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Tejonmayam<http://www.expressbuzz.com/edition/searchresult.aspx?AliasName=i7Bg|4jQbqCLCRKXEwXWFQ==>
First Published : 24 Jan 2009 12:55:00 AM IST
Last Updated : 26 Jan 2009 12:44:21 PM IST

CHENNAI: Having lent her voice for the scores of popular music directors in
Kollywood, Sri Mathumitha has added yet another feather to her cap by being
a part of the buzz of the town. The city-based singer has sung a track in
the film Slumdog Millionaire that received the much-awaited Golden Globe
Award for the maestro of Madras — AR Rahman and has now been nominated for
the Oscars. Singing for the track Liquid Dance was not anything different
for Sri Mathumitha but she never expected the film and the tracks would be
of such magnitude that it would receive a worldwide appreciation.

''I got a call from Rahman sir' studio last October and I was only told that
I am singing for the film Slumdog Millionaire which is a foreign project,''
she says after completing an on-air show at the Big FM studios. The song
demanded her to sing jathis that only a trained classical singer can do.
Rahman explained the track and gave her the freedom to experiment with
music.

The end result was Liquid Dance that was recorded in October 2008. Sri
Mathumitha wasn't sure if it would be featured in the film but she was happy
to her name listed in the track list.

This being not the first time she has sung for Rahman's compositions, Sri
Mathumitha has been into playback singing for the composer since the age of
nine and has also been a part of ARR's Vande Matharam song. One of the
popular songs that she sang for Rahman was Nathaswaram Pola for the film
Azhagia Tamizh Magan. The singer was also a part of Abaswaram Ramji's troupe
Isai Mazhalai that performs live shows across the globe. The 20-year-old is
presently a part of another muchawaited Kollywood film Naan Kadavul in which
she has two tracks for Illayaraja. Having sung for two popular music
directors in Kollywood, Mathumitha has also lent her voice to the younger
generation composers like Yuvan Shankar Raja (7G Rainbow Colony) and Harris
Jayaraj (Lesa Lesa). While Illayaraja explains his fixed plans for a song
and gets the same out of the singer, Rahman is more laid back explaining his
ideas for a song only after analysing what the singer can contribute.

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-- 
regards,
Vithur

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