Emraan Hashmi Reveals Why 2000s Bollywood Melodies Were Better

Emraan Hashmi shares his honest thoughts about Bollywood music evolution during his film Haq promotions. He acknowledges that every generation feels their music was the best while admitting he sometimes prefers 2000s melodies. The actor explains how streaming platforms and algorithms have transformed music creation into a numbers game. Hashmi emphasizes that true musical connection comes from emotional impact rather than mathematical formulas.

Key Points: Emraan Hashmi Says 2000s Bollywood Songs Had Better Melodies

  • Hashmi believes streaming algorithms now drive music creation through number-crunching
  • Each generation connects with different musical frequencies and sounds
  • Creative arts cannot be mathematically engineered to guarantee success
  • Young audiences' upbringing shapes their musical preferences and tastes
2 min read

Emraan Hashmi: 'I sometimes feel melodies of 2000s Bollywood songs were better'

Bollywood actor Emraan Hashmi discusses why he feels 2000s film melodies were superior and how streaming algorithms are changing music creation today.

"I do feel that sometimes, like the melodies were better in the early 2000s - Emraan Hashmi"

Mumbai, Nov 3

Bollywood actor Emraan Hashmi, who is gearing up for the release of his upcoming film 'Haq', boasts of a filmography embellished with great songs. The actor, who has featured as an actor on several chartbuster songs, feels that the sound of Bollywood has completely changed in the past decade.

The actor spoke with IANS at a 5-star property in the Juhu area of Mumbai during the promotional campaign of 'Haq'.

He concurred that the sonic texture of Hindi film songs has largely changed, as he told IANS, "It's a change in taste of a new generation that comes. Youngsters come on the foray, their upbringing, their soundstage that they're used to, they get accustomed to something else. And every generation has a different melody or a sound that they connect with, or different frequencies".

"And it becomes this whole mundane thing that every generation feels that their music is the best and the next generation is going down the dumps. Now, I don't really sit down and say that, although I do feel that sometimes, like the melodies were better in the early 2000s", he smiled as furnished an honest answer.

The actor further mentioned that the streaming medium, and the Internet 2.0 and Internet 3.0 have immensely contributed to the change of sound.

He shared, "I think it has also become a little algorithm-driven, it has become a little number-crunching. It's like, 'This song has done so many hundred million, these were the instruments used in this, so let's reverse-engineer it and that's what's working'".

"Creative arts don't function that way, you can't put math to it. Either it hits you, it connects with your heart or it doesn't. And that's the way I've picked up music for my films. If it has that reaction, it gives you goosebumps, either it makes you cry or gives you goosebumps, that's a good song", he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
He's absolutely right about the algorithm-driven music. These days songs are made for reels and shorts, not for the heart. The emotional connection is missing.
M
Michael C
While I respect his opinion, every generation says this about their music. Today's youth connect with current sounds just as we did with 2000s music. Both have their place.
A
Ananya R
Emraan Hashmi's film songs from Murder, Gangster, Jannat era are still on my playlist! Those melodies were timeless. Current songs don't have the same repeat value.
S
Sarah B
As someone who grew up with both eras, I think we're being too harsh on current music. There are some beautiful compositions today too - just different styles.
V
Vikram M
The problem is music directors today are chasing trends rather than creating them. In 2000s, each composer had a distinct sound. Now everything sounds the same.

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