AR Rahman scored big for emperors and slumdogs
BY LALITHA SUHASINI
    
Mint Lounge, 27 december, 2008

E arlier this month, I found myself roaming the streets of Dimapur, a 
nondescript, dusty city in Nagaland whose youth is fanatical about all forms of 
metal—white, death, thrash, speed; the heavier the riffs, the better. Posters 
of an upcoming White Lion concert were plastered all over town but there was no 
sign of Bollywood. Hell, the place didn’t even have a movie hall. I bumped into 
a mobile download store at every corner—you could even download tones at the 
local paan store. So it was surreal when I saw a kid blast the Yuvvraaj number 
Tu Meri Dost Hai off his mobile.

Every year, there’s an anthem that endorses A.R. Rahman’s talent. This year 
there were several, including the one our young man in Dimapur downloaded. 
Sixteen years into his career as a composer, 2008 turned out to be a watershed 
with the largest number of Bollywood releases till date for Rahman. He also 
launched KM Music Conservatory (KMMC) to train students in Western and Indian 
classical music soon after he launched his label KM Musiq. The fee is hefty but 
the composer has made sure there are grants and subsidized packages for 
deserving students. Rahman even engaged KMMC faculty in film soundtracks this 
year. So, Kavita Baliga, who teaches vocals, did the operatic parts in Guzarish 
from Ghajini and V.R.

Sekar with Elidh Martin, who teach the cello, are featured in the soundtrack of 
Yuvvraaj. I’m sure students will show up on soundtrack credits soon.

I remember Rahman sounding like an expectant dad as 2007 wound to a close—he 
was happy to announce that he had a slew of releases lined up for the new year. 
Jaane Tu...Ya Jaane Na had been held up over for a little more than a year due 
to production snags; Jodhaa Akbar, which was under production, had been pushed 
from 2007 to 2008; a Subhash Ghai project was yet to be titled (Yuvvraaj); and 
there was Ghajini. Dilli 6 made it to his list as well but it is still under 
production and is now slated to be a 2009 release. Ada: A Way of Life and 
Slumdog Millionaire were the two big surprises.

With Ada, Rahman, the geek that he is, opened himself up to a tech innovation: 
He allowed virtually anybody to remix two numbers (Gulfisha and Gumsum) off the 
film’s score via Nokia’s XpressMusic website. It was another first for Rahman, 
another leap into the future. Gulfisha, sung by Sonu Nigam, made a lot of noise 
but soon made way for the bigger hits in Abbas Tyrewala’s directorial debut.

Jaane Tu...Ya Jaane Na was an album cut for mass hysteria.

Rashid Ali, who played the guitar in a jazz quartet at pubs in London, turned 
into a phenomenon with Kabhi Kabhi Aditi as did Benny Dayal, who sang the sassy 
Pappu Can’t Dance Saala. This year reconfirmed that Rahman is a terrific 
headhunter. His formula is simple: He needs to hear magic when the singers go 
behind the mike. Exactly the way an actor transforms a scene dynamically when 
he steps into the frame. It doesn’t matter if the guy has lost a talent hunt 
(Naresh Iyer) or is a music teacher in Suriname with no claim to fame 
(Madhushree).

Rahman’s range as a vocalist expanded with each film too. If he surpassed 
himself with his tribute to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan in Guru’s Tere Bina in 2007, 
there was Khwaja Mere Khwaja from Jodhaa Akbar which made the qawwali 
accessible again.

And he kept innovating. Who would have imagined that he would direct the 
Chennai String Orchestra to magnificently pull off Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony 
Prelude in Yuvvraaj? The script allowed for lusty Western classical departures; 
sometimes film-makers such as Ghai and Mani Ratnam (I can’t wait for Raavan 
where Rahman and Ratnam reunite—it’s as thrilling as Quincy Jones and Michael 
Jackson every single time) are known to tweak their films around Rahman’s 
music. O.P.

Nayyar and Naushad commanded such respect in the 1950s and 1960s but few 
composers have thereafter.

Rahman has been accused several times of repackaging and re-recording his older 
tunes for a new audience. Even in doing so he’s managed to increase his fan 
base. Surely, few in the north would have picked up the soundtrack for 
Alaipayuthey but many must have enjoyed the soundtrack of Saathiya, the Hindi 
remake, as much or even more. Surprisingly, he hasn’t taken a single track off 
the hit Tamil OST for the Hindi version of Ghajini. Guzarish and Behka from the 
Aamir Khan-starrer are catchy melodies with Rahman teaming up again with Rang 
De Basanti collaborator Prasoon Joshi to sweep the charts.

Slumdog Millionaire was a quick, quiet release. Rahman wrapped up the project 
in an astounding two months for Danny Boyle, collaborating with M.I.A.—the 
UK-based Sri Lankan wild child. Like Rahman, M.I.A.

broke into the mainstream with her inimitable vocal style and razor rhythms. 
She spent her early years in Chennai and returned to record parts of her 
smash-hit second album, Kala, in Chennai, inevitably landing up at Rahman’s AM 
Studios to fine-tune it. She told me last year how she, like the rest of the 
world, had been blown away by Rahman and hated Gwen Stefani for grabbing her 
idea of redoing a Rahman hit. Stefani, she says, used the rhythm section of 
Ottagatte Kattiko, a Tamil hit from the 1990s flick Gentleman, in her debut 
Sweet Escape.

Slumdog was M.I.A.’s cash-in time. Not only did the soundtrack include Paper 
Planes, the knockout number from Kala, M.I.A. also recorded O Saya with her 
idol. The track is a megajam with dark tribal beats and Rahman’s chant-style 
vocals playing over M.I.A’s gritty rap.

And Rahman rewrote music history again when he completely redid Choli Ke Peeche 
Kya Hai as Ringa Ringa. So it isn’t surprising that the soundtrack has snagged 
a Golden Globe nomination.

As the world fell apart around us, Rahman raised his voice against terror with 
Jiya Se Jiya, a robust number that draws from Rajasthani and Punjabi folk with 
percussionists from across the globe, including Sivamani, in his brand new solo 
album, Connections. The video that shows free huggers walking around various 
parts of the country is as emotionallycharged yet simple. Oh, and he also did 
the rousing theme song for the new Champions League T20 series with some power 
chords and Jamaican influences thrown in. Looking back at all that’s happened 
this year, it’s sometimes hard to believe that Rahman is one individual at 
work. But every single victory of his is somehow personal for all of us. The 
Slumdog OST has two tracks in the Oscar longlist for Best Original Song. Can 
ARR win? You know the answer.

Lalitha Suhasini is a willing listener if you’re playing something original or 
have an original excuse to do covers. She was formerly an assistant editor with 
Rolling Stone India.

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