-

  • Genre:
  • Release Date:
  • Explicitness:
  • Country:
  • Track Count:

Tracks

Title Artist Time

Reviews

  • Amazing

    5
    By cosmic messenger
    Im a music collector and I love music that is done differently but beautifull. This fits all the categories. It became my sountrack while driving. So much texture.
  • I like bollywood but....

    2
    By Boolez
    Why must the Kronos quartet be so fawned apon for discovering Indian pop? I like the stuff on it's own terms and I don't need the Kronos to tell me to like it because they think they're special. Asha Bhosle is great, go buy her albums but PLEASE Kronos settle down and go play some quartet music for once!
  • An interesting take

    5
    By Wolfram Lee
    i am not a personal fan of combining strings with electronics as i hear in this album, but i must confess that the album was a very good listen.
  • THIS IS OLD STUFF

    2
    By ramanjoshi
    LOOK I'M A 13 YEAR OLD GIRL LIVING IN THE USA FOR 9 OR MAKE THAT 10 YEARS OF MY LIFE, I NEED SONGS FROM NEW MOVIES LIKE DHOOM 2, LAGE RAHO MUNA BHAI WHICH IS KINDA OLD AND ETC. NOT SONGS FROM THE ICE AGES!!!THIS STUFF IS POPULAR IN INDAI. AND I ONLY GO THERE 1 A YEAR DO UNTIL THEN ITUNES GET NEW SONGS!!!
  • Amazing

    5
    By Manish
    if you are at all into the nostalgia of bollywood this is a great chance to experience some of the golden oldies. Asha Bhosle is one the worlds greatest singers and teaming up with the Kronos Quartet just makes her that much more amazing. you may be a little confused at first but it is well worth it!
  • You've Stolen My Kronos

    4
    By Akimon
    This is a strange production: the famous string quartet's take on R.D. Burman's music left me rather confused at first. But I do like it more and more as I keep discovering very interesting nuances in the musical fabric. My introduction to Kronos was through the violent soundtrack to Requiem for a Dream, and I was hoping for something radical here, a jazzy classical Bollywood fusion, but they almost disappear in the mix. The first question may be "Where's Kronos?" I have been listening to Bollywood soundtracks for years and my Bollywood playlist has hundreds of songs, many procured here on iTunes: everything from good ol' Kishore Kumar to all the latest flicks, and this Kronos outing would blend in there just fine. And that's the problem- some tracks on this CD sound just like the originals, especiallly Dum Maro Dum. But there are some enhancements, too subtle to pick up at first: strange sound of the instruments, old fashion keyboards adding surreal touch, dissonances and weird sounds- elephants, occasional laughter, and a wicked James Bond thing in Saiyan Re Saiyan, plus that woozy feel of string quartet gone native. Asha Bhosle's voice is as good as ever- her and her sister, the great Lata Mangeshkar are like Placido Domingos of the Indian music, and will only retire when they are 120 years old. And I really loved the subdued, instrumental Mehbooba Mehbooba- if you know the raunchy original version, from the Sholay movie soundtrack, it's something new and different. In essence, Kronos have stripped these compositions, leaving the skeleton and adding their own subtle colors. Nothing radical- but it is a gentle, tickling listening pleasure... Once you have ingested a whole lot of mainstream Bollywood songs and yearn for something new and interesting, you should get A.R. Rahman's Dil Se soundtrack and start exploring the brave new world of remixes, but if this music is new 4U, Stolen Heart will serve as a great Bollywood appetizer, and a very tasty Kronos dish, all at once.