I feel both the people are being carried away by their perception of 
terms "boss/ manager/ senior/ delegation" etc.

I don't find anything wrong if ARR is now a project manager.

no project manager sends the work of his junior as such to senior 
management for approval and implementation. A project manager might not 
be doing nitty gritty of things, but he does audits, refines, filters 
the work of his juniors and then puts it in a shape for implementation.

I think if, after 18+ years of work, if ARR is delegating more and is 
just auditing/ refining/ improving the work of his juniors, it is 
perfectly ok. I am sure ARR would not pass on the inferior quality work 
of a subordinate.

Thanks.
--
rawat

On 11/7/2008 9:11 PM India Time, _Pradeepan R_ wrote:

> I agree with most part - but NOT the part where you compare today's ARR 
> Role to that of a Project Mgr.
> Plz !!!!
> I don't understand what you feel is being delegated by ARR.
> He composes the tune - he composes the beats - he also composes the 
> orchestrations. In all likelyhood, he would be directly teaching the 
> singers as well.
> Additional Rythm programming is something that he used to delegate even 
> in the early 90's. Think 'Hamma' from Bombay.
> and note the word 'Additional' in front of the Rythm Programming.. 
> 
> Overall...to equate a Proj. Mgr with ARR ---> Well thats wrong.
> 
> On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 7:51 AM, S.VijaiAnanth <[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> 
>     Dear all,
> 
>     I am an engineer by profession.I used to be very active here,
>     especially around the years 2002-2005, where I was in my varsity
>     days.....Im working nowadays, hence there's hardly time for me to
>     pen anything here....Have been silently observing many things posted
>     here, and felt like wanted to give my view: Mind you, Im a die-hard
>     fan of ARR but unbiased. This write-up is intended purely for
>     working class people , because they will be in a better position to
>     understand my views, but I do welcome responses from others.I'll put
>     it in essay point form for easier-reading:
> 
>     1) CURRENT MUSIC of ARR
>     - Lots of people complain that he doesn't sound the same like the
>     90's.
>     - When ARR was fresh in the industry, he does it all by himself:
>     composing, arrangement, mixing, editing,etc...only ASSISTED by
>     his engineers to fine tune or whatsoever. This is similar to a
>     junior engineer, who is loaded with all kind of tasks on his
>     head for the next five years at least. So, quality is there,
>     since only the individual is there, and if he is good, he will
>     churn out the results. ARR single handedly did everything, and
>     the result was mindblowing.
> 
>     - As ARR grew bigger in popularity, he had major distractions.
>     That little man who used to be media shy,reclusive, and cooped
>     up in Panchathan had to attend functions, awards, TV
>     interviews, overseas programmes, charity dinners, events,be
>     ambassador, etc. The junior engineer now would have become a
>     manager, and although he is very skilled, will not be in the
>     position to do all the hard work he used to do to build his
>     career and spend many nights in the office. Instead he
>     will have many junior engineers coming through the ranks and he
>     will delegate the job to them. Same applies to ARR. In current
>     terms, He definitely wouldn't have the time to do all by
>     himself..So, too many cook, spoil the soup, to a certain
>     extent.
> 
>     - I matured
>     in my thinking towards the couple of final years in my
>     university. He grounded in Tamil Nadu, and spread to
>     Maharashtra, and flew to UK, then rocketed to US. He is, truly,
>     now an International figure. Hence, people all
>     over the world will be eager to listen to his works. So,he
>     should not compose a Tamil song with only Tamil audience in
>     mind. He has to experiment as much as possible to come up
>     with a song which appeals to Tamilians as well as pleasing his
>     international fans.Similarly, working for a local company and a
>     multinational comapny requires so much adjustment in an
>     individual. Not to compare here, but Harris Jayaraj and
>     Yuvan is what ARR 10 years ago, catering the Tamil Film
>     Industry only. If they venture into bollywood and hollywood,
>     they'll need to change the way they make music too. We need to
>     understand this and accept the fact.
> 
>     - I love melodies predominantly,but that doesn't mean that I
>     don't like rhythm. Just an example: Kummi Adi (Sillunu Oru
>     Kaadhal) is a folk song. Sangamam is also folk + carnatic. If
>     you ask me, personally I would say, the beats in Sangamam were
>     lively and thunderous. Kummi Adi's beats sounds programmed all
>     the way. But then we need to understand one thing: As time
>     goes, lots of changes happening in this world. How to reach the
>     current younger generation (the teens) to respond to our folk
>     song?....It has to have their taste. When I played Sangamam to
>     my brother (he is 19), he says...Oh, boring la...But he enjoys
>     kummi adi....I understood one thing: I have gotten older, and
>     music of today is aimed atthe teens and they like more of hip
>     hop, rap, genres. They are not into "soul"...not for time
>     being, at least....
> 
>     - One last point is that "Nothing is Permanent"....As we grow
>     older, we can never recapture our old stuffs. I used to run
>     8kms effortlessly, but now gasping for breath even in my 2nd
>     km. When ARR
>     did "Kalluri Salai", he was in his late 20's, so his mind is of
>     a young man.....Now he is 40, so if you notice, he has reduced
>     a lot of rhythm (there are still rhythm, of course, just
>     reduced in racy numbers) and moving towards western classical,
>     electronica(Vangelis kind of sound, heard too often in his
>     works nowadays).
>     So to expect someone to do the same until the end is very
>     wishful thinking. Even Rajnikanth cannot be a hero until the
>     end. One day, he either retires or becoming supporting
>     actor.
> 
>     My humble opinion is that as long as ARR can give at least 2 soul-
>     stirrer like New York Nagaram & Munbe Vaa in each film, it is
>     sufficient until i breathe my last. We as a fan, should accept the
>     fact that he has grown too big and hardly have the time to be the
>     90's ARR. If we can accept this fact, there won't be much
>     disappointments. After all, ARR is also a human being like us. God
>     bless.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Cheers,
> Pradeepan.

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