Interview with AR Rahman, the composer behind the Slumdog Millionaire
soundtrack 'Slumdog Millionaire' composer AR Rahman talks about getting
three Academy Award nominations for his soundtrack.


By Peter Culshaw
Last Updated: 9:34AM GMT 06 Feb 2009
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   One of the most successful musicians on the planet: AR Rahman
  Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire has 10 Oscar nominations
  Slumdog Millionaire offers a startling glimpse at life in the Bombay slums

Only two Indians have ever won an Oscar – costume designer Bhanu Athaiya for
*Gandhi* (1982) and arthouse director Satyajit Ray who received a lifetime
achievement award in 1992. However, with three Academy Award nominations
this year for Slumdog Millionaire – one for overall score and for two songs
– Chennai-based composer A R Rahman looks likely to be the third. He's also
up for the Best Music award at Sunday night's Baftas.

"We've been waiting for this for 80 years," said Rahman recently in *The
Hindu*, the Indian daily newspaper. "I think it will create a bridge between
Western and Indian audiences, and lead to more people exploring Indian
music."

While Rahman first came to the attention of Western audiences with his film
music for *Elizabeth: The Golden Age* (2007) and stage shows *Bombay Dreams*and
*The Lord o*f the Rings, his already stellar profile will go into overdrive
should he win. Numerous Hollywood offers have been coming his way since the
film's release.

Just as in a Bollywood film, in *Slumdog Millionaire* the music is almost as
important as the imagery and the narrative, and is central to its ambience
of grit and grandeur. "We wanted it edgy, upfront. Danny [Boyle, who
directed] wanted it loud," says Rahman.

Until now, the 43-year-old Rahman was often seen as a kind of Indian Andrew
Lloyd Webber, inventive and full of melodic facility, often veering into the
middle of the road. Lloyd Webber compares Rahman to Paul McCartney. What
makes the soundtrack something genuinely new is the collaboration of rappers
such as Blaaze (also based in Chennai), and more particularly the presence
of Sri Lankan/British musician MIA, who co-wrote the Oscar-nominated song *O
Saya*, and whose huge global YouTube hit *Paper Planes* is also on the
soundtrack. She brings some Lennon-like acidity to Rahman's McCartneyish
sweetness.

*Paper Plane*, with its percussive gunshots, Clash sample and lyrics about
visas and bombs in the voice of an immigrant sandwich-seller went top 10 in
the US and was the first song to top both the alternative and hip hop charts
there. When the song became a hit, MIA said: "The other songs on the chart
are Katy Perry and the Jonas Brothers. Then you see *Paper Planes* and it's
cool because there's hope. Thank God the future's here."

The combination of Rahman and MIA superbly complements the film's mix of
urban realism and fairytale in its gritty but epic score, with gorgeous
tunes riding on the dust of the slums. The score seems utterly contemporary,
its globalised sounds reflecting a world in which a man of Kenyan ancestry
is now in the White House. Forget about economic or cultural decoupling – we
are all in this together, and need inspiring moral tales for uplift.

Rahman describes MIA, who shares a Tamil family background, as "a real
powerhouse". "Somebody played me her CD, and I thought, 'Who is this girl?'
She came here [MIA recorded her last album partly at Rahman's studio in
Chennai] and knew all my work, had followed my work for ages. I said, 'Cut
this "my idol" crap. You have to teach me.' "

It was MIA who pressed for both songs to be nominated. "I knew *Jai Ho* was
a hit, and I thought we'd push for one song, but MIA thought we should push
for *O Saya*, too. And she proved to be absolutely right."

Rahman's first breakthrough tune *Chinna Chinna Aasai*, in the 1992 film *
Roja* was a song of a poor man dreaming of riches. Rahman's family had
struggled after his father, also a composer, died when he was nine and the
family were reduced to hiring out instruments. His father's eclectic tastes
was inherited by his son, who formed a rock band in his teens and studied
Western classical music (at Trinity College in London) and Indian classical
music.

Since *Roja*, he has written scores of hit movie soundtracks for films such
as *Lagaan*, *Dil Se* and *Guru*. Whether or not the published figures that
he has sold more than 100 million CDs and 200 million cassettes are accurate
(with piracy endemic in India it's anyone's guess how many he has sold), he
is already one of the most successful musicians on the planet.

"Compared with other Indian film composers, I only write about six movies a
year. Others write up to 60," he tells me in the unlikely setting of his
house in Tufnell Park, where he lives when he is in London.

He is softly spoken and surprisingly modest about his accomplishments,
ascribing his talent and luck to divine intervention: "I believe that
whatever comes at a particular time is a blessing from God."

He's already the first Indian national to pick up a Golden Globe (for *
Slumdog*), and says: "I hope we get at least one [Oscar]. I cannot wait for
the announcement."

   - The 'Slumdog Millionaire' OST is out now on Polydor. The Oscars are
   announced on Feb 22.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/4535090/Interview-with-AR-Rahman-the-composer-behind-the-Slumdog-Millionaire-soundtrack.html
-- 
regards,
Vithur

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