My Pleasure.


________________________________
From: rosario praveen <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2009 7:52:12 PM
Subject: [arr] thnx

 


hi dude thnx for ur post on rahaman ji wz usefull nd intresting.. ...


________________________________
 From: sathya.boopathy <sathya.boopathy@ yahoo.com>
To: arrahmanfans@ yahoogroups. com
Sent: Tuesday, 24 February, 2009 7:42:03 PM
Subject: [arr] Re: Oscar would help do bigger things: A.R. Rahman


Hi Prakash,

Thank you very much for your post.

Thanks & Regards

H.Sathiyenthira Boopathy.

Ella Pugazhum Iraivan Oruvanukke.. .

--- In arrahmanfans@ yahoogroups. com, Prakash Balaramkrishna 
<prakysnaky@ ...> wrote:
>
> http://www.musicind iaonline. com/n/i/top_ stories/2869/
> 
> New York, Feb 23 : An Oscar award would be a 'great honour' and help 
do 'bigger things', says Indian music maestro A.R. Rahman, a hot 
favourite to take home a trophy for his music in 'Slumdog 
Millionaire' .
> "It would be a great honour," Rahman told the New York Times in a 
telephone interview from Los Angeles, where he was preparing to 
perform at the ceremony.
> "It would help me to do bigger things."
> Asked to elaborate, Rahman named "some Western directors he would 
like to work with". "Baz Luhrmann... Ridley Scott. I'm a big fan of 
Ridley."
> The Times notes Rahman is "one of the most prolific and successful 
film composers in India". He has three nominations for Danny Boyle's 
"Slumdog Millionaire" - best original score and best original song, 
for "Jai Ho" and "O ... Saya", a collaboration with the Sri Lankan-
British rapper M.I.A.
> Rahman, 43, has already won a Golden Globe for best score for 
"Slumdog Millionaire" .
> "I like to see a film and then start scoring it in my mind, while 
doing something unrelated," the maestro 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."
> Talking about his work on the most-talked about film of the recent 
times, Rahman said: "I kept three weeks aside. I moved to London and 
did the whole score there."
> David Novak, an ethnomusicologist at the Heyman Center for the 
Humanities at Columbia University, said Rahman is "sort of the Peter 
Gabriel of the Indian film industry".
> 
> "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," Novak added.
> Andrew Lloyd Weber, who worked with the composer for the West End 
musical "Bombay Dreams", said, "I've long been impressed by his 
talent, and I'm so pleased that Hollywood has recognized it."
> But Rahman said he was yet to prepare his Oscar acceptance speech 
ready as he was busy meeting various directors and record labels in 
Los Angeles.
>


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