
There are so few consistently excellent creative collaborations in our cinema that we must celebrate the ones that always overreach -- and always deliver.
The Vishal Bhardwaj and Gulzar duo remains one of the most thrilling partnerships in modern-day cinema, between our finest, most cinematic composer and our wiliest, wickedest poet. And make no mistake, their latest -- for Bhardwaj's upcoming Matru Ki Bijlee Ka Mandola -- is as saucy a soundtrack as we dare expect.
The title track that starts off confounding (whatever is a Matru? Or a Mandola?) pulsates with raucous enthusiasm and gets relentlessly madder, complete with increasingly violent vocals (from Sukhwinder Singh and a cleverly chosen Ranjit Barot) and even some Afrikaans thrown into the mix.
It's an uproarious onslaught, a runaway bull of a song that has broken out of its pen, and while I'm sure every bit of lyrical looniness will be explained as we see the film, for now it feels sufficient to embrace its good-natured masala roots and hang on for the ride.
Gears shift very abruptly as the next track, a heartbreakingly wistful song called Khamakha, takes over.
I'm of the tribe that believes Bhardwaj is a spectacular singer, a soulful crooner who makes great poetry even more magical, and he works his mellow, emotionally-laden voice perfectly here too. It is a haunting song, with Gulzar's words longingly lamenting and celebrating love all at once, saying that whatever it may be, it isn't for nothing.
"Jo nahin kiya, kar ke dekh na / Saans rok ke, mar ke dekh na," Bhardwaj sings, almost echoing Bekaraan from last year's Saat Khoon Maaf soundtrack, which worked on similarly breathless themes.
This one, however, is more of a justification for love; the poet calls being in love madness, and yet decides that -- by, say, worrying about it and talking about it -- we render it substantive, relevant, make it more than meaningless. Gorgeous.
Things get ridiculously playful immediately after with Oye boy Charlie, an earworm so rambunctious you can almost taste it.
Rekha Bhardwaj teases hotly while a slew of male singers gamely try and keep up, the lyrics ranging from curvy women to late night phone calls. This is an old-school song of flirting and oneupmanship, and while the dholak and harmonium melody seems deceptively simple, it drills right into the head. And the feet. Such fun. And calling a woman 'my Timbuctoo' has never felt righter.
Made for rabble-rousing, Lootnewale sounds like
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