Gupt - The Hidden Truth (1997) Home » Bollywood Music » Gupt - The Hidden Truth (1997) Gupt - The Hidden Truth (1997) Staring. Inkaar Movie Mp3 Songs (1978) Faraar Movie Mp3 Songs (1975) M.S. Dhoni - The Untold Story (2016) Mp3 Songs; Description: Gupt - The Hidden Truth (1997).
The music of Gupt was and is still a pathbreaking departure from what Hindi film music used to be, before 1997. The film is still known for its twist (the identity of the killer) and its trail-blazing music, by composer Viju Shah, son of composer Kalyanji Shah of composer-duo Kalyanji Anandji. It’s however unfortunate that Viju Shah wasn’t able to capitalize on Gupt‘s spectacularly successful music to become one of the leading composers of that time.The soundtrack of Gupt itself, however, holds a lot of gupt. It’s interesting that none of the tunes in the soundtrack have been copied or inspired, but this was an album heavy on sounds – and the sounds have been as memorable as the tunes themselves. So, let’s take a look at some of the sounds ‘sampled’ (to put it charitably) by Viju Shah, across Gupt‘s soundtrack.
If you listen to the source sounds for the first time, chances are you’d go, ‘Hey, that’s from Gupt!’ And the soundtrack is a veritable world music feast! Geforce 7050 pv driver for mac os. Let us start with the title song. The ‘Gupt Gupt’ song that plays over the opening credits is heavily influenced by Deep Forest’s very first song, from their eponymous debut album! Deep Forest, consisting of French duo Eric Mouquet and Michel Sanchez, is known for its new-age world music, also referred to as ethnic electronica, and their music has been sampled in many other Indian film songs across languages. In the Gupt title song, the core tune (the “Yahan Wahan Dhuan Dhuan” part, if that can be called as the main tune) remains Viju’s original. But the extended prelude is directly inspired by Deep Forest (starting 0:35).Listen to ‘Gupt Gupt’, title song (1997).
Next up is the song that plays first, in the movie (after the title credits) – ‘Duniya Haseenon Ka Mela’. The song that displays opens with a persistent flute’ish piece, that also plays elsewhere in the song, like a motif.
That piece is sampled from Japanese new-age, electronic music artist Kitaro’s song, Matsuri. Kitaro’s music has been used by other composers in Bollywood too, incidentally, like Nadeem-Shravan. Matsuri was part of Kitaro’s 1990 album, Kojiki.
Listen to ‘Duniya Haseenon Ka Mela’ (1997). And finally, a desi-sampling in Gupt. Viju uses a small, but easily recognizable flute piece in the prelude of ‘Yeh Pyaar Kya Hai’ that also plays in the first interlude and towards the end of the song. The flute piece is also used in the film’s background score, most notably in a scene early in the film, when Priya Tendulkar explains how she happened to join the family of Governor Jaisingh Sinha (played by Raj Babbar), along with her son, Sahil (from her earlier marriage). Consumir webservice rest progress. That flute piece goes back to 1978, to the movie Satyam Shivam Sundaram!
It plays briefly in the prelude to the superhit song, ‘Yashomati Maiyya Se Bole Nandlala’, with music by Laxmikant-Pyarelal! Listen to the flute piece in Yeh Pyaar Kya Hai (1997).