http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080313/jsp/nation/story_9014318.jsp
  First note in Rahman symphony orchestra
 OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT     Rahman in Chennai on Wednesday. (PTI)

*Chennai, March 12:* A.R. Rahman is wielding a different baton. The maestro
will shortly set up a music school to groom Indian talent, which will be the
first step in his dream to create a symphony orchestra of a different kind.

The school — Rahman prefers to call it a conservatory — will begin classes
from June and will hire teachers from India and abroad.

Addressing a news conference here, the composer said he wished to make
Indian musicians more professional and make them "sensitive" to western
musical modes and the latest technological innovations.

The school will be christened KM Music Conservatory (KM standing for Kosmic
Music).

Rahman said he had been toying with the idea of a full-fledged symphony
orchestra in India for some time. Indian composers, he pointed out, now have
to go to places like Prague, London or Birmingham to find orchestras to
record with. A symphony orchestra will eliminate that hurdle, he said.

Even countries like Bahrain and Iraq had their national symphony orchestras
and it was high time India also had one, Rahman said. "This idea has been
firing me for the last 10 years. I have now decided to take the plunge," the
composer, hailed as the Mozart of Asia, said.

At present the only functional symphony orchestras are the Delhi Symphony
Orchestra and the Symphony Orchestra of India, based in Mumbai. Both
Calcutta and Mumbai boasted of symphony orchestras in the first half of the
20th century.

A symphony orchestra consists of approximately 100-120 members comprising
families of string, woodwind, brass and percussion instruments.

Sharmistha Barrow, pianist and teacher who has taught in the Calcutta School
of Music and performed with the Calcutta Chamber Orchestra, said the basic
problem for Indian music to be performed by a symphony orchestra is the
difference in structure. Western classical music and its instruments are
mathematical and the music is written for all the various instruments to
come together and harmonise. In Indian classical music one particular
instrument is fine-tuned to play and improvise on a single raga.

The symphony orchestras in India, as with those in the West, usually play
western classical music, but what Rahman plans is to have an ensemble which
will allow Indian musicians a platform to write their own music, which could
be a blend of East and West.

This means that composers like Ilayaraja can now write music for an Indian
orchestra. Ilayaraja is the first Asian to compose a symphony for the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra of London.

Rahman said classical Indian music — both Carnatic and Hindustani — had
become extremely insular in that it was not absorbing the innovations being
carried out in the West. The "conservatory", he said, would ensure that
budding Indian musicians had greater exposure to the musical traditions
abroad.

KM Conservatory will offer "preparatory, foundation and diploma courses" in
instrumental and vocal music, both Indian and western, besides music
technology.

Any student interested in music can join after completion of Plus II, but
the total intake has been capped at 150.

Rahman, who will himself conduct special classes, will rope in musicians
such as Ustad Ghulam Mustafa Sahib and violin maestro L. Subramanian as
advisers. The school will offer a two-year diploma course after an initial
"foundation programme" that will be flexibly structured.

The conservatory will operate from two buildings next to Rahman's studio in
Kodambakkam in Chennai. Next year, Rahman plans to have a three-acre campus
outside Chennai ready to house the conservatory with classrooms, a concert
hall, a recording studio and residential facilities for faculty and
students. He declined to go into the project cost or the fee structure.

Discussions are also under way with the University of Madras to consider
conferring "deemed university" status to the conservatory, Rahman said.


-- 
regards,
Vithur

A.R.Rahman - The Adorable Human Being

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