Shilpa Jamkhandikar

MUMBAI (Reuters) - A.R. Rahman, who won a Golden Globe award Sunday for
best musical score with "Slumdog Millionaire," is one of India's most
famous Bollywood composers and has sold nearly as many albums as
Madonna.

His scores for a host of Indian language movies have fused global
influences from hip-hop and rap to Broadway musicals and Indian folk
music in a way that critics believe could help Bollywood music become
more global.

Rahman, 43, wrote the music for the rags-to-riches romance of a Mumbai
slum boy. The film also bagged three more Golden Globe honors for best
drama, best director and best screenwriter.

It is the first time an Indian has won a Golden Globe for composing in a
country whose rich classical traditions have inspired oeuvres of global
music. Yet, Indian film music is mostly popular only with lovers of
Bollywood.

"This means so much for Indian music," said Gulzar (one name), acclaimed
filmmaker and Bollywood lyricist, who wrote one of the "Slumdog" songs.

"Not just classical (Indian) music, for which you can credit Pandit Ravi
Shankar and all the other musicians, but when it comes to cinema and its
music, Rahman has really brought it to the global stage."

Known as the "Mozart of Madras," the hometown of Rahman in southern
India, the reticent composer was born A.S. Dileep Kumar, a Hindu, before
his family converted to Sufi Islam and gave him the name Allah Rakha
Rahman.

He studied music at Oxford and wrote advertisement jingles before
getting a break in 1992 for the film "Roja." The film paved the way for
a career that has seen him sell around 200 million albums.

While his tunes for Hindi films such as "Bombay," "Dil Se," "Taal" and
"Guru" and other Indian films redefined contemporary Indian music,
global acclaim came with his score for Andrew Llyod Webber's musical
"Bombay Dreams" and the theater production for "The Lord of the Rings."

"His confluence of Indian and Western sounds is sure to go global now,"
said Vishal Dadlani, a Bollywood composer and a contemporary of Rahman.

"The world had to wake up to the talent that this man has. It was
inevitable."

While Bollywood films are seen globally as splashy but naive, their
music hardly has managed to overcome the language barrier for a foreign
listener.

But in Rahman, Bollywood experts say, anyone with half an ear would not
miss the vibrant, varied melody that is universal.

"To have what are essentially Indian songs and sounds in an English film
speaks volumes of the confluence in Rahman's music," said Dadlani.

"When you see it in the film, it dawns that the music is neither Indian
nor Western, and that I think is the key to making it global. He has
managed to merge the two without losing out on the magic."

Bollywood experts hailed Rahman's Golden Globe as a watershed in Indian
music history.

"There are crossover films, and awards and mentions abroad, but to win a
Golden Globe is a true global honor," said Shankar Mahadevan, another
top composer and singer.

"The music industry in India has not even realised how huge this honor
is."

(Writing by Krittivas Mukherjee; Editing by Alistair Scrutton)

Reply via email to