This year's race for the best original song Oscar is getting way more
attention than usual – in part for who's in the race and, in part, for
who isn't.

There are only three nominees out of 49 eligible songs this year –
"Down to Earth" from "Wall-E," and "Jai Ho" and "O Saya" from "Slumdog
Millionaire" – due to the music Oscar's weird ranking system that only
nominates songs that scored higher than 8.25 out of 10 with its
members. Bruce Springsteen's "The Wrestler," which just won the Golden
Globe for best song, didn't make the cut.

Now Peter Gabriel's "Down to Earth," which plays over the "Wall-E"
credits is nice enough, but the original songs of A.R. Rahman really
are a major part of "Slumdog Millionaire." The same goes for M.I.A.'s
"Paper Planes," which is so dominant in one  segment that it not only
looks like the film was edited to fit the song, but that it was shot
with that song in mind.

Of course, "Paper Planes," which is up for a record of the year
Grammy, isn't eligible because it wasn't written specifically for the
movie. But hopefully Oscar voters will keep that in mind when they
make their picks and give "O Saya," which was co-written by M.I.A. and
Rahman, the nod. Her success story – a Sri Lankan native, the daughter
of a Tamil revolutionary, forced to flee her homeland for London by
civil war – is very similar to what many find appealing in "Slumdog
Millionaire." An Oscar (and hopefully a Grammy) would be grand new
chapters for her.


http://weblogs.newsday.com/entertainment/music/blog/2009/01/why_mia_should_win_the_oscar_f.html


__Regards A.R.Rajib__

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