Pritam Scrapped and Re-did the Entire Love Aaj Kal Score
August 8th, 2009 - 1:22 pm ICT by Sampurn Wire ( Leave a comment )
By Subhash K Jha
We’ve heard bits and pieces, and even entire songs from films being scrapped. But Love Aaj Kal (LAK) takes the cake.
While the recession and the multiplex strike proved a curse for the rest of the industry, it proved a blessing for Pritam. He was able to scrap and re-do the entire score.
Says Pritam, “I saw the film with Imtiaz and my lyricist Irshad Kamal in January. I was horrified. I very bluntly told Imtiaz the music in LAK was not working. You have to understand, Imtiaz is the most chilled-out guy. He didn’t flinch when I told him this. He immediately told me to do what had to be done.”
The first thing that needed to be changed in the soundtrack was the absence of a love ballad.
Says Pritam, “LAK was a love story, and there was no love song! Imtiaz wanted to know where it could fit in. I suggested we put it in the flashback in the Kolkata portion. Imtiaz was in Kolkata and was supposed to fly to Delhi to shoot Chor bazaari in a couple of days. I flew to Kolkata and gave him a love song. We didn’t like it. Then I came up with Aaj din chadhiya… over the phone! In fact, most of tunes were played by me and approved by Imtiaz over the phone. That includes Chor bazaari,” reveals Pritam.
The ballad Main kya hoon was also altered. “It was earlier designed as a fast-paced go-for-the-kill ballad. But then, I changed the pace and profile of the number.”
Barring Twist the entire score was scrapped and redone just a few months ago.
The secret was out when the film’s ebullient music composer in the course of our conversation revealed how after the film was ready he suggested to Imtiaz Ali that there should be an item song at the end of the film, just like in Jab We Met.
Says Pritam, “Imtiaz said, “Get me a song like Mauja hi mauja that ended Jab We Met. And you’re on’. That’s how ahun ahun, which comes at end of LAK was born. It’s a traditional Punjabi folk song.” Then began the hunt to get the copyrights.
“While getting the rights for the been music from Nagin was easy, getting the rights for this folk song proved impossible, since it has originally been sung by 18 singers, many of them from Pakistan. So we just credited it as “traditional’. Let’s hope no one comes forward to claim a slice of the song,” Pritam has his fingers crossed.
Only two lines from the traditional track were used, the rest was all by Pritam. “Luckily Imtiaz loved the number, and that’s how the end-song in LAK happened.”
- Sampurn Media

- Elvis is Singh! Saif dons the legend's robes for 'Love Aaj Kal' - Jul 18, 2009
- Pritam-Imtiaz hunt down Mohit Chauhan - Jul 30, 2009
- Imtiaz Ali rediscovers Delhi's legendary wedding band - Jul 22, 2009
- 'Love Aaj Kal' has peppy, soulful numbers (IANS Music Review) - Jun 26, 2009
- Will Ranbir's 'Rockstar' rock box office? (IANS Preview) - Nov 07, 2011
- Pritam at creative best in 'Mausam' (IANS Music Review) - Aug 17, 2011
- Hazarika's death plunges Kolkata's cultural world into gloom - Nov 06, 2011
- Jab We Returned - Aug 17, 2009
- Saif to jam with Pritam for music awards - Nov 09, 2010
- Pritam packs entertaining songs in 'Ready' album (IANS Music Review) - Apr 30, 2011
- Delhi brass band has Bollywood dreams, thanks to Imtiaz Ali - Jul 29, 2009
- Top 10 Bollywood songs of 2009 (Flashback 2009) - Dec 14, 2009
- Ethnic folk music finding echoes in capital - Aug 11, 2011
- Bollywood touch lends glitz to CWG closure (Lead) - Oct 14, 2010
- 'Rockstar' earns Rs.11 crore plus on opening day - Nov 12, 2011
Tags: ali, ballad, bits and pieces, copyrights, couple of days, curse, flashback, imtiaz, jab, kamal, kya, love song, love story, lyricist, music composer, punjabi folk song, recession, redone, subhash, tunes