A. R. Rahman, today
You’ve heard the phrase “gateway drug”? 
Usually it refers marijuana, with some folks asserting that smoking
pot is not as harmless as most people think, rather, it’s the start of
a slippery slope, serving as a gateway to harder drugs.
For me, the 1998 release Dil Se was a gateway film, in so many ways.
It was the first Mani Ratnam film I ever saw.
It was also the first time I ever heard Sukwinder Singh, lending his very 
distinctive voice to the now hugely famous Chayya Chayya song, while Shah Rukh 
danced atop a moving train with Malaika Arora.
And it was the first time I was hearing the work of A.R. Rahman, the
wunderkind of Indian film music: composer, singer, musician, in Hindi,
in Tamil, on Broadway.  He makes most of us look like slackers.
That was 10 years ago. 
Like I was back then - at a hastily added midnight showing of Dil Se - I am 
still stunned by what he can create, with such beauty and such
variety, from the haunting instrumental theme of another Mani Ratnam
film, Bombay, to the rippling, joyful Pachai Nirame (a.k.a. Saathiya), to the 
swirling Yenna Solla Pogirai of Kandukondain Kandukondain and the aching beauty 
of Tere Bina, a love song from yet another Mani Ratnam, Guru.
The maestro himself will be a guest today on SAJA’s blogtalkradio
webinar, at 12 noon, New York time, answering questions and talking
about his music and his career.
Details about how to connect and listen in here. 


http://filmiholic.com/2008/12/08/a-r-rahman-today/

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