India Today Group Online
 


January 01, 2001 Issue




COVER
  Return of the Dons
Faced with a shrinking empire, a desperate underworld targets the film industry again. This time round, it's not just extortion. The gangsters muscle their way to a larger share of the profits.


 
THE NATION
 

Closing in on Mr Q
The Bofors gun scam gets another twist with the arrest of Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi. For the CBI, struggling with investigations, the arrest is a feather in its cap.

 
BUSINESS
 

God's Advocate
With delay built into the court battles being fought over the ownership of Ayodhya's famous site, the VHP turns on the heat.

 
Columns
 

Fifth Column
by Tavleen Singh
Abuse of Power

 
  Kautilya
by Jairam Ramesh
What Will Bush Push?


 
 

Politically Correct
by P. Chidambaram
Releasing the Genies

 
 

Right Angle
by Swapan Dasgupta
Weariness of Ayodhya

 
Other stories
  Kashmir  
  West Bengal  
  Bureaucracy  
  Books  
  First Person  
  The Arts  
  Music  
NewsNotes
 

Fast Food Chain

 
 

Call of the Party

More...

 
   




India Today Anniversary

 
 



 
  Home  
 

MUSIC

Reverberations
Folks Score

The cover of pehchan could easily be mistaken for a promo of a horror show with the Silk Route crew wearing African voodoo masks. Those mukhotas can be misleading. The group consists of Kem Trivedi, Mohit Chauhan and Kenny. This is their second album after their debut with Boondein two years ago. their first album was refreshing and had something new to offer listeners. This one disappoints. The group has not been able to go a step further in terms of their music. There are certain musical nuances or a combination of notes a composer or singer falls in love with. But when he starts repeating those nuances, he tries to be different only to fall flat. The use of the mouth organ too fails to capture listeners. Morni, a traditional folk number, is well arranged and very hummable. Are they trying to ape Simon and Garfunkel? Listen to find out more.

Folk music is the oldest form of Indian music. Heritage, an instrumental album, is based on the folk melodies of various states of India but with a very contemporary feel. The folk melodies include: Mand of Rajasthan, Prabhatiyu and Bhajan of Gujarat, Pahadi from Kashmir, Kairi from Uttar Pradesh, Mast Qalandar from Sindh, Baul of Bengal and Heer of Punjab. The instruments used are santoor, flute, sitar, sarangi, shehnai, pakhawaj and tabla. And the music has been arranged and conducted by Ashit Desai. The colours of the states have been distinctively reproduced using folk instruments with bass guitars and electronic keyboards. The popular number Mast qalandar has beautiful orchestration. The song refers to mast qalandar (the drunken dervish) and the tune is set to the hypnotic rhythm of the Dhamal dance which has been performed in front of his tomb after the sunset (maghreb) for hundreds of years. A good buy for those who cherish folk music.

-S. Sahaya Ranjit

Screen Surf
Festive Buzz

This December through January, Carnatic music buffs can get a daily update during the Kutcheri music season on happenings in Chennai. Log on to www.kutcheribuzz.com. Set up by the husband-wife team of Vincent d'souza and Nitya, this site gives information on new releases on classical music, list of dance and music schools, profiles of artistes and calendar of events. Surfers could also buy season tickets for sabhas online. For the connoisseurs, there is a list of arangetrams and articles on dance. During the off-season, this site is updated weekly.

-S. Sahaya Ranjit

Hot Track
NATURAL WOMEN

Carole King
(Sony Music; Rs 125)

Singer/songwriter Carole King, whose album Tapestry was a '70s legend, showcases the best of her talent in Natural Woman. Melding the free spirited pre-rock classics Up on the roof (live, with James Taylor) and Some kind of wonderful, with a whispery Crying in the rain, King's music is a potent journey through times when music was "sweet" and even a pop song wasn't complete without a jazz accompaniment.

The very thing that makes the album a success, however, is also that which makes it a bit of a drag. The tone is equable, sometimes too mellow, and one song could well be mistaken for the other. An album that can be safely allowed to play out till the end, can also turn into bland elevator music. But You make me feel like a natural woman, Will you love me tomorrow? and Hard rock cafe are a brand of pop that is instantly recognisable. As her tunes transcend genres and her words time and place, King is best explained in her own words, as a "Nightingale".

-Sonia Faleiro

Top

 
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     METRO TODAY
  MetroScape  
   


MetroScape
Where Words Were King
Katha celebrated its 10th year with "Worlds into Words, Words into Worlds", an international interdisciplinary conference on the short story.
more...

Looking Glass

Delhi: Art Show

Bangalore: Retreat

Bangalore: Restaurant

 
    Web Exclusives
COLUMNS  


Forget endology, writes INDIA TODAY Senior Editor S. Prasannarajan. Celebrate 2001, celebrate the future in
Locomotif.


 
DESPATCHES  



The 80th birthday do of a social reformer shows how the lives of entire communites in coastal Gujarat have changed for the better. INDIA TODAY Principal Correspondent Uday Mahurkar reports in Despatches.


 
XTRAS!

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