Great publicity for ARR!

http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2008/11/ar_rahman_on_slumdogs_sound.html


Composer A.R. Rahman on the Sounds of `Slumdog Millionaire' and Being
M.I.A.'s Idol
11/12/08 at 2:06 PM
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Composer A.R. Rahman on the Sounds of `Slumdog Millionaire' and Being
M.I.A.'s Idol

Photo: Getty Images

In India, fans love A.R. Rahman almost as we love David Archuleta —
and he's reportedly sold a few more albums: 100 million records and
200 million cassettes. A huge pop star in South Asia, he's famous for
scoring Indian classics like Roja and Lagaan (among the dozens of
other films) — and he's recently begun to cross over into Hollywood
with Elizabeth: The Golden Age and Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical
Bombay Dreams. We spoke with him about his Slumdog Millionaire score —
which Fox Searchlight is pushing for an Oscar — and his collaboration
with M.I.A.

How'd you hook up with Danny Boyle?
I literally had to leave another film to do this. When Danny met me,
he said, "I've heard a lot of your stuff' and he talked about it.
That's about the first time I've heard a compliment from a Western
director, apart from Andrew Webber. He's a good human being.

Was it different working with him than a Bollywood director?
Usually, it's very different. Danny used my stuff in a very different
way. I really loved the film, so I would compose pieces to fit the
images, so I would do a lot of templates. With this, there's not many
cues in the film. Usually a big film has 130 cues. This had just
seventeen or eighteen: the end credits, beginning credits, that stuff.

What were you going for?
A lot of things. I had to do stuff from modern India, eighties Hindi
film soundtracks, mixing modern India and the old India.

What did Boyle suggest?
He wanted something very pulse-y. He said he hated sentiment, hated
cello. No cellos! He said, "Never put a cello in my film" — he was
funny. I worked fast, like him. It took two months of planning, two
weeks of completing. Usually it takes six months with the musical
films I'm doing in India.

The soundtrack really drives the film. That seems like something Boyle
has in common with Bollywood. Do you think so?
What's good about [Boyle] is that he likes how Indian films mix music.
You push it and it comes out. We wanted it edgy, upfront. He said
every piece of music was going to be a piece by itself. Normally some
directors suppress music — they always want the effects to be loud and
the music to be softer. Danny wanted it loud.

And you worked with M.I.A. on a new track.
We met before but never worked before. M.I.A., she's a real
powerhouse. Somebody played me her CD and I thought, Who's this girl?
She came here and knew all my work, had followed my work for ages. I
said "Cut the crap," this "my idol" crap. You have to teach me. We
started working in India, then we e-mailed the track back and forth.
She did the vocals in England. I did the rest in India.

How does the film's Mumbai compare to the real thing?
For me, it's not about India at all. It's about human emotion, how we
suppress so much and it all comes out. It's a human film, not about
India at all. The soundtrack isn't about India or Indian culture. The
story could happen anywhere: China, Brazil, anywhere. Who Wants to Be
a Millionaire is on in every damn country.


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