The Songbird of 'Slumdog' Hip-hop star M.I.A. on her Oscar and Grammy
nominations

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   By ETHAN 
SMITH<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=ETHAN+SMITH&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>

Hip-hop artist M.I.A. recently rocketed from the experimental underground to
the pinnacle of the entertainment world. "O Saya," her collaboration with
Indian composer A.R. Rahman from the "Slumdog Millionaire" soundtrack, is
one of three nominees for the best-song Oscar. And her track "Paper Planes"
is in contention at this weekend's Grammy Awards for record of the year --
the Recording Academy's top honor.

Born Mathangi Arulpragasam in Britain, the future singer returned with her
family to her parents' native Sri Lanka when she was 6 months old. The
family, who are members of Sri Lanka's ethnic-Tamil minority, moved to
Jaffna, in the island nation's north. Not long afterward, the country
erupted into civil war between the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan
government, and violence consumed Jaffna.

As a child, Ms. Arulpragasam rarely saw her father, Arul Pragasam, who was
involved in the Tamil-separatist movement -- though she says he was part of
a more political faction than the violent and better-known Tigers.

At age 10 she fled with her mother, elder sister and younger brother first
to India and then back to London, where her mother now works as a seamstress
and M.I.A. attended art college.

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M.I.A.'s songs appear in 'Slumdog Millionaire.'
 [image: M.I.A.'s songs appear in 'Slumdog Millionaire.']

Ms. Arulpragasam says her harrowing life has informed both the lyrics and
sound of her songs. After her song "Paper Planes" was included last year in
a trailer for the stoner comedy "Pineapple Express," it became M.I.A.'s
first hit -- and an unlikely one at that. The song's signature element,
gunshot sounds that are part of its rhythm bed, generated controversy. The
song's refrain is the seemingly aggressive chant: "All I wanna do is" --
Pow! Pow! Pow! Pow! -- "and take your money." But M.I.A. calls the song an
ironic comment on the way Westerners perceive Third World immigrants.

Ms. Arulpragasam now lives in Los Angeles, where she is starting a family of
her own under far gentler circumstances than the ones in which she was
raised. She and fiancé Benjamin Brewer are expecting her first child as soon
as this weekend.

*WSJ:* *You're nominated for an Oscar and a Grammy as the conflict in Sri
Lanka is heating up, with accusations of very ugly behavior by both sides.
Does that make for a bittersweet moment?*

*M.I.A.:* I'm also nominated for a Brit Award in England. But for me
nominations are not like a musical thing. It's more like me having a
platform. The point of success is being able to tell a wider audience about
the situation in Sri Lanka.

*Your lyrics address issues like human trafficking and guerrilla warfare in
a telling-it-like-it-is, almost amoral way that's similar to the way gangsta
rap treated drug dealing and urban violence in the 1990s. Do you see a
connection?*

I've seen, with my own eyes, a lot of s- go down. I've seen people get
massacred in front of me. My school was burned to the ground when I was 6
years old. When you come from that kind of background, you do become matter
of fact, and tell it like it is.

*What do you say to critics, like the Sri Lankan rapper Delon, who accuse
you of glorifying terrorism?*
 If you think lyrics about guns are bad, I shouldn't have been shot at when
I was 7 years old.

*Your Oscar-nominated song sounds very different from your own music. What
was it like collaborating with A.R. Rahman on a lushly orchestrated song for
a Hollywood movie?*

I'm not used to recording in $1 million studios. I approach music as an
experimental artist. I go out in the street and record people in their
element; I play around with drum machines and samplers. I make a whole bunch
of mess and see what works. A.R. Rahman works in a much more professional
way than I do, with a lot of professional people. But I love him musically.
He's been the only composer in every Tamil film that I've watched and liked.

*Was it set up as a meeting of two Tamil stars?*

When I first met A.R. [while recording her album "Kala"], I wasn't that big.
My music wasn't Tamil-sounding, it didn't sound like average music coming
out of the West, but it wasn't mainstream Indian, either.
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-- 
regards,
Vithur

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