Cricket mania rocks silver screen! Pritam rejuvenates his branded style of peppy and tuneful music with elan with added doses of "cheerathon" (marathon cheering) in cheerfully endearing HAT TRICK. This emotionally packed cricket bonanza boasts moments of triumph and jubilation for spirited "Team India" which connects theatrically with four different lifestyles. Milan Luthria pitches experienced campaigners Nana Patekar, Danny Denzompa and Paresh Rawal as the front runners of the show with long haired hunk Kunal Kapoor sharing lovey-dovey moments with bubbly Rimmi Sen. The euphoric feel of winner forms the style statement of the film with the message of "triumph of human spirit". Pritam fields his trusted new prodigies as the added fuel and fire for the album with success.
"Home is where my heart is, take me home..." mesmerizes out nostalgic feel, it takes loads of excruciating emotions in poetically refined verses ("Kitne Armaan Lekar Ab Main Jaoonga Kahan, Kuch Paane Ko Jo Khoya Phir Paoonga Kahan, Manzil Kho Gaya Ek Pal Ko Bas Raah Gayi...") with Roop Kumar Rathod's classical flair in notably brilliant "
I am coming Home ". Vishal Dadlani shows his poetic intellect in sensitively penned lyrical works -"Chehra Jaana sa, Kuch Pehchana sa, Main tha Magar Main Nahin..." Pritam's earlier work "Khwabon Ki" (MUDDA) is rekindled with sentimentally mellowed flow with tinge of feminine sensuality in Caralisa rendition. Mellifluous to the core, it has the heart piercing resonance with an incessant ambience of serenity. Pritam's exuberance complements magnificently with Roop Kumar's rhetoric flair and Vishal Dadlani's prosaic skills.
Worth-a-hear!
Rana Mazumdar's cheerfully boisterous vocals lift the tempo with accelerated rhythms and vigorously plucked guitar strumming in lively "I am coming Home (reprise)". Its bonus offering that should caper pop genre fancies with a rock-star feel.
Youthful and vivacious scurry of zestful emotions bubble out with Soham Chakraborty rocking the mike in energetically delivered "Kahan Kho Gaya". The sound of loner with heart felt impulse of "lost paradise" gets the musical make over of conventional hard rock. Groovy to the last beat; it has the "yuppie" binge with impressive vocal flair and promises to be ear-grabber.