Jade Tete-a-tete

Jade February 2009

>From creating a revolution in INdian film music to composing for international 
>plays and films
A.R.Rahman has done it all. As we go to press, his original score for the 
critically acclaimed
Slumdog Millionaire has won him the Golden Globe Award.

Vee Jay Sai gets to know the man behind the acclaim.

A bylane in Kodambakkam, Chennai, is filled with people holding boquets, 
candles and cakes. A
sleek car pulls up, a man hops out with a wide smile on his face. Greeting the 
crowd that mobs
him. He talks, smiles at clicking cameras and then spots an old lady in torn 
cotton sari,
standing silently in a corner. He rushes across leaving everyone behind. She 
flashes him a
toothless smile, gives him a rose and kisses him. "I am so honoured you came," 
he says. 

In the living room, a Yamaha CLAVINOVA electronic piano sits in the corner. 
THere is a ROland
D5 editing console, the size of a TT table. A glass-enclosed case holds dozens 
of awards and
citations. 

Slumdog Millionaire

"So sorry to keep you waiting," says A.R.Rahman. "But lets sit and talk now." 
Outside the glass
door are a hundred eager faces watching him. Bagging the Golden Globe award for 
Best Original
Score in Slumdog Millionaire, has his whole office excited as his fans across 
the world. Rahman
talks about how the assignment happened. 

"I got a mail one morning from Danny. He said that he knew my music and wanted 
to work with me
on a project. I had no clue who he was or what he did. I did a Google search 
and found out that
he was a well known director. Slumdog Millionaire is about suffering, hope and 
redemption.
Danny was very sure what he wanted from me and what he didn't want. The way he 
projected my
music is terrific. I don't think any other city has been portrayed as vibrantly 
as Mumbai has."


So, what didn't he want? "Oh, he didn't want romantic and sentimental stuff. He 
likes edgy
music and that's what we worked on, so it's like a terrific discotheque." 

And the response to his music? "They loved it. LA is a place that people in the 
entertainment
industry say things that they don't mean. So, I thought they were just being 
polite. But then I
found that those biggies of Hollywood actually meant every word they said. 
Although some of the
songs are in Hindi, it didn't seem to matter. Jai Ho, O Saya and Ringa Ringa 
are all in Hindi,
but they responded to them wonderfully."

How important is the knowledge of classical music for a composer? "Well, 
knowing is good. But
then not knowing is also good. Knowing and pretending not to know is also good. 
When one knows,
ones pride often takes over and doesn't allow one to proceed with one's work. 
When one doesn't
know, there is no pride and the constant process of learning keeps bringing out 
one's best.
Either way, the quest for learning must go on."

Early Times

Born as Dileep Kumar, he converted to Islam after the illness of his father was 
miraculously
cured with the healing of a Sufi saint. His father was a musician who "almost 
killed himself
working. In those days, he did 90% of the job and almost all of it went 
unrecognized or under
someone else's name. What was worse, he used to be called an 'Assistant'. This 
sort of a
treatment never let him live a peaceful life. His health deteriorated till he 
passed away. His
life has taught me not to take on too much work. I get lots of offers every 
day. But I am fine
doing two or three films a year rather than running around doing twenty. One 
learns from
life..."

After the death of his father, the family survived by hiring out the musical 
instruments which
their father used. This continued till young Rahman started making music 
himself along with
some close friends. 

He had a band called Magic, in the 1980s, which included Sivamani, the drummer, 
TV
Gopalakrishnan, mridangam and Deva on the drums. They released a private music 
album called
Disco 82 which was popular with the young crowd. 

The Sufi philosophy

Having grown up with problems, one cannot help notice how down to earth Rahman 
is. Trying to
understand life philosophically helped him heal. He says, "I took to Sufism for 
the one
question that we all ask. The eternal question: who am I? What was I created 
for? And in this
search I started opening up and found light and love. THe turning point is to 
question one self
and start the inward journey to find the answer. At some point, all your 
intellectual pride
crashes. You feel a power from within. It's this power that drives you."

A devout muslim, Rahman never misses his namaz five times a day however busy 
the schedule he
has. It was after his first pilgrimage or the Haj that his son was born. And as 
if it were a
true blessing, the father and son both share the same birthday! It's the strong 
Sufi
inclination that gets him to creates his unforgettable melodies.

Revolutionary music

Rahman brought about a revolution in Indian film music. There are rumours about 
the way that
Rahman composes his music, from accusation of plagiarism to the practice of 
mysterious rituals.
" I love classical music. I love Bach, Beethoven, Verdi. Classical music is 
like an ocean. All
the other genres of music are mere droplets in it. So there are bound to be 
influences of
classical music in my work. I also attend music concerts where I can. My 
favourite musicians
are L. Subramanian and L. Shankar. There are the real heroes of Indian music if 
you ask me.
It's mind boggling, the phenomenal work they did of taking our music to the 
world, In those
days when INdian music did not have any global exposure. As for secret 
rituals..." he laughs.
"It's just that I need complete peace and calm when I compose , so I do it in 
the night.
Another thing is, I am a father of three kids, they often fight, and I am 
summoned to make
peace between them in the day time. So, all this is avoided at night."

Rahman scores music across geographical boundaries by composing for languages 
like Hindi,
Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam. Does he mind if sometimes his music is thought to 
be a flop?
Rahman shrugs. "I didn't know about that. I only know that I make music. Like 
there was this
movie made by Mani Ratnam called IRuvar, for which I composed. People suddenly 
realized that
they music was good one year after the film released! So, you never know. What 
is flop for one,
works for another. As for me, if I haven't invested in myself wholly and felt 
satisfied about
my music, then I term it as a flop."

The inheritance of music

As for music legacy, Rahman doesn't believe in it. "I think music has to change 
time and again.
RD Burman became himself not because he tried to be his father. Similarly, I 
dread to be anyone
else or have anyone else take over from me. I keep worrying about my children 
having a father
like me. People start expecting from them what they see in me. You can be 
influenced, but you
have to make your own music in the end. "

Other than film music, Rahman has done a great deal of work in non-film music. 
"I have been
working with the Hamburg Orchestra, to compose a great Sufi mystic Fareed Al 
din Attar's
Conference of the Birds. It's not an easy thing. I mentioned it to them and 
they immediately
commissioned it. It's only after I started working on it, that I realized what 
I was getting
into. I haven't done much work on it. I feel I need to be spiritually ready for 
it. 

Are there any specific music directors or singers that he likes. "Mohd. Rafi, 
Whitney Houston,
Ofra Haza, the Jewish singer, Kylie Minogue..." He also takes time out to watch 
a film once in
a while. "A good movie I saw recently was Takwa, a Turkish movie and then I saw 
Waris Shah -
Ishq da Waris by Gurdas Mann, on the Sufi saint Hazrat Waris Shah. I loved 
them."

The Philanthropic Composer

It's difficult to practice Sufism without constant detachment and charity. It 
was this
philosophy that got him to start the A.R.Rahman Foundation.

"I was inspired by the El Systema project in Venezuela. They take poor kids 
from the slums and
train them as classical musicians. This is a movement. There is immense 
participation and in
the end they come out with some of the best music. So, the foundation I set up 
is on those
lines. It works to make poverty history in India. If we all put our heads 
together, we can do
it. We only plant the seed and water it with good intentions. What it grows 
into is not in our
hands."

He came up with his first English composition "Pray for me Brother" to raise 
funds for the
foundation. "I feel that more than anything every person in the world needs 
love. I hope the
song will create awareness and make a difference in the life of underprivileged 
children."
Rahman's formula for love and his Sufi philosophy also got him to endorse the 
famous "Free
Hugs" campaign started by Jason Hunter. 

Rahman took time out along with his old buddy drummer, Sivamani to compose Jiya 
Se Jiya, the
popular track and video that promotes this campaign. "Believe in the power of 
love and love
your fellow humans. This is what the world needs now."

A.R.Rahman chooses top 5 romantic favourites

1. When I fall in love by Celine Dion
2. Theme music of Kal Ho Na Ho
3. Chopin's Hungarian Rhapsody
4. Love Theme from Cinema Paradiso
5. The Theme music from Love Story

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