MSV : His Music and his times - Part 9: The melodies



Last week we saw some of the westernized songs which MSV composed. These songs have stood the test of time and these are the songs through which lot of current day youngsters associate MSV with. These songs also helped MSV make a second transition. The first was when along Ramamurthy he transitioned out of the G Ramanthan era. The second transition happened when he transitioned out of the Vishwanathan Ramamurthy era and established his own unique style.

This style was not limited to the 'western inspired' songs. The style was also evident in the melodies he composed during those time. These melodies shed their melancholic tone and became celebratory melodies. This was the major shift after he moved away from Ramamurthy. These melodies had more 'in your face' approach and were able to instantly catch the attention of the listeners. I will be dealing with the melodies he produced in the 1966-1971 timeframe. We will take a look at the later day melodies in a different context.

Let's start our look into Vishwanathan's melodies. A great place to start is this wonderful song which was a humongous hit in those times. 'muthukalo kangal' from 'Nenjirukkum Varai'



The melody is a typical MSV melody in the sense that it is very difficult to fix a ragam to it. It has a classical base alright but it transcends that base and gives us an outstanding song. (Since it involves K R Vijaya I leave it to you if you want to take the risk of watching this song.)

I have a feeling that Pendyala Nageshwar Rao ws enamored with this song and under its influence created this beauty. The songs are definitely close cousins. Pendyala's song's instrumentation is more classical in nature. This song was a major hit in Telugu and even today it is performed in stage shows and reality singing shows.



I had already posted this song in a different context in this series but I cannot leave this out when writing about MSV's melodies. A typical MSV bright melody brimming with sweetness. Once again it is classical and yet modern. (Nominally it is based on Abheri I think). This is a melody which everyone thinks of when they think of MSV. 'poo malayil' from 'Ooty Varai Uravu'.



I have heard it said that MGR was very impressed by 'yeh jo mera prem patr padkar' from the RajKapoor film 'Sangam' tune by Shankar Jaikishan and that he wanted MSV to tune a song in that mold. MSV came up with a beauty of his own though you can hear the inspiration of 'yeh jo prem patr' if you hear carefully. Though the basic raga structure is taken from the Hindi song, MSV builds a lovely melody which is all his own. 'kunguma pottin mangalam' from 'Kudiyirundha Kovil'



MSV did not use the voice of S.Janaki much. He chose P.Susheela and L R Eswari and in later days Vani Jayaram. But when he did use Janaki he gave her some nice songs, like this melody from 'Avalukkenru Oru Manam'. 'unnidaththil ennai koduththen'. The charanam takes us back to the Vishwanathan Ramamurthy days with the constant beat and the light melancholy which is reflected effectively in Janaki's voice.



Here is one of those MSV songs where you cannot mistake the raga. There have been many Bageshree based songs in Indian film music history and this song can proudly stand up to any of them. 'nilave ennidam nerungadhe' from 'Ramu'. The sadness of Bageshree in the heart melting tone of P B Srinivas. The way the song is tuned, the Hindustani ragam used, the use of sitar and shehnai and the manner in which the tabla is played all give this song a ghazal type touch.



In the same year, MSV came up with another such melancholic touch, though it was for a love song. This song from 'Kodimalar' we have already seen in a different context but is worth publishing here since it should definitely be counted as one of MSV's great melodies. 'mouname paarvaiyaal'



Here is a melody with a folkish touch. While it is a sort of happy song the tune per se doesn't convey the happiness fully held back by a bit of inherent sadness. This fact helps MSV a lot when the tune turns sad. Here is the happy version.



And here is the sad one.



No such sadness exists in this song. It is a happy go lucky song and is a sort of archtype for the latter day 'I don't care a damn about the world till I meet the hero' based heroine songs. (Think Jyothika in 'Kushi'). 'chittukuruvikkenna kattupadu' from 'Savale Samali' This song also fetched P.Susheela the national award.



I have a feeling that MSV may have been inspired by the Shankar Jaikishan melody, 'sayonara sayonara' from 'Love in Tokyo'. Well listen to it and decide.



Here is a lovely duet. 'manikka vendugiren' from 'Iru Malargal'.  A nice melody.



We will round off the song list with this beauty sung by a very young S P Balasubramaniam. 'iyarkai ennum ilaya kanni' from 'Shanthi Nilayam'. A nice contrast of voices. Susheela's experienced vocals against an upcoming and still finding his feet Balu.



MSV did a lot of films in the 1965 to 1970 timeframe. Unlike the 5 years of Vishwanathan Ramamurthy, these 5 years were a combination of hits and misses. Some great albums combined with some middling albums. The consistency of Vishwanathan Ramamurthy was surely missing but the fact that MSV could generate those magical melodies kept him in demand and he was definitely the top music director of those times. He almost had no worthy competitors. This would hurt Tamil film music.

We did see some of the Hindi music influence showing up in MSV's work. The influence of Hindi film music on Tamil film music listeners in the 70s would not come in the form of MSV's work but it would come directly in the form of Rahul Dev Burman. Though he had hit films to his credit in late 60s, it was in the early 70s that the full impact of R D Burman would hit everyone in India, upto a laborer working in deep South of India,

We will see the impact of RD Burman's music on All India level and how MDs across south tried to counter it.










Comments

Ravi said…
Hi Suresh: It would be good to analyze the success rate of MSV between 1966-71 for the % of hit movies in terms of his music. But a look at the movies of the songs you have mentioned in this and the previous thread: Ooty varai uravu, Nenjirukkum varai, Kudiuyirundha koil, Rickshaw Kaaran, Sorgam, Sivandha Mann, Avalukkendru oru manam, Parakkum Paavai, Iru Malargal, Anbe vaa (and if I may add Uyarndha manithan which also had an award winning song, Deiva Magan etc.) all had a high success rate of songs in that most of the songs in these movies were hits. Particular mention must be made of the melancholic "Poo mudippal" from Nejirukkum varai where MSV tunes the marriage invitation card in a seamless manner with the main melody. I also like the rarely heard "Ninaitthal Podh,um paduven" by S Janaki. Kudiyirundha koil had a variety of songs including the folksy "Aadaludan" and Iru Malrgal the classical "Madhavi Pon Mayilaal".. Special mention must be made of "Anda Naal Gnyabagam" from Uyarndha Manithan where MSV shows his capacity to maintain the melody and tempo in a dialogue mode song.
Ravi
Ravi said…
Hi Suresh: I did a quick survey of MSV films in the period 1966-71 as published in his official website. Some of the movies I have not heard at all and they might have some good songs. Recently, I heard two melodious songs from a movie "Namma veetu Lakshmi" which is not the movie that immediately comes to mind when you think of MSV. Discounting such movies and including those which I am sure had a majority of good songs, I would put the % of such movies at around 70%. Of course, this is only a tentative estimate and is also subjective.
Ravi
ravi said…
Suresh: I did a bit more "analysis" and found that while in 1966, the success rate of his songs (based on popularity plus my own assessment) was about 85%, in 1971, in which year he had around twenty movies, I could find only about 50 -60% excellent to good songs. The number of movies where just about one song was good/was a hit was quite high. Thus, one may say that the decline/tiredness that you are to talk about later was just setting in.
Ravi
Suresh S said…
Ravi,

Terrific work. You are putting in a lot of effort to do an objective analysis.

As you mention, and as I had guessed, the number of 'full album' hits was declining after the split. To be honest I am still not able to really get a grip on why this happened, especially since TFM during those stages depended more on the tune than the orchestration. So TKR moving away should not have had much of an overall impact. (It didn't if you look only at the commercial success of MSV). Yet, MSV's music becomes inconsistent slowly after the split. Is it because MSV deliberately wanted to give a new sound or whether he was getting 'bored' or 'tired'? Very difficult to conclude just from the musical evidence.
Ravi said…
Hi Suresh: Thanks for your comments. You gave a wonderful tribute to MSV in 17 engrossing parts and i thought the best tribute to you is to contribute to them in a meaningful manner. I think MSV's slow decline is probably typical of any creative artist to a greater or lesser extent. If in fact it is true that MSV was the tunesmith in the MSV-TKR era (as we have guessed), then it is clear much of the creative juices had already flowed by the time they split. Increasingly, it must have become difficult to produce fresh sounding tunes to hackneyed situations. Same must have happened to Kannadasn too in the seventies. Yet it is to their credit that they gave excellent songs such as in many Balachander movies and in other suitably challenging contexts. Or a task master like MGR could extract four excellent songs from MSV (Meenava Nanban) even as late as 1977.
ravi
Ravi said…
Another point to note is that in 1971 MSV scored for an unusually high (until then) number of movies : 21. Compared to 1966 (15) and 11-13 movies /year in the intervening years. Thus, the total number of good songs in 1971 did not decrease significantly but the number of mediocre songs increased quite a bit. Also, in 1966, at least some of the songs in some movies possibly had inputs from TKR. TKR, trained as an instrumentalist in the Carnatic system, might not only have lent expertise in orchestration but also ragas might have provided crucial inputs to tunes when MSV sagged so that the quality of the output was more consistent. I recall reading an article about R D Burman.The author had written how RDB had to compete with the combined might of two minds while referring to competition from the famous duos: Laxmikant-Pyarelal, Kalyanji-Anandji, Shankar-Jaikishen.
Ravi
Ravi said…
The word "ragas" in the fifth line of the previous post must be deleted.
Sorry.
Ravi

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