..x.. Vishal Dadlani Fan Club ..x..

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Posted: 17 years ago
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...Welcome To The...









Randolph, Shiraz, Papal and Vishal came together in 1994, with a strong need to play individual, original, unique music. This was as much a reaction to the stagnating Indian Rock scene, populated by bands playing mostly cover music, as it was a primal instinct. They did the rounds of college festivals, almost immediately becoming well known and popular, by winning three major rock competitions at the Kanpur, Delhi and Bombay IIT's. They signed a record deal and put out their first album (We Are Not Listening) in 1996. They played gigs in the Seychelles and all around Indian Campuses, while figuring out their sound. When they put out their second album (Up, 2002), their audiences were taken by surprise. The alternative rock band they had known had added a huge electronic edge to their sound. Pentagram has always maintained that the new sound came out of a burning need to find a way to make music that was uniquely and solely theirs. Their new edge brought them international recognition, in that the doors of several festivals were flung open to them. They headlined the Sundance Music Festival in Estonia in 2004, a first for any Indian band. They were also invited to , and played at the Glastonbury Music Festival in 2005. This was a real high point, as they not only became the first Indian Act to play there, but also became aware of the real possibilities of their music. They were able to share the stage with giants like Coldplay, Chemical Brothers, Tori Amos, Fat Boy Slim, White Stripes. Seeing how they stood up to huge acts, and how positive the audinces were, knee-jerked Pentagram into producing their current album (It's OK, It's All Good). Self assured, more mature, and yet as edgy as ever, they're hoping to release this one internationally, as well as tour the festival circuit a lot more aggressively.

http://www.musicyogi.com/asp/mtyArtistHistory.asp?artistId=A RT20402






Vishal-Shekhar are a music directing duo for Bollywood films. They have had a number of successes including Salam namaste and Dus and Bluffmaster. The duo rose in prominence when they composed the score for the film JHANKAAR BEATS, which included the hit song TU HAI AASMA MEIN . There efforts paid off when they won the Filmfare RD Burman Award for new music talent for Jhankaar Beats. The music for the film Musafir became very popular with youths. They combined techno music with Indian sounds. The score of the film included the music hits Saaki and Dorr Se Paas. 2005 was a good year for the duo as they composed the scores for two hit films: Salam namaste and Dus and Bluffmaster. They are now judges on the Zee TV show, SaReGaMaPa Challenge 2007. They also directed the music of Tara Rum Pum a hit.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vishal-Shekhar








































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Posted: 17 years ago
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( if i misspelled ur name or if ur name isnt here, plz let me know)

  • CaLiiZ*DiiMe [ Ruby ]
  • S a r a h [ Sarah ]
  • Pyaari_Puja [ Puja ]
  • Xplicit_desii [ Sandy ]
  • Shukhsmiles:] [ Shukh ]
  • Kim182 [ Kim ]
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  • *xsaher jaanx* [ Saher ]
  • .:Aphrodite:. [ Megan ]
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~*~ Interviews/Articles ~*~

The Rediff Interview / Vishal-Shekhar

Chilling with Bollywood's new songsters

September 08, 2005

Vishal DadlaniMusic direction isn't what it used to be. Hummable'melodies have now been replaced by dancehall patterns and thumping beats tuned to discotheque mania.

Leading the new Bollywood sound brigade are Vishal Dadlani and Shekhar Ravjiani. Vishal-Shekhar are responsible for setting floors on fire with the'superhit Dus soundtrack, and are stepping up to bat now'with Salaam Namaste.

Raja Sen shot the breeze with the music composer duo, and tried to see how they work. Here are some excerpts:

Let's start by talking about the Salaam Namaste soundtrack.

Vishal: Oh, it's young, light'

Shekhar: 'Fresh' (laughs at the commonly used adjective). It's a very vibrant soundtrack.

Vishal: See, Dus (their recent smash hit) was a big club sound, but this is totally different.

So how do you guys develop a mood for a certain film's soundtrack? Is it your call or the directors?

Vishal: The music we make is the director's music, based on the story he wants to tell.

Shekhar: For example, for Salaam Namaste, Siddharth (Anand, the director) briefed us on the kind of music. This started with a story session, in minute detail.

Vishal: The music came based on the emotion he wanted to convey. We got the story, and then hung out together, started writing tunes.

Shekhar: The end result is quite different from what we have'done before.

Salaam Namaste: The music review

Is that a constraint for you, this need to constantly innovate? Do you get enough scope to be different in Hindi cinema?

Vishal: It's not being different for the sake of being different. We're working towards a director's vision.

Shekhar: This is a Yash Raj (Films) soundtrack, so we're expected to be melodic. The music is typically our sound, but there are a lot of strong melodies. Good directors know what they want.

Vishal: Adi (Aditya Chopra, the film's producer) knows music so well. These are directors who try and bring out the best melodies. Siddharth is great to work with.

Shekhar RavjianiIs the whole process of music-direction a very structured and clinical one, or do you guys just jam?

Vishal: We jam! There is structure, yes, but basically we all get together ' the music directors, the director, and the producer. We play around with tunes and what our basic ideas are, and things obviously change. We get a lot of inputs, and a lot more to work with.

What's with music-directors constantly working in twos? Isn't composing a very personal process?

Shekhar: (Laughs) They work in threes also!

Vishal: Not just threes, sometimes even teams of four, five' eight! (Laughs)

Shekhar: The thing is that music directors never work alone.

Vishal: Yeah, it's just a matter of how they choose to share the credit. There are music directors who work with a lot of people but don't name them.

But you two are a definitive partnership. How do things work with you? Are there clearly demarcated musical areas?

Vishal: Yes, I have the left side of the room, he has the right!

Shekhar: We pretty much do everything together. We're from different schools of music, we like different kinds of music, but we manage to have a good shared musical taste.

Vishal: The process, as you call it, is very free-flowing. I can write a song, and Shekhar can say it's really cheesy! We bounce each other's ideas.

Shekhar: And it's very important that we can both be objective and analyse the songs.

Vishal: True. Tunes need a definite quality control, and when both of us end up writing songs together, it feels great.

So how did you two meet?

Vishal: Well, we put on this rock show many years ago, with the basic intention of meeting women. I don't know, Shekhar might have participated because of some 'creative urge' (laughs) but I wanted to meet women!

Shekhar: We had a common friend, a drummer called Shiraz, and I must say (laughs) it really wasn't much of a 'rock show' eventually.

Vishal: But we did meet there, and hit it off. But then nothing else happened, and we fell out of touch.

Shekhar: I was working on jingles for Raj Kaushik (advertising filmmaker, director of Shaadi Ka Laddoo), and the soundtrack for the original Dus film, for the late Mukul Anand. But that film totally changed, and that music was never used.

Vishal: And Raj heard a couple of songs of mine, and he loved them.

Shelhar: So five years after the rock show, we both met in Raj Kaushal's studio to work on Pyaar Mein Kabhi Kabhi!

Vishal: It was a crazy coincidence! I walked into the studio, and I see this guy, and I do a double take! (Laughs)

Salaam NamasteVishal, you've been a rocker for quite some time with Pentagram. Are you still actively part of the band? Have your film responsibilities forced you to cut back on rock?

Vishal: No, actually. Nothing is in the other's way. My bandmates and Shekhar have both been really accommodating, and I've been able to juggle my schedules comfortably. It's pretty cool. I still rock as much as I ever did.

But what about music styles? You two worked separately, and did your own thing. Now you're smack bang in the middle of big bad Bollywood. How different is it?

Vishal: First of all, the horror stories you hear are 99% untrue. The industry treats you depending on the way you are.

Shekhar: Exactly. It's about how you respond to people. Maybe certain people just behave coolly based on how we are. So they're cool with us, and maybe ' for all we know ' different with the rest of the industry folk: It doesn't matter.

Vishal: Also, we're very informal. Instead of a traditional producer-music director or a director-music director relationship, we end up being friends. The jamming sessions are great fun, where we all hang out together.

Shekhar: Music direction is something we love, and are very passionate about. I guess we're cool in Bollywood because making music can never be our 'job'.

There's a lot of 'different' music being made these days, and a lot of purists aren't warming up to it. Do you think Bollywood is suddenly trying to be too radical, in every way?

Vishal: There's no such thing as too much experimentation.

Shekhar: There are a lot of new guys in the industry now, and they're all making different kinds of cinema. There are a lot of different moods to compose for.

Vishal: And all these new guys have their own set of influences, their own likes and dislikes, musically. Most of them are very hands-on about what they want. I think we're here at the right place, at the right time.

Shekhar: In the West, music is constantly evolving. There's always something new to do. We should be just like that.

What kind of experimentation thrills you guys musically?

Shekhar: We like to work with traditional sounds in a non-traditional manner.

Vishal: For example, the Dus bahaane song is basically a dholak loop, under a dancehall pattern. If you rip up the track and break it apart, that's what you'll discover -- which is something you can hardly make out when you listen to the track. And that's what makes the sound of the song so special.

Shekhar: The dholak gives it'the groove.

Who have inspired you as music directors? And which of your contemporaries do work you think is admirable?

Vishal: Oh, Kalyandji-Anandji, Lakshmikant-Pyarelal, R D Burman...

Shekhar: S D Burman, Naushad, O P Nayyar, Khayyam sa'ab.

Vishal: Oh, Khayyam sa'ab, definitely. (Bows, rocker style)

Shekhar: (Among the new guys) I like Shantanu Moitra's work.

Vishal: Pritam is doing some pretty good stuff.

Shekhar: And (A R) Rahman is totally brilliant. Sometimes you just have to be overwhelmed with certain things. Like the way he mixes the shehnai in the Swades theme. (They start 'singing' the instrumental bits) It's really awesome.

What kind of music do you like personally? Any favourite artistes?

Vishal: All kinds. Rock, obviously. Then electronica, world music, Sufi stuff, hip hop, jazz. Right now, in my car, I have Vulgar Display Of Power (by Pantera), Nightsong (by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and'Michael Brooks) and some assorted hip hop stuff.

Shekhar: In my car, I have the Bunty Aur Babli tape (laughs) because my daughter just loves it!

Vishal: She doesn't like the Salaam Namaste stuff as much, na?

Shekhar: No, not yet, but she's big on the television promo, and occasionally dances to the (sings) Salaam namaste, salaam namaste chorus.

Vishal: (Laughs) But it's not in the league of (sings) Bunty aur Babli, yet.

Shelhar: No. Anyway, about my music, I listen to a lot of old Hindi stuff. Lots of (Mohammed) Rafi, Mukesh sa'ab, Kishore Kumar. And then there's hip hop and Sufi music.

Vishal: And (sings) Bunty aur Babli, Bunty aur Babli, Bunty' damn! See what you started?



Vishal Dadlani Of Parikrama Sings For Dhoom
Its official, Vishal Dadlani of Vishal Shekhar Duo fame will lend his vocal chords to the title song of Dhoom 2! This is quite a surprise since Vishal and Pritam (music director of Dhoom 2) are considered archrivals. When contacted this is what he had to say:

"Yes, I am have sung the song but how did you get to know about it?", he exclaims with genuine surprise! Well, there are ways to find such information out, especially in the age of internet. "Great! Well yes, but me singing is hardly a scoop, isn't it? After all I have just gone ahead and sung a song for the film. It's not even on the air, I don't know how it will be used in the film and I have absolutely no idea if it is a song in the film or a promotional video or something for a background score", he says rather modestly.

"Adi [Aditya Chopra] called me up and said would you like to sing for this track composed by Pritam. And I was like - wow, why not? See, I may not be a playback singer in conventional terms but I am a part of Pentagram band and have been performing for quite a while. The basic fact is that I enjoy singing and hence have no qualms if someone ropes me in for a particular number. Coming to 'Dhoom Again', believe me I had a lot of fun while doing it. We all know that the song is legendary and one has to give his best for singing a track like this. This time around it is in English. Now it has to be seen how has it been used in the film!",






A Conversation With Pentagram

It's clear that Pentagram are India's biggest rock act. After all, they're the only band from India that's been invited to perform at the UK's prestigious Glastonbury rock festival. But it's the lesser known details that have us intrigued. For instance, Pentagram vocalist Vishal Dadlani teamed up with Shekhar Ravjiani – the trained vocalist who produced Vishal's debut album, First Love – to compose the feature track for Raj Kaushal's Pyaar Mein Kabhi Kabhi a few years ago. Since then, the duo has composed tracks for films such as Bluffmaster, Jhankaar Beats, Mujhe Kucch Kehna Hai, Rehnaa Hai Terre Dil Mein and, most recently, Taxi No. 9211.

Not only that, but during the Kargil war, Pentagram recorded and released India's first exclusive song on the Internet, "The Price of Bullets", featuring poet Javed Akhtar and classical artist Shankar Mahadevan. The video, directed by Farhan Akhtar, one of India's most successful young film-makers, was blocked from the airwaves for being "too political". Refusing to give in, Pentagram added the song as a bonus track on Up, their second album.

Of course, nothing is too political for petaDishoom, so we caught up with Vishal when Pentagram performed at HT City's Youth Nexus in Delhi. He talked to us about his decision to go vegetarian, which he made around the time Pentagram hit the scene, and then he told us … oh, wait. We're sorry. Why don't we let you get the inside scoop in this exclusive interview?

How long have you been a vegetarian? What pushed you to make the switch?
I turned vegetarian in 1993, specifically because I like animals. I am unhappy with the idea of eating them.

What would you do if you witnessed an animal who was being ill-treated? Would you speak up?
Yes, for sure. If I knew an organisation or a number I could call to make a complaint, I would do that. Other than that, if I got out of my car or a rickshaw to beat a guy who's beating an animal, it would be like beating another "animal". It can't be a fascist thing.

You must have heard how animals are being poached – wild tigers are being killed for their skin, elephants are being killed for their tusks, etc. What are your views on that?
That's horrible. It is sick when people kill animals for their skin, especially when they know they are few. And it's even sicker when they are killed for medicinal and decorative purposes.

What would your message be to the youth about animal protection?
I would ask them to educate their friends. If they like animals, they should share their ideas and support the fact that animals should not be killed. It starts from a small community and spreads to society, state, country – right from within the neighbourhood. There should be awareness about the slaughter of animals, animal conservation, etc.

What's up next for the band?
Pentagram is writing our third album. In June and July, we will play in festivals abroad – France, Denmark, back to the UK and Estonia – and then we'll push our way into the US. We have a network established in the UK and Europe but have yet to break the barriers in the US.

For further information on Pentagram as well as info on our latest celebrity interviews, exclusive events and

Edited by CaLiiZ*DiiMe - 17 years ago
HayeSiyaapa thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#3
iaj joinin just for u ruby
Xplicit_Desii thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#4
hey im here i wanna join it n yeah wuhz pentagramer😆
Shukhsmiles:] thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#5
Hey Ruby I wanna join!

And one more thing your Vishu siggy rocks!
That's a hot picture! 😳 Did you make it?
CaLiiZ*DiiMe thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#6

Originally posted by: pyaari_puja

iaj joinin just for u ruby



lol thankss pujaa 😛 ill add ur namee
u didnt join just for me..i know deep down u love vishalllll
CaLiiZ*DiiMe thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#7

Originally posted by: pyaari_puja

ruby wats a pentagrammer?



umm its a rock band that vishal is in 😛 called pentagram
so that makes vishal a pentagrammer hehe
CaLiiZ*DiiMe thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#8

Originally posted by: Xplicit_Desii

hey im here i wanna join it n yeah wuhz pentagramer😆



ok i'll add ur name 😃 its a rock bandd ~ pentagram 😛
keep voting for people in vishal's gharana lol
CaLiiZ*DiiMe thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#9

Originally posted by: Shukhsmiles:

]Hey Ruby I wanna join!

And one more thing your Vishu siggy rocks!
That's a hot picture! 😳 Did you make it?



heyy shukhh 😛 i will add ur name 😃
and thankss i know that pic is soo hot
he looks lovely in red 😳
thanks the sig is lovelyy lol but i didnt make it
pyaari_puja made it
she's one of the best sig makers on IF😃
Shukhsmiles:] thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#10

Originally posted by: CaLiiZ*DiiMe



heyy shukhh 😛 i will add ur name 😃
and thankss i know that pic is soo hot
he looks lovely in red 😳
thanks the sig is lovelyy lol but i didnt make it
pyaari_puja made it
she's one of the best sig makers on IF😃

Ty!

He does look lovely in red😳

It suits him very well with his little pointy beard.😳

Oh I bet she is!

I want one... of shekhu vishal

Or one with Anu Malik ji and Bappi and Mauli and Bobby Darling since they are making an album and bobby is eye candy in the video!

Does she have a shop?

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