Anirudh Ravichander composed the soundtrack album and background score for Remo in which he collaborates with Sivakarthikeyan for the fifth time. He joined as the film's composer in June 2015. The album consists of seven songs with one bonus track composed by Anirudh Ravichander and lyrics were written by Vignesh Shivan, Vivek, Ku. Karthik, Inno Genga and L. H. Harish Raam. The audio rights were acquired by Sony Music India. Before the album release, three singles were released from the movie, with lyrics written by Vignesh Shivan.[1] The former two singles were rendered by Anirudh himself, while the latter was sung by Bollywood singer Arjun Kanungo,[2] who made his debut in Tamil as singer alongside Srinidhi Venkatesh. Composer Santhosh Narayanan, also crooned one song for the film, in his first collaboration with Anirudh.[3]
Marketing and release
The first single from the movie, titled "Remo Nee Kadhalan" was initially supposed to be released on 9 June 2016,[4] but the song was released 23 June, at the film's first look and motion poster release event,[5] which was telecasted live on the official YouTube channel of Sony Music South, and Anirudh gave a live stage performance of the song. The second single "Senjitaley" was launched on 1 July 2016, which performed by Anirudh Ravichander at the 5th South Indian International Movie Awards, held at the Suntec Convention and Exhibition Centre in Singapore, and was launched by actor Vikram.[6][7]
The third single "Sirrikadhey" was launched in a form of a promotional video song on 18 August 2016.[8] The promo was directed by Prabhu Radhakrishnan, featuring the music composer Anirudh, singers Arjun Kanungo and Srinidhi Venkatesh and music technicians. Another single, "Come Closer" was released on 26 August 2016, which was written and rendered by Inno Genga. The song was a reprised international version of "Sirikkadhey".[9]
The entire album was launched on 5 September 2016, by composer A. R. Rahman, and it was made available to download on the internet.[10][11] Post-release, an additional song "Veshangalil Poiyillai" written by L. H. Harish Raam and composed and sang by Anirudh was released on 16 October 2016, coinciding with his birthday.[12]
The album received mostly positive reviews from critics. Behindwoods rated the album 3.25/5 stating that "Remo's music is definitely a Cupid's arrow from Anirudh".[17]IndiaGlitz rated the album 3.5 out of 5, with a verdict "Some beats, a little melody, and a whole lot of fun, Remo is soulful jukebox. Another badge on young man's shoulder, Anirudh's Remo album shakes up the inner spirit and gets your heart lively and beating. Here we look forward to the movie even more cheerfully now!"[18] Cinemaplus News gave a favourable review with a statement "Entertaining and engaging!"[19] Top 10 Cinema rated that "Anirudh comes up with some energetic numbers, but in many places they sound so much stereotypical as his erstwhile numbers. Maybe for certain seasons, teen audiences would love his musical score, but he has to attempt trying with different genres".[20]Moviecrow rated the album 3 out of 5 and stated "Anirudh delivers another fun filled album which is sure to satiate the fans and though devoid of standout experimental tracks, the feel of the album is vibrant enough to elevate the overall mood of the movie."[21] Studioflicks rated the album 3 out of 5, and stated "Remo songs completely belong to the usual style of Anirudh as he ritually comes up with the tunes to savour the teen groups. But it would be nicer if he can redirect towards different musical genres rather than playing the same tunes to his fans, which might get time worn after some time."[22] Karthik Srinivasan of Milliblog stated "Anirudh makes all the right moves in the music of Remo!."[23]
Controversy
The song "Senjitaley" irked criticism for the glorification of stalking in the song. According to Sudhir Srinivasan, in an article on The Hindu, he stated about the lines from the song "Enakku nee easy-ah laam venaam[...]" which romanticises harassment.[24]The News Minute summarised about this stating "The comments section on YouTube has discussions on the music and how good the song is but barely anything on how problematic it is."[25]
Track listing
The tracklist of the film was released in the form of an album preview on 1 September 2016, through the official YouTube channel of Sony Music India.[26] The full soundtrack album was released directly through iTunes on 5 September 2016, without hosting any formal launch event.[27]
The original background score of the film was released on 21 October 2016, post-release of the film. It contains eighteen original scores, and a bonus track "Veshangalil Poyillai" which was written by Harish Raam L. H. and sung by Anirudh.[29]
^"Remo Music Review". Cinemaplusnews. 7 October 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
^"Remo Music Review". Top 10 Cinema. 6 September 2016. Archived from the original on 21 October 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)