Only one songs from the soundtrack, "Dia Dia Dole", was used in its entirety, along with an altered shorter version of "Rasathi" and parts of "Mudhal Murai", while "Avanapathi" and "Oru Malayoram" were completely left out. Yuvan composed a small bit song "Adi Kavakara Kiliye" as of 1 minute.[16][17] The film, however, featured two additional tracks, not included in the soundtrack, which would be released in a second edition.[18]

Track listing

Шаблон:Tracklist

Reception

The album received positive reviews from music critics. Richard Mahesh from Behindwoods gave a 2.5 out of 5 rating and said "Yuvan Shankar Raja has experimented with a new-dimensional music that sounds good on the whole" and described the album as "different but a laudable show by Yuvan"[19] Pavithra Srinivasan from Rediff gave 3 out of 5 stars, saying "Yuvan has voluntarily tried to move out of his comfort zone, given up on his template and experimented, particularly with the instrumental arrangement and most times, it works."[20] Indiaglitz said "Songs from Bala's films never failed to disappoint us. The director has repeated the magic this time too and the credit goes to Yuvan Shankar Raja."[21] Karthik Srinivasan of Milliblog wrote "Yuvan nails the sound perfectly in Avan Ivan".[22]

Accolades

Award Date of ceremonyШаблон:Efn Category Recipient(s) and Nominee(s) Result Шаблон:Abbr
Mirchi Music Awards South 4 August 2012 Upcoming Female Vocalist of the Year Priyanka, Srinisha Jayaseelan and Nithyashree for "Oru Malayoram" Шаблон:Won [23]
[24]

Notes

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References

Шаблон:Reflist Шаблон:Authority control