Ummmm, so AM (AM Studio) stands for Arifa Malik.... so finding what KM (KM 
Musiq) stands for is not that far away... :-)
 

--- On Fri, 23/1/09, Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] A. R. Rahman: On a song and a prayer
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, 23 January, 2009, 10:26 AM






A. R. Rahman: On a song and a prayer
Kaveree Bamzai
January 23, 2009 

On a song and a prayer

Rahman at his Kodambakkam home in Chennai
Rahman at his Kodambakkam home in Chennai
Kareema Begum, formerly known as Kasturi, is a slight woman, clad in a shiny 
blue zari-edged
sari, every square centimetre of her worn fingers studded with diamonds, her 
sparkling toothy
smile belying the struggles of her past.

A single mother since 1976, she kept her four children together by renting out 
the two
keyboards her husband, music composer R.K. Shekhar, had left her when he died 
of stomach
cancer.

Times were tough and her prodigiously talented son, then known as A.S. Dileep 
Kumar, was barely
11 when he started performing in public. “It got to the point where I had to go 
take him out of
school every day to take him to performances,” she recalls, speaking in Tamil, 
translated
rapidly by Dileep Kumar a.k.a. Allah Rakha Rahman’s imperious 12-year-old 
daughter.

Hitting the high notes

The Golden Globe has only reiterated Rahman’s genius

Roja (1992)

Mani Ratnam takes a chance on a youngster whose coffee ad jingle he likes.

Rangeela (1995)

Ram Gopal Varma introduces Rahman to Hindi films. His legend grows.

Vande Mataram (1997)

Maa tujhe salaam redefines nationalism. Flag waving suddenly becomes cool.

Bombay dreams (2002)

Thanks to Shekhar Kapur, Andrew Lloyd Webber asks him to compose for the 
musical.

Slumdog Millionaire (2008)

Danny Boyle meets him in Chennai in June, Rahman composes the score at his home 
in London in
July.
“He was in Class X. He told me I should either let him study or let him 
perform. We had to
survive. He had to drop out of school,’’ recalls Kareema. “I will always regret 
it.”

What kept her going was what gives 43-year-old Rahman strength even today. 
Prayer and work.
Influenced by a Sufi mystic, Karimullah Shah Qadri, in whom Kareema found 
solace as she battled
her husband’s illness, she converted the family to Islam in 1987. That faith 
drives her son
today, with everything from the door to his recording studio to his mobile 
number bearing the
holy numbers 786.

And it is that faith that has seen him grow from the boy who played in several 
orchestras for a
living to now being the man who has conquered the capital of the entertainment 
world, becoming
the first Indian to win the Golden Globe for his score in Slumdog Millionaire. 
Rahman’s world
is as multicultural as it is multiplying.

A state-of-the- art commercial studio started in 2005 forms the hub, a music 
conservatory with
40 fulltime foundation students and 50 preparatory students begun last year, is 
the realisation
of a long-cherished dream.

A newly launched music label allows him to give a platform to new talent. And 
his own work,
usually composed at night while the world sleeps, in his private studio at his 
Kodambakkam home
in Chennai, reaches newer heights.

Rahman's mother could afford to send him for guitar lessons only after his 
elder sister
Raihanah had to drop out
Rahman's mother could afford to send him for guitar lessons only after his 
elder sister
Raihanah had to drop out
What makes him the finest among our musicians (who can go from a Meera bhajan 
to a Sufi Khwaja
mere khwaja in Jodhaa Akbar) also distinguishes him as an Indian.

A devout Muslim, his first public performance was in a church on the keyboard 
for his teacher,
and for many, his best works remain the stirring rendition of Vande Mataram, 
the flag swaying
in the wind in tandem with his hair.

How does he do it? If Rahman is a true believer, who insists that every lyric 
should be like a
prayer, so are those who work with him. Only their faith is in him. Most of 
them have been with
him for over a decade, having known him much before Mani Ratnam’s Roja 
propelled him to
national fame.

Things you didn’t know about Rahman

* He sleeps from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., starting work only at 6 p.m. every day.
* His mother could afford to send him to guitar lessons only after his elder 
sister
Raihanah had to drop out. “I didn’t mind,” she says.
* His first public performance was at the age of 11 in a church where his 
master Jacob John
had taken him.
* He changed his name to Allah Rakha Rahman on the credits of the soundtrack of 
Roja in
1992.
* His first stop in any new city is either an electronic store where he likes 
to buy the
latest equipment or a mosque.

Noell James, former singer of many Rahman jingles, has worked with him for 22 
years and been
his manager ever since he can remember.

T. Selvakumar, a former keyboard player who would source his instruments for 
him, is now the
CEO of the KM Music Conservatory.

Vijay Mohan Iyer, a friend for 14 years, now runs his music label.

Deepak Gattani, introduced to him by singer Hariharan 16 years ago, handles his 
concert and
endorsements.

Liz Cook, formerly with the US Government, takes care of his film work. And 
yes, two recent
acquisitions, the law firm of Collins Long and the agents Sam Schwatrz, take 
care of the global
brand he is becoming.

“It’s not about me. It’s about how as a team we survive and excel. That’s when 
you can do good
things,” Rahman says.

At the centre of this vortex, the star remains calm, trying to meet deadlines, 
juggling the
media’s sudden interest in him, and yes, trying to pray five times a day. It 
clears his mind,
allowing the purity of music to filter in. And what music.

Seven-year-old Rahman on his father’s keyboard
Seven-year-old Rahman on his father’s keyboard
As Rahman has evolved, so has his amazing ability to synthesise sounds, taking 
Carnatic,
Western classical, Sufi, Indian classical, jazz and pop and then putting it all 
together like
pieces of a jigsaw puzzle at his Fantome keyboard while the sound engineers 
burn up the Neve
88R console.

Not for him the rigidity of other music directors who are sticklers for their 
tune.

His working style is more collaborative, allowing the musicians to jam together 
and interpret a
piece of music the way they want to.

Rahman with his mother and sisters
Rahman with his mother and sisters
It explains the layers and subtext to his songs.

It’s a process that can take hours, and the comfortable couches in both his 
home and commercial
studios are proof that sometimes the waiting directors do wilt and just crash 
out.

Stories about his late nights are legendary though director Rajiv Menon says it 
is simple. “I
once asked him, why don’t you work in the day? He said he would, “only the 
sunlight hurts his
eyes.” More precisely, says Menon, it probably echoes his apprentice years, 
when he would play
in various orchestras in the day and compose advertising jingles during the 
night. It’s when he
made lasting friendships, from percussionist Sivamani to his CEO Selvakumar. 
It’s also the time
he played in five rock bands.

Everything changed when Mani Ratnam asked him to compose the soundtrack of 
Roja. The 1992 film
was as controversial as its music was outstanding. For Rahman, every 
achievement since pales in
comparison. It ricocheted him into a league of his own, an exclusivity that was 
further
enhanced when Ram Gopal Varma asked him to compose the soundtrack for Rangeela 
in 1995.

Rahman with Roots, a rock band he played with
Rahman with Roots, a rock band he played with
Over the years, Rahman has tried to work only with people he understands. From 
Ashutosh
Gowariker to Aamir Khan, Subhash Ghai to Shankar, Mani Ratnam to Shyam Benegal, 
he works where
there is a relationship. “I only work associate people I want to work with. The 
energy has to
be right,” he says. “It’s almost like a friendship. It can’t be that they 
commission me and I
give the music and they go.” As Gowariker says: “Rahman really blossoms when he 
is given more
information about the script, the song, the characters, the settings. Whenever 
I complete a
script, my first phone call is to him.”

But make no mistake. Rahman is no solemn proto-philosopher trapped in the ivory 
tower of his
soaring creativity. He keeps an open house, with his private studio and meeting 
rooms on the
ground floor, his mother on the first floor and his family on the second floor.

His wife Saira is a shy, retiring sort but his three children, Katheeja, 12, 
Raheema, 10, and
Rumi, 5, more than make up with their boisterous natures, playing noisily next 
to their
father’s reluctant fancy buy, a BMW 5 Series. “For many years,” grumbles 
Selvakumar, “he was
very happy to be driven around in an Ambassador. I had to force him to buy 
this.” Hot idlis (or
tiffin, as his oldest retainer Swami Durai says to all hungry visitors) are 
always on offer as
is coffee on tap from two machines. “For the first two weeks of our arrival in 
India,” says
American Joshua Pollock, one of eight westerners who teach music at the KM 
Music Conservatory,
“he even fed us every meal every day.”

Rahman with wife Saira
Rahman with wife Saira
If making music is his primary talent, his ability to spot talent is not far 
behind. Whether it
is in choosing the faculty for his school or the singers for his soundtracks, 
Rahman has an
unerring eye. It’s not just that he has built a voice bank from all over the 
world categorised
according to their genres.

But it is also that he listens, choosing Rashid Ali, a guitarist he heard at a 
concert for the
Gujarat earthquake in London, to sing the soulful Kabhi kabhi Aditi in Jaane 
Tu... Ya Jaane Na,
or Kavita Baliga who teaches Western vocals at the conservatory and found her 
way into Guzarish
in Ghajini.
There are moments of doubt though and it’s then that Rahman heads off to Andhra 
Pradesh to meet
his spiritual guru, Arifa Malik. “It’s good to talk to someone who is 
disconnected from all
this. Who shares good things with the world,” he says. It’s probably the same 
urge that sees
him dashing off to the nearest dargah in Chennai. “He has earmarked a few 
across the city,”
says Selvakumar, “depending on where he is.”

He is his own worst critic. As he says: “I need to approve my own work. You can 
go wrong even
then. You have to keep an open mind and take inputs. Often you don’t have 
time.” Like the
master of Slumdog Millionaire. They we were mixing it and literally uploading 
straight on to
the Internet for the US release to meet the two week Oscar deadline. “We worked 
20 hours for
three days, sleeping for just two hours. In fact we even got a lot of abuse 
from the US guys.
But yesterday it’s No. 1 in the US digital downloads. Whenever there is too 
much trauma, bad
pressure, it always pays off, ” says Rahman.

But he is firm that music should bring a positive vibe to the listeners. 
“People should feel
uplifted.” He is an astute businessman as well, insisting wherever possible 
that he retain
publishing rights to his songs. He is the face of Airtel, for a reported 
contract of Rs 1 crore
every year, has a strategic partnership with Nokia for projects with a common 
vision and also
popped up as a celebrity judge on 9X’s Mission Ustaad last year.

As he signs papers close to midnight in a day where he has done 20 interviews, 
back to back, he
talks of being introduced at a Los Angeles party to all the music heads of the 
big Hollywood
studios. “They were all familiar with my music,” he says, with just a tinge of 
surprise. And
then he adds with typical understatement: “Offers could come.’’ They always do.

Rahman’s universe

The musician is so tenacious about his privacy that for every story about him, 
there is
another.Aglimpse into his restricted world.

Students at the KM Music conservatory
Students at the KM Music conservatory
The KM Music Conservatory: Full-time foundation and part-time preparatory 
courses train
youngsters in music.

Three of the 40 full-timers who pay Rs 2.5 lakh each have already been signed 
on to apprentice
with Rahman.“Investing in education is the best thing ever,” says Rahman.

The Neve 88R at Rahman’s AM studio
The Neve 88R at Rahman’s AM studio
The AM studio: A high-tech studio where everyone from John McLaughlin to Vishal 
Shekhar (for Om
Shanti Om and Aaja Nachle) have recorded. The phenomenally well-equipped studio 
is named after
his Sufi guru.

Publishing rights: Rahman tries to retain the publishing rights of his music 
wherever possible
so he can reuse it free of cost. His fee for a soundtrack is usually Rs 2 crore.

Endorsements: He is the face of Airtel, has represented Worldspace for a year, 
and has a
strategic partnership with Nokia. Global concerts are organised by long time 
promoter Deepak
Gattani.The last one was in 2007.

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