In sync with Rahman
Monday, March 05, 2007 04:02:07 pm

/photo.cms?msid=1726054 It’s the awards season in the Hindi Film Industry and 
when it comes to
the best music category, there is practically no competition -- AR Rahman and 
cult film Rang De
Basanti, it is. This unassuming composer says awards are energising. TIMES 
NOW’s Naomi Dutta
caught up with the talented musician and got talking first about RDB!

Excerpts:

Rahman: I think it’s a very important film for all of us, not only for me, its 
changed the way
India thinks, I think it’s a revolutionary film

Naomi: And you said that when you worked with Rakeysh, you wanted to ensure 
that every number
is a super hit, can you really ensure that as a composer?

Rahman: You can just try, but if you don't have an intention you don't even 
try, and for a film
like RDB, we wanted that to happen because its not a straight commercial film, 
it could have
gone wrong. So from my side and music and lyrics side, we wanted everything to 
go right, so
each one was taking care of their departments in the right way!

Naomi: As a music composer what is your biggest fear -- that there is a song in 
a film and
people go out of the theatre for a loo break, has it ever happened? Does that 
thought scare
you?

Rahman: No, if you concentrate and work together, you can avoid that. Like in 
RDB, I thought
'Tu Bin Bataye...Would be that kind of a song, but we never got that reaction. 
They were
sitting and watching the film that time, even though it came near the interval 
and it was a
every slow song. So sometimes you can break all the formulas.

Rahman followed up RDB with Mani Ratnam’s ‘Guru’ this year. A slow starter, 
this album though
eventually became a top seller, one could argue that it is not Rahman & 
Ratnam’s best work!

Naomi: It’s very important for you, especially in the Indian context that the 
song
picturisation is right. In Guru, a lot of people appreciated the music, but lot 
of people felt
they broke the narrative, how do you react to that as a music composer?

Rahman : I think people have become too intelligent, so much so that everyone 
can make a film
now. When Mani puts a song in, it’s with loads of thing in his mind, so he 
obviously knows what
he is doing. In fact, he told me that we have a song and if you remove the 
song, the film
doesn't work, because it’s a serious film and it needs that song.

Naomi : And you have that Bappi Lahari song -- again people thought it was a 
force fit.

Rahman : Well, you can expect the unusual from Mani. There are two opinions 
about that -- some
of them really love it, when I was watching the film in New York, they said, 
“Oh! It’s the best
song.” That’s good actually when people have different opinions about the same 
thing,
completely opposite!

Naomi: Are you open to your songs being used as background scores, because in 
India that’s not
totally appreciated, but that’s very important, now you that you have songless 
films and all of
that. What do you make of that?

Rahman : Well, in a way music suffers if you put it as a background. 
Definitely, the full
output of the song doesn’t come through, but sometimes it’s important to have 
that song behind.
In ‘Guru’, especially, we did a song called 'Shock Hei', which was composed 
after I saw the
film, it became a background score, and it was intentional.

As you may have noticed, this musical genius would rather his music speak for 
him, but in
recent times, what he has been vocal about is the music composer getting joint 
copyright over
his compositions along with the music label. It is a call, which cost him Farah 
Khan’s ‘Om
Shanti Om’, but Rahman says it is the way forward.

Rahman: It’s fair to give a composer or a lyric writer whatever he or she 
deserves, and
somebody has to voice it, so that’s the reason I voiced it.

Naomi: Has there been resistance?

Rahman: No, actually people are willing. Initially, they were like – ‘What is 
this?’, but once
they get into it they realise how important it is. I see people who have done 
great songs
suffering in poverty, suffering without money in the end. Here if this kind of 
thing works out,
it’s almost like a pension for a composer or a writer, which I think they 
deserve.

Naomi: But is that something you want for all your projects, you have recently 
signed up with
Subhash Ghai, has his label agreed to that?

Rahman: That’s news to me!

Naomi: You haven't signed up with Subhash Ghai?

Rahman: He has not spoken to me yet.

Naomi: I got an SMS saying Subhash Ghai's new film, music by AR Rahman.

Rahman: Okay, I will be meeting him next week, I will find that out. We had 
agreed to work on
some project couple of years back, and then he got busy with his Whistling 
woods.

So we don’t know if Rahman is working with Subhash Ghai, but he is definitely 
working for the
United Nations. Rahman’s first song in English for a noble cause – ‘Pray for 
me, Brother’, is
an anti- poverty song composed and sung by him for the UN. This song is also 
part of K music,
Rahman’s label to promote different music, which is not necessarily commercial 
or composed by
him. As we sign off, we asked him one last question.

Naomi: At one point you said it took you some time before you could be 
unapologetic about
presenting your kind of music, or Indian music to a western audience, but 
that’s changed now,
how did that change?

Rahman: It’s got to do with loads of factors, first of all, when you are 
talking to a person
and then listening to him or her, the way they talk convinces you whether they 
are speaking the
truth. So, I think this has been a culture of songs and movies I am not afraid 
to show it to
anyone, and from Hollywood point we just went, this is us, watch us!

So be it then, let Rahman’s music take over!

(For more, tune into E NOW Weekend, on Saturday 9:30 pm & Sunday 5:30 pm, only 
on TIMES NOW) 

http://www.timesnow.tv/In_sync_with_Rahman/articleshow/1725704.cms

Reply via email to