First up is O Naye Insaan. For a film on robots, you get a robotic track. From the audio, I’m hoping this song os picturised on the robot and not the leads. Vocals are by Khatija Rahman (yes! Rahman’s daughter) and Srinivas. With a deliberate balanced tenor, the track flows from ‘now slow-now fast’ pace. If you close your eyes and hear this one, you can almost feel the world spin around you and make you feel dizzy. The lyrics sound patriotic initially and it’ll probably take more than one listen to figure out the actual connotations. Khatija for a first attempt displays potential, Sreenivas effortlessly adjusts to the dual electronic requirements. Lines like ‘Lohe ka dum silicon chooman, Taaron ke jab ghat se, Hard disk mein yaadein lekar’ and the rest of the lyrics aren’t fun to hum or listen or interpret. Not a winning composition!

The third track is Naina Mile. The fastest number in the album, sung by Rahman, supported by Suzanne D’Mello, Lady Kash and Krissy. It’s a desi mix between 90’s singer Cher and 2010’s Lady Gaga’s supersonic ways, but not the usual variety for the musical tastes of Bollywood cinegoers. Techno beats, scientific words thrown in with a bad mesh of hinglish (combination of English and Hindi words) and the outcome is rather disastrous.
Arima Arima sung by Hariharan, Benny Dayal and Sadhana Sargam is again very situational, not something, that stays with the listener much after. Nonetheless, it is the only track that correctly highlights Rahman’s fabulous orchestration trademark. The song that starts with a good impact owing to decent musical arrangement falls flat within the first minute because of substandard lyrics. Even for someone like me who has been listening to Bollywood for the past 25 years, it’s hard to digest lyrics when penned as ‘Kamatur yantar hoon, Seedhay jo dil jhapte, Aisa silicon shape hoon mein, Yantaara’. Not your usual commercial score. Definite skip.

Chitti Dance Showcase is the semi-instrumental offering of the album with some aalaps and ragas thrown in to probably satiate the requirements of everyone associated with this song i.e. Pradeep Vijay, Pravin Mani, Rags & Yogi B. So in the around 2-minute track, there is an unusual concoction of western symphony, dhol beats, digital sounds and a tune which sounded belonging to Michael Jackson’s rendition. Although this one has all the requirements to be a hit among dance shows, auditions and break-dancers in city bylanes, there is nothing more to it.
Lastly, Boom Boom sung by Madhushree, Keerthi Sagathia, Tanvi Shah, Rags and Yogi B is a fast number bordering on the hip-hop genre. The tempo is comparatively louder that the rest of the tracks and seems like a complete mis-fit in the otherwise techno laced album. A couple of feet tapping moments, but once again the absolute disarray of lyrics don’t manage to keep the listener charmed for long.
As a whole, the album is nowhere close to Rahman’s winning compositions. The electronic touch in most songs might appeal to a certain segment but the lyrics are hardly going to get any accolades. The audio in isolation is undoubtedly not Rahman’s finest work, it remains to see how the songs fit into the movie as a whole. Hopefully, it does a better job fitting into the plot than making it to any of the chartbuster lists.