The Score Magazine November 2017 issue! | Page 17

are all about entertaining our fans as we interact with them sans any strings attached. Our primary aim is to provide them with super amusement and we hope to continue this routine every time we do a public concert. We are really looking forward to this festive season and have already started touring with our dates blocked on the itinerary. What are your forthcoming film projects? We are presently coordinating over a line-up of four films. But we can only speak about Parmanu as of now. We are genuinely very proud of this album and the story itself is quite interesting to drive its music way higher. Others are too premature to talk about. Overall, the music graph of 2017 has been rather gratifying for us. We have had six Hindi releases so far and two Gujarati. Gradually, music stores are shutting down and giving way to online shops. How do you find this transition from physical to digital music space? Sachin: I badly miss the CDs and cassettes collection these days. It’s like a deep sore void left behind. I miss going to the music stands and buying my CDs after fiddling with a sample or two and listening to them. I used to tune in to music so much that I would almost burn the head of my CD player. Jigar: I guess, more emphasis should be laid upon purchasing original, quality music, irrespective of the form it is accessible in. As long as we are buying pure, untampered music, it doesn’t matter whether we are importing soft stuff from the internet or grabbing hard copies like CDs, etc. You have also given music direction for plays, television and jingles. How different is it from film music, considering that all are different mediums? Jigar: Every medium has its own dynamics you see. Theatre is where our passion is and it has taught us in heaps and helped us grow as music directors. Television gave us stability and money but there is very little room for innovation, while jingles are very creative as you have to say a lot in a condensed capsule in very little time. It becomes exceedingly difficult even for ad makers at times to meet the odd demands that put the project at stake. The asking rate is always piercing through the roof in this realm. Still I find our ad industry chasing infinite excellence day in day out and flourishing at a brilliant pace. You kind of strike a fine balance between soulful music and pulsating numbers. Comment. Sachin: In Bollywood, it is mandatory to cover everything and anything. For versatility is a key feature here. Every script has its own expectation and if it calls for soulful music, you have to deliver that. While the pulsating dance numbers give your album the fizz and opening it needs. So depending on the script and sequence, we must serve up what is necessarily required. Has a foot-tapping dance/club track become more compulsory than ever before? We beg to differ on this. See, change is a constant factor in the showbiz industry. There was a time when everyone wanted item numbers on a spree. Then came club songs, whereas, love ballads have always been in vogue and no matter what, the genre will glow eternally like a glorious jewel in the composer’s crown. They are like immortal creations with timeless appeal The Score Magazine highonscore.com 15