"I like to work fast,"  - I am sure bollywood producer/directors wouldn't agree 
with that statement.  
 
Sam

--- On Fri, 2/20/09, Thulasi Ram <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Thulasi Ram <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] Newyork times: ‘Slumdog’ Fusionist in Oscar Spotlight
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, February 20, 2009, 9:02 PM







http://www.nytimes. com/2009/ 02/21/arts/ music/21rahm. html?_r=1

'Slumdog' Fusionist in Oscar Spotlight





SIGN IN TO E-MAIL
PRINT
REPRINTS
SHARE

By BEN SISARIO
Published: February 20, 2009

A. R. Rahman knows how big a deal it would be if he wins an Oscar on Sunday.



Monica Almeida/The New York Times
A. R. Rahman is one of India's most prolific film composers.

Multimedia


Enlarge This Image
Monica Almeida/The New York Times
A. R. Rahman, in his natural habitat at the computer, works on five or six 
films a year, juggling several at a time. He is a kind of national hero in 
India.
One of the most prolific and successful film composers in India, he has three 
nominations, all for "Slumdog Millionaire" : best original score and best 
original song, for both "Jai Ho" and "O ... Saya," a collaboration with the Sri 
Lankan-British rapper M.I.A. (The film, by Danny Boyle, has 10 nominations, and 
last month Mr. Rahman won a Golden Globe for best score.)
"It would be a great honor," Mr. Rahman said with characteristic diffidence in 
a phone interview this week from Los Angeles, where he was preparing to perform 
at the ceremony. "It would help me to do bigger things."
Ask him what those bigger things might be, however, and he grows even quieter. 
Naming some Western directors he would like to work with, he sounds distracted, 
almost bored, as if the future is just too abstract to worry about.
"Baz Luhrmann," he said. A beat, then: "Ridley Scott. I'm a big fan of Ridley."
But when it comes to his music Mr. Rahman, who is 43 but with his cherubic 
cheeks could pass for less than 30, turns surprisingly chatty. His work has 
been in more than 100 films since 1992, and after scoring Andrew Lloyd Webber's 
Bollywood-themed stage musical "Bombay Dreams" in 2002 he enjoyed had a 
steadily growing profile in the West. One of the first major composers in India 
to embrace digital technology, he is in his natural habitat at the computer, 
and he maintains the manic, multitasking rhythm of a true 21st-century techie.
"I like to see a film and then start scoring it in my mind, while doing 
something unrelated," he said. "You just grasp a film and start working, and 
something unpredictable comes out from a third element. The mind, the more 
active it is, the more productive it is."
Productivity, along with a gift for golden melody and a cosmopolitan touch that 
reflects the new, globally conscious India, have given Mr. Rahman, who lives 
and works in Chennai (the city formerly known as Madras), a kind of 
national-hero status. "Rah Rah Rahman," The Times of India proclaimed on its 
front page after the Oscar nominations were announced.
"He has a rapper from Tanzania working with him," Mr. Boyle said, "and 
fulfilled a mutual desire to work with M.I.A., part Sri Lankan, part London, 
part New York. Add the house-music disco beats sweeping Bollywood dance lately 
and you have a real moment of fusion."
Mr. Rahman works on five or six films a year, juggling several at a time in 
various stages of completion. While unheard of in Hollywood, that pace is 
common in India, and Mr. Rahman has made his share of modern classics, like 
"Lagaan: Once Upon a Time in India" (2001), beloved by Indian and Western 
critics alike, and "Dil Se" (1998).
"Slumdog," Mr. Rahman said, was created in relatively luxurious circumstances: 
"I kept three weeks aside. I moved to London and did the whole score there."
Even by the musical-sponge standards of Indian film, Mr. Rahman has been an 
especially curious fusionist. The son of a film composer, R. K. Shekhar, he 
grew up with a record collection that included Indian music and rock; two 
favorites were the American country singer Jim Reeves and Walter Carlos's 
landmark electronic album "Switched-On Bach." (Born A. S. Dileep Kumar, he 
changed his name to Allah Rakkha Rahman when he converted to Sufi Islam in his 
early 20s.)
Mr. Rahman was playing professional sessions by age 11 and soon had a rock 
band. He received a scholarship to the Trinity College of Music in London, and 
upon his return to India began composing commercial jingles. His first film was 
"Roja," and his sophisticated approach quickly revolutionized Indian film 
music, said David Novak, an ethnomusicologist at the Heyman Center for the 
Humanities at Columbia University.
"He's sort of the Peter Gabriel of the Indian film industry," Mr. Novak said. 
"He shifted things from a simple East-West mode to a multicultural, global 
mode, where India and its regional musics are part of a palette of sound from 
around the world."
Mr. Rahman's crossover to Western audiences has not come without bumps. "Bombay 
Dreams" was a success in the West End, but on Broadway it closed in eight 
months and never recouped its $14 million investment.
"I've long been impressed by his talent, and I'm so pleased that Hollywood has 
recognized it," Mr. Lloyd Webber said. "I'm just disappointed that Broadway 
didn't get it when he and I did 'Bombay Dreams' there."
An Oscar would certainly raise Mr. Rahman's profile in Hollywood, and 
commentators in India and in the West have said that recognition for "Slumdog" 
could help legitimize India's film talent in general. Only two Indians have 
received Academy Awards: Bhanu Athaiya won in 1983 for best costume design in 
"Gandhi," and the director Satyajit Raywas given a lifetime achievement award 
shortly before he died in 1992.
But Mr. Rahman said he does not view the awards as a referendum on Bollywood, 
and indeed wasn't getting his hopes up about the contests, in which his 
competitors include Mr. Gabriel, Danny Elfman and James Newton Howard.
He didn't have an acceptance speech ready, he said, and his days in Los Angeles 
before the awards were packed with activity, including a performance of "Jai 
Ho" on "The Tonight Show" on Thursday, meetings with various directors and 
record labels, and filming the video of a Pussycat Dolls remix of "Jai Ho."
"I like to work fast," he said.















      

Reply via email to