Slumdog Millionaire
曲目リスト
1 | O... Saya - Performed by A R Rahman & M.I.A. |
2 | Riots - A R Rahman |
3 | Mausam & Escape - A R Rahman |
4 | Paper Planes - M.I.A. |
5 | Paper Planes DFA REMIX - M.I.A. |
6 | Ringa Ringa - A R Rahman featuring Alka Yagnik & Ila Arun |
7 | Liquid Dance - A R Rahman featuring Palakkad Sriram & Madhumitha |
8 | Latika's Theme - A R Rahman featuring Suzanne |
9 | Aaj Ki Raat - Sonu Nigam, Mahalaxmi Lyer & Alisha Chinoi |
10 | Millionaire - A R Rahman featuring Madhumitha |
11 | Gangsta Blues - A R Rahman featuring BlaaZe & Tanvi Shah |
12 | Dreams on Fire - A R Rahman featuring Suzzanne |
13 | Jai Ho - A R Rahman featuring Sukhvinder Singh, Tanvi Shah & Mahalaxmi Iyer |
商品の説明
内容紹介
In composing the music for acclaimed director Danny Boyle's intoxicating new film Slumdog Millionaire, A.R. Rahman has conjured the sound of a city, fusing the frenetic scramble of daily life in Mumbai, India into beautiful fugues that ride upon the dust clouds kicked up by its everyday people.
From the movie's first frames --- with children racing through alleyways, knocking over merchants and pottery, police kicking loose clay roof tiles, disrupted birds fluttering from gutters -- we hear the sound of their commotion made manifest in "O... Saya." It's a rumbling hybrid of Bollywood and hip-hop, a brand new collaboration between Rahman and M.I.A. It's the kind of cinematic moment where image and sound coexist. And that's only the first five minutes.
Filmed in the streets and slums of Mumbai, India, Boyle needed just the right music to compliment the film's cinema verité urban realism. He turned to internationally renowned composer A.R. Rahman (a huge star in South Asia--selling more than 100 million albums worldwide and 200 million cassettes--Rahman is one of the world's top 25 all-time top selling recording artists.) The film's score is central to the propulsive modern grit that pervades the story, but is also a nod to classic Bollywood productions where the music is front and center. And loud. Says Rahman, "We wanted it edgy, upfront. Danny wanted it loud."
M.I.A.'s appreciation for Bollywood music led her to record much of last year's Kala inside A.R. Rahman's studio in India, although the two had never worked together until now. Referring to him in URB magazine as "the Indian Timbaland," M.I.A. obviously jumped at the chance to work on "O... Saya" with the famed composer. Rahman says, "She's a real powerhouse. Somebody played me her CD and I thought, `Who is this girl? She came here and knew all my work, had followed my work for ages. I said, `Cut the crap, this "my idol" crap. You have to teach me.'"
M.I.A. crops up again, later in the film, with the remix of her worldwide hit "Paper Planes" seemingly made for Slumdog, as the lyrics pronounce, "Sometimes I feel like sitting on trains..." while a light blue locomotive chugs and hurls its way through India, young boys perched up top in the sepia sunlight scoping out for a scrap of food.
Other songs on the soundtrack include "Gangsta Blues," featuring hip-hop artist BlaaZe, which flutters with the rhythms of a film projector, capturing a bit of the madness of crowds as they disperse in a thousand directions to escape the claustrophobia of back alleys. And nothing quite prepares you for the triumphant climax, the overarching ode to joy that is "Jai Ho," closing out the film in a rousing sing-a-long that's had film audiences burst into spontaneous applause. As Rahman told Variety, "The energy of the film takes you through a roller coaster, and that's one of the main inspirations for the whole music."
Product Description
In composing the music for acclaimed director Danny Boyle's intoxicating new film Slumdog Millionaire, A.R. Rahman has conjured the sound of a city, fusing the frenetic scramble of daily life in Mumbai, India into beautiful fugues that ride upon the dust clouds kicked up by its everyday people.
From the movie's first frames --- with children racing through alleyways, knocking over merchants and pottery, police kicking loose clay roof tiles, disrupted birds fluttering from gutters -- we hear the sound of their commotion made manifest in "O... Saya." It's a rumbling hybrid of Bollywood and hip-hop, a brand new collaboration between Rahman and M.I.A. It's the kind of cinematic moment where image and sound coexist. And that's only the first five minutes.
Filmed in the streets and slums of Mumbai, India, Boyle needed just the right music to compliment the film's cinema verit� urban realism. He turned to internationally renowned composer A.R. Rahman (a huge star in South Asia--selling more than 100 million albums worldwide and 200 million cassettes--Rahman is one of the world's top 25 all-time top selling recording artists.) The film's score is central to the propulsive modern grit that pervades the story, but is also a nod to classic Bollywood productions where the music is front and center. And loud. Says Rahman, "We wanted it edgy, upfront. Danny wanted it loud."
M.I.A.'s appreciation for Bollywood music led her to record much of last year's Kala inside A.R. Rahman's studio in India, although the two had never worked together until now. Referring to him in URB magazine as "the Indian Timbaland," M.I.A. obviously jumped at the chance to work on "O... Saya" with the famed composer. Rahman says, "She's a real powerhouse. Somebody played me her CD and I thought, `Who is this girl? She came here and knew all my work, had followed my work for ages. I said, `Cut the crap, this "my idol" crap. You have to teach me.'"
M.I.A. crops up again, later in the film, with the remix of her worldwide hit "Paper Planes" seemingly made for Slumdog, as the lyrics pronounce, "Sometimes I feel like sitting on trains..." while a light blue locomotive chugs and hurls its way through India, young boys perched up top in the sepia sunlight scoping out for a scrap of food.
Other songs on the soundtrack include "Gangsta Blues," featuring hip-hop artist BlaaZe, which flutters with the rhythms of a film projector, capturing a bit of the madness of crowds as they disperse in a thousand directions to escape the claustrophobia of back alleys. And nothing quite prepares you for the triumphant climax, the overarching ode to joy that is "Jai Ho," closing out the film in a rousing sing-a-long that's had film audiences burst into spontaneous applause. As Rahman told Variety, "The energy of the film takes you through a roller coaster, and that's one of the main inspirations for the whole music."
登録情報
- メーカーにより製造中止になりました : いいえ
- 製品サイズ : 14 x 1 x 12.5 cm; 110 g
- メーカー : Interscope Records
- EAN : 0602517946293
- 製造元リファレンス : 1794629
- レーベル : Interscope Records
- ASIN : B001LX0JK6
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 103,103位ミュージック (ミュージックの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 919位ヒップホップ (ミュージック)
- - 2,465位グローバルミュージック (ミュージック)
- - 4,668位サウンドトラック (ミュージック)
- カスタマーレビュー:
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
作曲はインド映画サントラ界の巨匠AR RAHMAN。
(スパイク・リー監督『インサイドマン』のテーマ曲もAR RAHMAN作です)
とにかく「スゴい」の一言に尽きます。
映画そのものもスゴい疾走感でしたが、
サントラを聴いているだけでもスゴいです!
駆け抜けていく感覚が尋常ではないです!!!
なかでも“Jai-Ho”(「万歳」の意)の完成度はピカイチです。
思わず心躍るというか、
両手を広げて綺麗な青空を見上げているような、解放感、疾走感。
これだけはとにかく聴いてみてください。
ダニー・ボイル監督作品としては前作『サンシャイン2057』のサントラが
発売されなかったりして、ヤキモキさせられましたが、
今回は(当然)発売となりました!!
よかった、よかった。
※『クイズ・ミリオネア』の日本でもお馴染みのあのテーマソングは収録されてないです。
新しい感覚の音楽!
インド色も濃すぎなくて聞きやすい。インド+イギリス?がうまくミックスしているというか・・・
何回も聴いてるけど飽きないね。
ファンの間では、スラムドッグの曲は彼の最高傑作という訳ではないという見方が多いようです。このサントラでラフマーンとであった方には、おびただしい名曲の数々をぜひ聴いてみてください。サウンドトラックとしては以下の映画が私のお勧め。Hindiだけですが、彼のコアなファンによると、ホームグラウンドのTamilの音楽がやはり良いそうな。そこらへんもチェックしてみてください。
Dil Se..(1998, Hindi)
Swades (2004, Hindi)
Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na(2008, Hindi)
Ghajini(2008, Hindi)
音楽アルバムでは、何といってもこれです。
Vande Mataram (1997). Sony Music / Columbia Records
ジュエルBOXのプラケースではなく
ただのCDケースになってました・・
もちろんサントラ内容としては、今話題のMIAを起用するなど
相変わらず音楽センスは抜群の出来です。
ちなみにjai-hoはアカデミー歌曲賞、サントラ自体も音楽賞をとってます。
輸入版の中にはもうDVD&BDの発売が載ってました。
遅すぎるよ日本公開・・
映画配給会社の買い付け人達って「ヨミ」のセンスが無いですよね
それともGOサインを出さない上が無能なのかな?
「Paper Planes」や「Liquid Dance」も疾走感が半端じゃないな!
(全体的にそうなんだけどね)
「Jai Ho」も俄然、盛り上がる!カッコイイ音楽とはこういうモノだ!ヘキサゴンやジャニーズのクソったれ共め!
映画のトレーラーにシガーロスの曲が使われていたので
(ペネロピと被りますが・・・・・・・・・)
注目していたのですが、なかなか日本では扱いが薄いみたいで、
やきもきしています。
本編もサントラも評判いいので買いましたが、とてもいい出来です。
とても波瀾万丈なドラマみたいで、サントラもドラマティックです。
ただし、シガーロスの曲は入ってません。
他の国からのトップレビュー



My favorite songs on the album include:
1. "O... Saya"--this song opens the film, but is just a great piece of music to listen to for its own sake.
3. "Mausum & Escape"--the piece played when the brothers are fleeing for their lives. It has just the right balance between fearful tension and upbeat excitement.
4. "Paper Planes"--the song played when the boys begin a new chapter in their life working around the Taj Mahal. The song is just a good song to listen to and could easily be a Top 40 hit if it wasn't from a movie soundtrack.
8. "Latika's Theme"--the music that accompanies Latika when she is near Jamal. The song feels like a lullaby.
10. "Millionaire"--the music that ties together the action of the entire film in its climatic scene. The music begins with a techno-styled beat the builds tension tinged with foreboding until it transfers into a more hopeful melody that captures the action of what is happening on the film perfectly. The song is just a great instrumental piece to listen to.
12. "Dreams on Fire"--this song is the closing song of the film. The song builds upon the earlier "Latika's Theme" and gives words and more layers. It's a great way to close the film, but as a piece of music it's also a charming love song. The song reminds me of the closing song "El Bosco" from another Danny Boyle film, MILLIONS.
13. "Jai Ho"--the song that closes out the credits. I admit it. It makes me want to get up and dance.
Overall, a great soundtrack from a beautiful and powerful movie. Fans of the film will enjoy this soundtrack, but people who just enjoy good music will enjoy it, too.
