One Movie Composer Who Knows the Score

By BRIAN WISEWhen
British director Danny Boyle needed a composer to capture the frantic
and violent hustle and bustle of Mumbai for his film "Slumdog
Millionaire," he turned to A.R. Rahman, Bollywood's best-known
composer, whose dozens of film scores span romantic symphonic themes,
classical Indian music, and catchy pop confections. In India, Mr.
Rahman is a megastar, having sold an estimated 100 million albums, or
roughly the same number as Madonna or Billy Joel. Not only has he
scored such Bollywood film classics as "Roja" and "Lagaan," but he has
a growing slate of international credits, including the 2002 Andrew
Lloyd Webber-produced London stage musical "Bombay Dreams" and last
year's film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age."
Mr. Boyle's exuberantly paced story -- about an orphan from the
Mumbai slums who gets a shot at winning a fortune on India's version of
"Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" -- is a distant cry from Bollywood,
where Mr. Rahman has worked for nearly two decades. "He didn't want any
sentimental or sad stuff. He wanted only throbbing and edgy and
pulsating sounds," Mr. Rahman said of Mr. Boyle's request to avoid
emotion-tugging themes and maudlin arrangements.

Ken Fallin"The music came as a kind
of counterpoint actually," added the soft-spoken 42-year-old composer.
"When there's something really serious happening on screen there was a
fun soundtrack underneath. It would make the movie more enjoyable."
With its intoxicating Indian rhythms blended with Western hip-hop
beats, the "Slumdog Millionaire" soundtrack has received a Golden Globe
nomination for Best Original Score, making Mr. Rahman the first Indian
composer to receive such an honor. (Music from the film is collected on
a new soundtrack release.)
Mr. Rahman said that after receiving Mr. Boyle's commission, he had
just three weeks to study early DVD cuts of the film and compose the
cues (the musical themes that correspond to moments in the plot). On
two tracks, he quotes well-known Bollywood tunes, while in one of the
film's most talked-about sequences -- the rousing chorus "Jai Ho" -- he
pays homage to splashy Bollywood song-and-dance routines. Mr. Rahman
also worked with M.I.A., the British-born, Sri Lankan-reared rapper to
create "O . . . Saya," which is heard in a pivotal scene. "She speaks
my language, but her sensibility is completely different," noted Mr.
Rahman, who grew up speaking Tamil.
While a typical Bollywood music director may score up to 150 movies
a year, Mr. Rahman limits his annual commissions to between five and 10
films (still a considerable number by Hollywood standards). In popular
films like "Kadhalan," "Rangeela," "Dil Se," "Taal" and "Rang de
Basanti," Mr. Rahman introduced styles relatively foreign to Bollywood
-- including dancehall reggae, hip-hop, hard rock and Baroque
counterpoint. Even so, he acknowledges that experimentation often bows
to commercial pressures.
"The demand in India is to have a hit, which becomes a promotion for
the movie and makes people come to the theater," Mr. Rahman said. "You
have five songs and different promotions based on those. But when I do
Western films, the need for originality is greater. Then I become very
conscious about the writing. However, the good thing about Indian
cinema is because there are so many ragas in it, you can take a raga
and make it a little bit funkier and people can relate to it. Half of
the stuff I get away with is like that."
Mr. Rahman identifies with the rags-to-riches tale of "Slumdog
Millionaire." "A lot of people write you off when you have an idea or
something good to say," he said. "This is to give hope to those kind of
people. Take the right road and you will definitely be there."
Mr. Rahman was born into a middle-class Hindu family that fell on
hard times after his father, the film arranger and conductor R.K.
Sekhar, died when he was 9. The young Rahman, who began studying the
piano at the age of 4, began helping to support his family as a
keyboardist for television productions. As a teenager he performed with
Indian musical luminaries like tabla maestro Zakir Hussain and
violinist and singer L. Shankar. These gigs led to a scholarship to
Trinity College, Oxford, where he earned a degree in Western classical
music.
Returning to Madras (now Chennai), Mr. Rahman worked as a jingle
writer for an ad agency. A turning point came in 1991, when at age 25,
he was hired to write and direct music for the Mani Ratnam film "Roja."
The film and soundtrack became smash hits, and Time magazine listed it
as one of the top 10 movie soundtracks of all time. Today, Mr. Rahman
remains based in Chennai, although he considers Mumbai his second home
-- feelings that intensified after the November terrorist attacks.
"We were all affected by that," he said, noting the many press
events that he's attended at the Taj Mahal hotel, the site of one of
the attacks. "For me, it was a shock. I could have been there with my
family. Some of my friends had a dinner reservation there. Then 10
minutes before they heard the news they stopped going. They could have
been victims."
Even as the Mumbai attacks signaled growing religious and ethnic
strife, Mr. Rahman, whose family converted to Islam in 1989, sees music
as having the power to cut across class and religious divisions. "When
I listen to Bach or Beethoven, I don't see them as Christians," he
explained. "And when people listen to my music, or that of [the late
Qawwali singer] Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, they don't see the religious
element in it; they just see the spiritual element. At this chaotic
time in the world, music can play a very important role as a spiritual
force."
Mr. Rahman said that despite Hollywood's allure, he has no plans to
leave the Indian film industry, although he's ready to work with any
director who appreciates his music. In 2002, Sony Pictures hired him to
write the score for "Warriors of Heaven and Earth," a costume epic by
Chinese director He Ping that included songs in Chinese, English and
Hindi. Coming to movie theaters are his scores for "Paani" (Water), by
"Elizabeth" director Shekhar Kapur, and "19 Steps," an English-language
martial-arts film co-produced by Walt Disney and starring a Japanese
actor.
"It's very difficult to get a director who understands what you're
capable of," said Mr. Rahman. "Danny Boyle was definitely good luck for
me. He could get what I was trying to do, and in my own little way I
could get what he wanted. So if I can get another director like that I
would definitely love to work in Hollywood."
Mr. Wise is a writer living in New York and a producer at WNYC Radio.

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