Thumb | Song Heading | Singer | Composer | Lyricist | Actor | Film (Year) | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aigiri Nandini 3.00 - 1 votes | Sona Mohapatra, Aruna Sairam | Traditional, Ram Sampath | Traditional, Bulleh Shah | Coke Studio 3 - Episode 02 (2013) |
Movie | Film Cast | Singer | Lyricist | Composer | Director | Producer | External Links |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coke Studio 3 - Episode 02 (2013) |
Sona Mohapatra, Samantha Edwards | Traditional, Ram Sampath, Amir Khusro, Bulleh Shah, Munna Dhiman, Hard Kaur | Traditional, Ram Sampath | Coke Studio 3 - Episode 02 at Wikipedia |
This is where I have reservations. How deviant can we be in the name of
Fusion? Should we disconnect the meaning of the lyrics just because it is
more suited for intense beats?
I am personally fan of this prayer, having performed it on stage in my
school days, I know how it is sung. It opened up nicely, with a little
aggression since its a Mahishasur Mardini song, but it went straight
downhill after that.
What was Sona Mohapatra doing in it? Tere Ishq Nachaya with such a heavy
base, high bpm drumming and lights? Is the song depicts such a dreadfully
aggressive feat of love? I for one would stay away from such a insane
fanatic.
Again we go back to Mahishasur Mardini song, a conceptual shift. I am not
willing to accept such a unholy juxtaposition under the name of Fusion,
Sorry.