It is so easy to come up with a hit song these days.
All one needs is a good key board. Drums help but not needed. so too is a rhythm guitar. So adept are the keyboards, with multiple background beats, and sound variations to imitate anything from a violin to a clarinet, all within the reach of levering a switch and walking the keys with the fingers.
I think it was a.r.rahman, in his initial days produced hits from his single equipment studio – just listen to chinna chinna aasai, and you can see not too much instrumentation there. a few background vocals and a keyboard. That’s all I think was there.
Well, I would like to present an upcoming melody in the same genre. The music sounds exotic, sounds that appear to come out of a modern day computer, which it probably is. But no one can deny the melody.
Here is santhosh hariharan, singing kanavu thozhi, from uyirai tholaithen (yet to be released) composed by dhilip varman.
Uyirai Tholaithen - Kanavu Thozhi - YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQwkOF5WGPU
All one needs is a good key board. Drums help but not needed. so too is a rhythm guitar. So adept are the keyboards, with multiple background beats, and sound variations to imitate anything from a violin to a clarinet, all within the reach of levering a switch and walking the keys with the fingers.
I think it was a.r.rahman, in his initial days produced hits from his single equipment studio – just listen to chinna chinna aasai, and you can see not too much instrumentation there. a few background vocals and a keyboard. That’s all I think was there.
Well, I would like to present an upcoming melody in the same genre. The music sounds exotic, sounds that appear to come out of a modern day computer, which it probably is. But no one can deny the melody.
Here is santhosh hariharan, singing kanavu thozhi, from uyirai tholaithen (yet to be released) composed by dhilip varman.
Uyirai Tholaithen - Kanavu Thozhi - YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQwkOF5WGPU