Hear, hear



Font Size 

-A +A
Pallavi Jassi
Posted: Dec 14, 2008 at 0128 hrs IST




 
 

It is nomination time for Indian musicians. AR Rahman is in the running for a 
Golden Globe, while 82-year-old Lakshmi Shankar and Debashish Bhattacharya eye 
the Grammy 

A.R. Rahman is what Pandit Ravi Shankar once was — not in the kind of music he 
makes, but in being the blue-eyed composer of every foreign filmmaker who has 
an India story to tell. Danny Boyle too spotted Rahman — for Slumdog 
Millionaire, which stops at all the must-see places of India, from Dharavi to 
the Taj, from call centres to TV studios. And finally at Golden Globe 
nominations for best film (drama), best director, best screenplay and best 
original score. The last is where Rahman makes it. 
“Danny approached Rahman as he had known him since Bombay Dreams. And since it 
was an Indian story with Indian actors, he was convinced that Rahman would be 
the best to belt out the soundtrack for the film,” says a source close to 
Rahman. It was reported that unsentimental Boyle asked Rahman not to put a 
cello in the film. Instead, Slumdog Millionaire’s is an unusual sound that is 
not rooted anywhere but is rooted everywhere — Rahman slips in a light-hearted 
flute that seems it is being gently coaxed to sing, then quickly notches up 
with avant-garde percussion in O saya and old-school hip-hop in Gangsta blues, 
and goes so very Bollywood in Jai ho with Sukhvinder Singh’s vocals. But to win 
the Golden Globe on January 11, Rahman, who has sung most of the songs as well, 
will have to beat Hans Zimmer, Clint Eastwood, James Newton Howard and 
Alexandre Desplat. 
Even as you wonder if Rahman will be at Kodak Theater with an Oscar nomination 
as well, in Los Angeles itself, an 82-year-old doyenne of Hindustani classical 
music is eyeing a Grammy. Lakshmi Shankar has won a nomination in the Best 
Traditional World Music Album category for her compilation Dancing In The 
Light. She is the wife of Rajendra Shankar, the elder brother of Ravi Shankar. 
Ravi, a three-time Grammy winner, is elated by another nomination coming to the 
family — if Anoushka was nominated earlier, Norah Jones has won plenty. “It is 
such wonderful news that Lakshmi has been nominated for the coveted Grammy 
award for her new recording,” says Ravi. “I cannot think of anyone more worthy 
than her as she has been performing all over the world for over five decades 
now. It is unfortunate that we in India have not honoured her for her immense 
talent and dedication even at this ripe age of 82. I send all my best wishes 
and pray that she wins
 this.” 
For that, Lakshmi Shankar will have to beat compatriot Pandit Debashish 
Bhattacharya as well. A 40-something, Kolkata-based musician who invented the 
slide guitar and collaborated with the likes of John McLaughlin and Jerry 
Douglas, Bhattacharya has been nominated for his studio compilation Calcutta 
Chronicles: Indian Slide Guitar that features his guitars that blend the tones 
of the veena, violin and the sarod. “This is my first Grammy nomination and it 
makes me extremely proud as an Indian classical musician,” he says. 
At the Staples Center, LA, on February 8, we will get to know if either Shankar 
or Bhattacharya could take home a Grammy. 
 
http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/hear-hear/397887/


      

Reply via email to