As always, the best weren't necessarily the bestsellers. Although the year remained sharply slumped for the music industry, there were bright spots throughout 2005. Here's looking at the creatively and commercially successful soundtrack of the year.
Zinda
Alive and ticking. At year-end, just when we thought we had heard and seen it all, came this shocker of a knocker. For Sanjay Gupta, Vishal-Shekhar designed songs that were anxious, energetic and emphatically punctuated by pain.
A remarkable album from a filmmaker who broke every musical rule in Kaante and Musafir. Throaty, husky and smouldering, the vocals rip a hole in your soul. This is crossover music at its coolest and most promising. Apparently, T-Series allowed Sanjay Gupta to do his own thing without interference.
Dus
You didn't need Dus bahaane to like Vishal-Shekhar's tracks on this album of snazzy snap-and-crackle tunes. While Shaan and KK whooped it up in the chartbusting title song, it was the powerful music video with Abhishek and Zayed that did the trick. People simply got out of their seats and danced.
The audio sales were so high that they exceeded the film's box office revenues!
Parineeta
Shantanu Moitra's silken stab at old-world music conveyed a quaint, though hardly dynamic charm. The best part of the music was the delicacy of the arrangements. The melodies were passable, though not quite the volcanic curios they were expected to be.
Trust Sunidhi Chauhan to smoulder up the soundtrack with her seductive Kaisi paheli hai yeh zindagani.
Rang De Basanti
After the disappointing Mangal Pandey, A R Rahman returned to form with this fabulously designed album of that offered a 'young' probing sound and outstanding lyrics by Prasoon Joshi.
From a mother missing her sonĀ (a historic coming together of Lata Mangeshkar and Rahman) in Lukka chuppi to the youth anthem Khalbali -- the score spanned a century of feelings.
Aashiq Banaya Aapne
You can't keep this one out! Emraan Hashmi has all the luck in the world. The songs he sings on screen have a way of hitting home.
So what do we say about Himesh Reshammiya's nasal sufi-rock rendition of the title song that rocked the nation? Even the other tracks, namely Aapki kashish sarfaroshi hai and Marjawa mitjawa were chart-toppers.
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Kalyug
From Dil tadap tadap in Madhumati to Ustad Rahat Fateh Ali Khan's Jiya dhadak dhadak, the Kalyug track is probably the best dhadak-dhadak song of the year. Its romantic appeal was so earthy and raw as to provide a counterpoint to Himesh's Aashiq Banaya Aapne.
This one track alone afforded a world-view into traditional sufi sounds as they should, and must, sound in the present day and age.
You've Stolen My Heart
The US-based Kronos Quartet got together with Asha Bhosle to work on some of R D Burman's choicest chants. And boy, did they kick up a storm!
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