http://www.musicindiaonline.com/n/i/top_stories/2873/
New Delhi, Feb 24 (IANS) Allah Rakha Rahman, simply translated as God Save
Rahman. And that’s what India said Monday for the man who became the first
Indian to win two Oscars for his score in “Slumdog Millionaire” and for the
film’s theme song “Jai Ho”.
Rahman, credited with taking the Indian sound across the seas, has for long
comfortably straddled the worlds of not just classical and popular music, but
also Bollywood and Broadway.
A household name in India for his contribution to Bollywood, as well as cinema
from the south, he has been the cynosure of all ears since 1992 when he burst
on the Indian musical scene with his refreshingly different tunes for the Tamil
film “Roja”.
The film was subsequently made in Hindi, giving mainstream Hindi film music a
new meaning altogether: the rest, as they say, is history.
He has moved on from being a celebrated composer in India to a global music
supernova who has entered the record books as the first Indian to get a Golden
Globe, the first Indian to get the British Academy of Film and Television Arts
(BAFTA) award for music and the first Indian to bag a golden Oscar statuette.
With “Slumdog Millionaire”, Danny Boyle’s rags to riches drama based on a book
by Indian diplomat Vikas Swarup, the 41-year-old Rahman has stuck gold - and so
has India and Indian music.
The film, which had 10 Oscar nominations, including three for Rahman, won eight
Oscars. Two went to Rahman for best original score and best original song “Jai
Ho”, which he shared noted Indian lyricist Gulzar.
For India, the “Slumdog” awards story, which some say is as improbable as the
film itself about an 18-year-old orphan from the slums of Mumbai who goes on to
win a staggering Rs.20 million ($410,000) on India’s “Who Wants To Be A
Millionaire?” game show, is not just about the BAFTAs and the Oscars.
It is also recognition of popular Indian cinema in the West that for long has
shunned Indian movies as too long and too full of song-and-dance sequences.
Rahman’s exuberant score has shattered all those perceptions, and shown that
the West likes the sound of India.
“All my life I had a choice between hate and love. I chose love and I am here,”
said Rahman after receiving his second golden statuette.
Composing music for British director Danny Boyle was a challenge, said the
self-effacing celebrity.
Boyle simply wanted a score with energy and an edge for his film. There was
also a twist. The perfectionist Rahman was given just three weeks to plan and
execute the score.
“It’s probably one-fifth of the time I normally take. For one thing, a normal
film has about 150 cues. But in this one there were only 17-18 cues for me.
Boyle uses music very little but very efficiently,” Rahman told us.
Like the film’s protagonist Jamal, Rahman’s is also an inspiring story of the
everyday struggle for survival that has ended on the glittering red carpets of
showbiz.
Born A.S. Dileep Kumar to a Tamil Hindu family, his father R.K. Shekhar, a
composer who directed music for Malayalam movies, died when he was just nine.
The family was forced to rent out musical equipment. Two years later, the
11-year-old budding maestro joined noted composer Ilayaraja’s troupe as a
keyboardist and computer programmer to support his mother and three sisters.
After working with several renowned composers like Zakir Hussain and L.
Shankar, he set out on his own to compose jingles and scores for popular Indian
television features and has composed more than 300 jingles.
During this period, he also earned a degree in western classical music from the
Trinity College of Music, London, and went on to set up his own in-house studio
at Chennai, said to be Asia’s most sophisticated and hi-tech studio.
In 1989, Dileep Kumar converted to Islam along with his family due to personal
reasons. He became A.R. Rahman.
The Bollywood debut came a couple of years later. And there was no looking back
after that.
The musical genius not only won hearts in India but also made a mark on the
global music scene.
He got his first international break when Andrew Lloyd Webber invited him to
compose music for the Broadway musical “Bombay Dreams”, which won him immense
fame.
He also composed for the stage adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord Of The
Rings” that premiered in Canada in 2006 and in London in 2007.
Apart from composing music Rahman is also involved in social work. He launched
the A.R. Rahman Foundation to tackle the issue of poverty by providing
education to the poor and equipping them with knowledge and skills to earn a
living.
As the awards pile up, Indians can only say a collective and joyous “Jai Ho”.