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Q&A
Rolling Stone, February 2009

A.R.Rahman
The soft-spoken composer of Slumdog Millionaire's soundtrack, on the movie, the 
Golden Globes
and the Oscars.

By Bobin James

Congratulations! First the Golden Globe win, and now the Oscar nominations. 
When you first did
the music, did you think it would be appreciated so much?

When I did the movie, I wasn't even thinking about it. I was just concentrating 
on the work at
hand.

Had you heard of Danny Boyle, seen his work  at that time?

I had heard the name, yes. I knew about Trainspotting, but hadn't actually 
watched it. But when
I met him, he came across as really nice person, who respected the place, 
Mumbai. And who
respected my music.

You've got two out of the three nominations in the Best Original Song category 
at the Oscars.
Are you expecting to win?

I don't know.. (Laughs)

What prompted you to take this project up, when it came to you?

I was very excited. I was excited by the story... and the collaborators like 
MIA and Gulzar...

I read somewhere that you finished the score in under four weeks. Would that 
make it one of
your fastest projects ever?

I would say, the fastest. I did it in 2-3 weeks. It helped that Danny gave me 
very specific
cues (individual pieces of music on the soundtrack) to score. So unlike working 
on, say, a
hundred cues, I could work on those specific ones... I could focus.

Do you think these wins and all the attention will help other Indian artists 
break into the
Western markets?

Big time! All of us have always felt that we make good music but there's nobody 
out there who
wants to listen to it. With this,, I think I have broken those cliches... And 
there is also a
certain respectability that has been achieved.

What, about the movie and the music, do you think has suddenly captured the 
imagination of
people across the world?

The important thing is that the intention is right - the intention of the 
movie, the intention
of the music. The movie talks about optimism, the fact that life is worth 
living. All of us go
through these phases of negativity, but what this tells us is to be optimistic. 
It's about the
victory of truth. It's like our national motto, 'Satyameva Jayate" And we built 
in this subtle
reference to that too, by making 'Jai Ho'

What's your take on Slumdog Millionaire, the movie purely as a viewer? If you 
were to
disconnect yourself from being part of it...

I always see myself as a viewer... I only take up projects that appeal to me 
(at that level).
And I think that's how I have established myself as a brand over the last 18 
years. I would not
take up anything that i am not personally convinced about.

What's next on the anvil? Any more international projects?

As of right now, it's only traveling and promotions (for Slumdog Millionaire). 
Once things
settle down, I will get back to work.

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