Here’s a short story inspired by the emotional journey of composing for a film like Varalaru (a Tamil film known for its complex family drama and classical dance backdrop).
One sleepless night, Arvind visited the film’s lead actor, who was training in a dilapidated dance hall. The actor was practicing a padam (expressive dance) alone. No music. Just the thumping of his feet on the wooden floor, the jingle of his ankle bells , and the raspy whisper of his breath. composer of varalaru film
Varalaru won every award for music that year. But Arvind learned a different lesson: that a film’s composer is not a musician. He is a ghost who listens to the silence between the scenes and finds the rhythm of souls colliding. Here’s a short story inspired by the emotional
The first rough cut screening was silent afterward. The producer wept. The lead actor hugged Arvind and whispered, “You didn’t compose for Varalaru. You composed Varalaru’s heartbeat.” No music
Arvind sat in his studio for three weeks. He tried grand orchestral swells. He tried electronic beats. Nothing worked. The producer panicked. “Where are the kuthu songs? The duets?” they demanded.
Arvind Menon, a 52-year-old National Award winner, was burnt out. He had spent three decades churning out chartbusters, but lately, every melody felt like a copy of a copy.
The Echo of a Forgotten Raagam