A Conversation With Bollywood's A.R. RahmanLauren Streib, 01.06.09, 11:50 AM 
EST 
The man behind the music for ''Slumdog
Millionaire'' on fame, the effects of the Mumbai terrorist attacks and
changes in Bollywood. 
A.R. Rahman 
   
A.R. Rahman, Bollywood's leading composer, is the man behind the music for the 
runaway hit Slumdog Millionaire.
Critics have already doused him with award-season honors: The Hollywood
Foreign Press Association, Chicago Film Critics Association, Los
Angeles Film Critics Association, International Press Academy and the
Broadcast Film Critics Association have recognized him.
The composer emerged to prominence after the 1992 film Roja became an instant 
success and earned Rahman his first of three National
Film Awards (India's version of the Oscar). Rahman introduced a wide
range of musical influences--from Western pop to electronica--to
Bollywood film scores, redefining contemporary Indian music. He's now
one of the best-selling musicians of all time, with estimated lifetime
sales topping 100 million records.

What do you think will happen to the film industry in Mumbai as a result of the 
recent attacks?  
I think the basic reaction was anger towards a lot of
things--the security, the government and towards Pakistan. As a result
of all that, there's a kind of madness and probably an urgency for a
solution, which is nice. 
I think some of the very high-profile
movies were affected because promotion couldn't be done. In such a
state, you can't go and promote a movie. But it's slowly settling down.
Bombay's almost like New York; people have to get going the next day.
Will it change the nature of films produced? 
That's yet to be seen.
What role does religion have in your work? 
I'm a Sufi Muslim, I would say. I believe in using the medium to
create a good vibration because art is so important to society. Some
projects I don't do because I feel that it's going to create a bad
vibe. I don't do propaganda films that are anti another religion,
anti-Muslim or anti-Hindu. 
How do you decide which projects to accept and which to turn down? 
That's a question of instinct, actually. Some things are very
low profile, but if they excite me creatively, I accept them. Sometimes
there are high-profile projects, and you have to do it. We all have
human limitations. It is a painful decision to turn things down. Even
accepting Slumdog Millionaire was a decision that I had to sacrifice another 
project. 
Is it true that as a musician you don't receive royalties on the sales of your 
music? 
It is true. It was true. But now things are changing.
Now we're more aware of what music can do and the ways music is used in
certain things. Initially, we just wanted to do music and nothing else.
Now we have the option to talk. The time was coming. There's a time for
everything, and that time came. It so happened that I had to be the
first step. 
A film composer, at least until last year, was paid
but not to the level of anything. In the U.S., you do one song and
you're settled for life almost. But I was happy with what I was doing
and what I was getting. The hunger always makes you push to do more
things. 
You're a superstar in India, yet you're an unknown in the U.S. Does that bother 
you? 
I think I can get away, sometimes, with walking in the streets
and not getting noticed. I like that. I want my work to get noticed,
not me. And it's slowly getting there, which is good. 
After a
point of time, when you get success and fame, money and everything, the
purpose of life has to be redefined. For me, I think that purpose is to
build bridges. Artists can do that very easily, more than politicians.
I am involved with my foundation in doing projects for fighting
poverty, and I have a music school to teach students here to play
classical music. All these things make me run faster; otherwise I'd get
complacent. 


http://www.forbes.com/business/2009/01/06/bollywood-movies-rahman-biz-media-cz_ls_0106rahman.html

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