EXPECTATIONS
On a regular day one wouldn't have been too sure about what to expect from the music of The Dirty Picture. After all, the film recounts the 80s era, tells the tale of Silk Smitha and has an unconventional pairing of Vidya Balan with men like Naseeruddin Shah, Emraan Hashmi and Tusshar Kapoor. Moreover with Vishal-Shekhar coming on board and writer Rajat Aroraa turning lyricist for an entire album for the first time ever, there is further intrigue quotient to the entire soundtrack. However what makes one hopeful of a fun outing in the offering is the single most factor which is also the USP of the album - 'Ooh La La'. With the song pretty much catching attention of audience ever since it's sound was unveiled a few months ago, one looks forward to what does the rest of the album have to offer. MUSIC
Expectedly it is a fun beginning with 'Ooh La La' giving The Dirty Picture a smashing start with the kind of arrangements that are totally set in the 80s mode. In fact for those who have been brought up in the 80s era would really sense the kind of nuances that have been taken care of by Vishal-Shekhar who go all the way in creating a riotous outing. Also Rajat Aroraa's lyrics deserve special mention here for the kind of word-spinning he does in order to bring in a sensual-n-naughty mood come alive on screen. However none of that would have been possible if not for Bappi Lahiri and Shreya Ghoshal who have clearly smashed it big time with their rendition and are seemingly having so much fun behind the mike that one can well expect them to have continued singing even after Vishal-Shekhar would have called 'okay'. A special mention for the second half of the song where the entire mood of the song shifts from Jeetendra's 'Himmatwala'/'Tohfa' mood to that of Mithun Chakravorty's 'Disco Dancer'/'Kasam Paida Karne Waale Ki' with Bappi Lahiri bringing back the mood bang on. This is the reason why even though there is a 'Dhol Mix' that arrives at the end of the album, one still wants to stick to the original here.
There is a shift in the album though with singer Kamal Khan crooning Ishq Sufiyana, a number that is tailor made for Emraan Hashmi. Reminding of the style that director Milan Luthria had adopted in Once Upon A Time In Mumbaai for the songs 'Pee Loon' and 'Tum Jo Aaye', even 'Ishq Sufiyana' gets into a similar mode and ensures that the album would have one more chartbuster to it's name that would go all the way in fetching audience's attention. A Sufi track that has an out and out 'desi' feel to it and is thankfully not adulterated by any Western influences, it also appears in an added version with Sunidhi Chauhan coming behind the mike. However one does wish that if only Rahat Fateh Ali Khan could have been roped to do a solo version of this song, 'Ishq Sufiyana' may have reached further heights.
OUR PICK(S)
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