Musicians who work with him call him 'Rahman Sir' and technicians in his
studio refer to him as 'Boss' – out of sheer respect and admiration. On his
43rd birthday, Radioandmusic.com spoke to those who have worked with the
homegrown genius and also his composer fans from the industry who have
followed his music.

Rahman has a set of musicians whom he prefers to work with. We know that
Rahman composes at night and that he also owns the best equipped studio that
anybody could ever dream to own. But there is something more interesting
than that – the ability of this man to understand emotions and music so
well.

Needless to say, Sivamani is one such musician who has worked closely with
Rahman and is extremely proud about it, "I started my music career with
Rahman, we played together in a band called 'Roots' – I feel really proud to
say that 'I know Rahman'" says Sivamani.

On Rahman's working style, Sivamani says, "When Rahman is working on music,
he has ideas about which musician should be given the song for
improvisations – I don't know how but he has that knack". We know that
Bollywood has a tendency to follow things or ideas that 'work'. However,
when it comes to music, Rahman has been in the forefront – in setting trends
and experimenting with sounds. "Well, Rahman belives that in music, you
should not follow any rules – just fill the plate the way you like it at
that moment," adds Sivamani.

Often, the maestro captures 'recording takes' of musicians while they are
not even aware or are completely lost – this way, he tries to get the best
of the musician or the singer's creative instincts in their most natural
state. "Even when I would sing some parts with less involvement, or
inadvertently cough during a song, Rahman would still retain and use it at
an appropriate place," recalls singer Mahalaskhmi Iyer, who sang one of her
earliest hits for Rahman in Mani Ratnam's Dil Se. However, it's not just the
songs by Rahman that stand out – his background scores are also equally
good. "Rahman pays equal attention to his background scores as well. Films
like the recent Slumdog Millionaire, Guru or Bombay all had phenomenal
background scores" she says, "I don't see him just as a musican - he's a
magician."  Many, who ...
have worked with him, feel that Rahman is a completely different person in
studio. For the outer world he may be an introvert, but those who have seen
him closely say that the man also possesses a good sense of humour – lucky
guys!

Working with Rahman is the biggest achievement any musician can ask for.
Working with a director of his reach also exposes the musician playing with
him to the entire world. Sanjeev Thomas, guitarist of Rainbow Bridge and
someone who often plays for Rahman says, "His reach is unimaginable, if you
are a musician working with Rahman you meet so many musicians, creative and
like minded people from all over the world. Not to forget he is the best
'paymaster' in the industry – most importantly, he knows how to treat and
respect a musician." Rahman can really pump you up to take the best out of
you. Thomas says, "I was supposed to play a guitar solo in Ghajini's 'Aye
Bacchu' – Rahman's brief was simple – he said, 'just make it the most
memorable solo of your life'." He adds, "Mostly, Rahman is quiet, he doesn't
spend too much time directing – but we all know what he wants." Rahman
acknowledges inputs from all, be it lyricists, musicians or technicians.
Besides that, he makes sure that those who have contributed gets their due
credit – something which musicians and technicians really value.

Benny Dayal, who has sang several songs like Tu Meri Dost Hai, Behka, Papu
Can't Dance for Rahman sums it up in a line, "Well, he's pretty chilled
out."

THE COMPOSERS P.O.V

Amit Trivedi, who recently hit it golden with debut film Aamir says, "I have
grown up listening to him and have probably heard all his albums – right
from Roja to Slumdog Millionaire. I have also been following his Tamil and
Malayalam releases closely."

"Most composers either draw refrences or influences from other composers for
sound or song structures. I feel what makes Rahman stands out is that he
starts with a 'blankspace' - no references no influences. He simply follows
what comes naturally - that is what makes him unique" he adds.

Composer and singer Rabbi Shergill says, "I see him as a very mature
musician, composer and a settled human being. Well, one album which I really
liked of Rahman was Swades."

Most likely, we may never be able to figure out 'how' ...

http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/news/to-rahman-sir-with-love#story
-- 
regards,
Vithur

Reply via email to