*http://roseofsilk.phovi.com/2008/04/01/mani-ratnam/*
**
**
*past……*

Going back in History, the following question arises. Six years ago, who
listened to Tamil music? Only Tamilians. Five years ago, what did teenagers
dance to at discotheques? What else but Michael Jackson, Dr.Alban or the
latest Western dance hit of the day. But one man singlehandedly changed all
that. With his universally appealing tunes, A.R.Rahman has demolished all
conventional rules in Indian film music. He amazes with the manner in which
he seamlessly integrates traditionally incompatible harmonies. If anyone can
make a perfect potpourri of the latest dancehall rhythms, electro-pop, Latin
melodies, Western and Indian classical and pepper it all with a local folk
touch or even something as otherworldly as Reggae and serve it all in a
contemporary Indian manner that mesmerises listeners, it is A.R.Rahman. His
music transcends all barriers - geographic, age or linguistic. Everyone from
6 to 60, Kashmir to Kanyakumari, as the cliché goes, are fans of his music.
He was the first to successfully and solidly bridge the gap across the
Vindhyas with Hindi speaking denizens who did not understand one word of
Tamil enthusiastically lapping up his music. He gave film music a trendy
legitimacy, a legitimacy that made Indian youth who were till then ashamed
of admitting in public that they enjoyed Indian film music, dance to Humma
Humma, Muqabla Muqabla, Musthafa Musthafa and Chaiyya Chaiyya at every pub,
club and disco. Overnight, Indian film music considered 'infra-dig' by the
youth became 'cool' and 'hep'. All in all, quite arguably, no one has
influenced Indian music as much as Rahman has in recent times.

*Trucking 
strike*<http://thehunteroftheflame.myminaret.com/2008/03/25/trucking-strike/>

He is the man who helped south Indian cinema go national in a way that was
considered impossible even a decade ago. He bridged the gap between Tamil
(and even Telugu on occasion) and Hindi with that most universal of all
languages: music. Predictably Rahman would later say "I hate the
discrimination between south, north, Tamil, Hindi. If I represent India that
is good enough for me. But we should cross all these barriers." Rahman did
more: he made, to use film industry jargon, music a territory in its own
right. Thus, the soundtrack of each movie was sold as if it were a separate
entity from the film itself. And as if to prove him right, his music assumed
a life of its own, flying off the shelves at record speed even when the film
in question bombed at the boxoffice.

Rahman's strength lies not only in his perfect sense of melody and rhythm
but also in his immaculate sound engineering. His music has been hailed as
that of the digital age and has also been assailed for the very same reason.
His music can never be adequately described in words. One has to personally
experience the pleasure of his creations. Many of his compositions might
actually sound ordinary the first time. But his music has this amazing
capacity to grow on you and establish a firm hold on the listener. His
compositions are an intriguing cocktail of musical pieces that literally
blow your mind. His music is unique in its offbeat instrumental interludes,
unconventional harmonies, and use of far from perfect voices and thumping
rhythms.


-- 
regards,
Vithur

Whatever God wants to give, no one can deny; Whatever God wants to deny, no
one can give. Be happy always

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