Friday,
November
16,
2007
What's
playing
on
your
I-pod
these
days?
'Jab
Se
Tere
Nanina',
from
the
film,
Sawaariya.
What
kind
of
music
do
you
like,
and
what
kind
irritates
you?
I
like
all
kinds
of
music.
Every
genre
has
a
form
and
each
form
has
a
certain
beauty.
Nothing
irritates
me.
Which
movie,
do
you
think,
has
better
music
–Om
Shanti
Om,
Sawaariya,
or
Jab
We
Met?
(Laughs)'Jab
We
Met'
is
my
film,
so
I
would
think
it
has
the
best
music.
Actually,
I
would
not
want
to
comment
on
'Jab
We
Met'.
I
really
like
the
music
from
Sawaariya,
because
it
has
a
lot
of
emotion.
Name
five
of
your
all-time
favourites.
That
is
a
difficult
question.
It
is
difficult
to
shortlist
only
five
from
so
many
songs.
From
the
top
of
my
head,
these
would
be
my
favourite
five
–
'Aane
Wala
Pal
Jaane
Wala
Hain'
from
Golmaal;
'Tere
Bina
Zindagi
Se
Koi'
from
Aandhi;
'Allah
Tere
Naam',
from
Hum
Dono;
'Dark
Side
of
the
Moon'
by
Pink
Floyd;
and
'Bohemain
Rhapsody
by
Queen.
And
what
makes
you
dance?
There
are
many
romantic
songs
that
make
me
feel
like
dancing.
Any
song
that
has
an
Indian
rhythm
makes
me
dance.
Do
you
prefer
remixes
to
the
originals?
I
prefer
the
originals.
Which
is
your
favourite
romantic
song?
Difficult
choice,
again.
'Lag
Ja
Gale
Se',
from
the
movie,
Woh
Kaun
Thi,
with
Sadhna
and
Manoj
Kumar,
is
one
of
my
favourites.
The
situation
in
the
sequence
makes
it
one
of
my
favourites.
Is
today's
music
on
par,
better
or
not
a
patch
on
the
old
numbers?
Explain.
Music
is
always
the
same,
and
will
remain
that,
according
to
the
time
that
it
is
set
in.
If
you
ask
a
musician
50
years
later
about
his
take
on
older
music,
he
will
say
that
the
music
of
today
is
better.
Some
music,
like
the
one
in
the
60s
and
the
70s,
becomes
extremely
popular,
and
also
becomes
a
trend.
It
was
the
Golden
Era
of
film
music.