Arriving on the right note 

Sudipta Basu chats up 
Rashid Ali, and thinks everything’s gonna be okay with this newest musician on 
the block 



   It’s easy 
to get slotted here and given that Bollywood is all about cliques and 
camaraderie, one is tempted to go that route with Rashid Ali as well. Rashid 
(42) is the flavour of the season (apart from the boy-wonder Imran Khan) given 
that his song ‘Kabhi Kabhi Aditi’ from the film Jaane tu... is a chartbuster. 
And yet the NRI singer is untouched by the feverish aspiration of making it big 
in tinsel town; he’d rather simply be a busy musician for now. 
   Born in UP 
and brought up in London, his father a retired businessman and mother a ghazal 
singer who trained with 
Ustad Ghulam Mustafa Khan, Rashid’s sensibility towards melody has been 
multi-ethnic. He grew up with strains of classical Hindustani music wafting at 
home while outside, it was R&B, Jazz and House. He is of that generation 
that was obsessed with Stevie Wonder, Elton John and Sting. Today, some of his 
favourites are Al Di Meola, Flamemco guitarist like Paco De Lucia and musicians 
like Chick Corea. Sting has been an enduring favourite. 
   “I was 
like a sponge as a kid, soaking it all in,” says Rashid. “I am happy that I 
grew 
up in London, as it exposed me to a wide 
range of international music — Greek, Italian, the lot.” While in his teens he 
gravitated to fusion jazz, and soon took to the guitar. He chose the guitar 
over 
the violin when faced with a choice of instruments as he knew that the former 
would support his singing as well. “Can you imagine me singing ‘Kabhi Kabhi 
Aditi’ while playing the violin,” he laughs, humming the first lines. “The 
guitar offered both vitality and virility, as it always does to boys in their 
teens.” 
   Rashid was 
spotted at a concert in London by A R Rahman about six 
years ago. Rahman walked up 
to him for a casual chat, although Rashid did not know much about him except 
for 
his work in Rangeela. “We got along and I became part of his troupe for a while 
as a guitarist,” he says. He worked with the maestro on the Bombay Dreams 
project in 2002 in the formative phase, only to quit soon when the schedules 
became too manic. They travelled together across India on the 2003 tour titled 
Unity of Light. There, he improvised on ‘Ooh la la la’ by infusing it with 
jazz, 
and played the title track of Rangeela as well. “Jazz gives a musician rigour. 
You have to fuse the various elements of 
music very subtly, pretty much like Hindustani classical music. If you master 
that, you can improvise on any kind of music.” 
   Clearly 
then there was to be no looking back, at least not with Rahman after that. He 
offered playback support in a few Tamil films with him, until Jaane tu was to 
put him on the map eventually. 
   “I have 
never consciously aspired for Bollywood; but wanted to do just enough for 
people 
to recognise my voice, my guitar and eventually my compositions,” he says. 
“Come 
to think of it, I was always keen to go on stage, even as a kid. When my mother 
released her first album of ghazals in London, I went up on stage and sang an 
old Kishore Kumar favourite, ‘Mere dil mein aaj kya hai’. Going up on stage as 
often as I was urged to, during community functions and such, didn’t bother me 
at all.” 
   Next up, 
Rashid is busy putting the final touches to his compositions for an album to be 
produced by Rahman, of whom he says, “A R is very definite about his ideas and 
vision but at the same time gives the artist freedom along a given framework. 
He 
has always welcomed my musical ideas and individuality such as on some of the 
guitar vamps on ‘Kabhi Kabhi Aditi’.” 
   Contemporary 
Bollywood could do with some mature youthfulness and Rashid fits right in.

Mumbai Mirror, 13th July, 2008.

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