Source - http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=30642

A.R. Rahman Takes Oscar for Slumdog Original Score, Best Song


Original score: 'Slumdog Millionaire's' A.R. Rahman

Rahman, composer of countless Bollywood scores, won for his
transporting soundscape in Slumdog Millionaire, Danny Boyle's
crowd-pleaser that is part potboiler, part fairy tale.

Rahman started writing music for Indian TV ads in the early '90s,
eventually switching to film and composing dozens of soundtracks a
year. In 2002, Andrew Lloyd Webber commissioned him to write the music
for the play "Bombay Dreams," which ran in London's West End. Rahman
also collaborated with London musician M.I.A. on the film's acclaimed
soundtrack.

Original song: 'Jai Ho' from Slumdog Millionaire, by A.R. Rahman and
Sampooran Singh Gulzar

"Jai Ho" was one of two songs composed by Rahman that was nominated
for original song from "Slumdog Millionaire." It beat out the other
song, "O Saya," which was punctuated with stylish vocals from M.I.A.,
as well as Peter Gabriel and Thomas Newman's "Down to Earth" from Wall-E.

"Jai Ho" was the more accessible of the two Slumdog songs, an
uplifting theme also threaded with tension. With lyrics by Sampooran
Singh Gulzar, who often goes by the singular name Gulzar, "Jai Ho" was
one of eight awards for "Slumdog Millionaire" and Rahman's second
Oscar of the night.

Rahman swept up by worldly influences

It was only fitting that Slumdog Millionaire," a British film graced
by Bollywood stars, would feature India's star film composer, A.R.
Rahman. At 42, the modest maestro has been credited with a staggering
number of achievements: scoring more than 100 movies, selling more
than 200 million albums and making traditional music cool to Indian youth.

Because his songs and soundtracks effortlessly blend Indian and
Western influences, Rahman has had a string of hits, making him as
well known as, say, composer John Williams (though Williams probably
doesn't have a league of obsessed Japanese fans following his
concerts). Rahman says that the dramatic, sweeping nature of Slumdog
Millionaire and its rags to riches story spanning about 15 years led
to the wide variety of music composed. "We had everything from the
typical Indian '80s music to more futuristic sounds . . . in one
sequence, we wanted it to sound like a space shuttle taking off."

Normally based out of his home studio and music conservatory in
Chennai, India, Rahman composed Slumdog in a whirlwind two months in
London. Using the Apple-based Logic Pro digital audio workstation to
lay down ideas for director Danny Boyle, he spun notes together that
spring to life in the film's emotional arcs. Sunlight on a face or a
panoramic city view elicits the spare, singing notes of a sitar.
During a mad pursuit through the slums, his violins slice like Bernard
Herrmann's in Psycho. Another heart-stopping sequence called "Escape"
pulses with energy, in step with the sound of a rapidly approaching train.

"Danny was very specific in his ideas. He wanted to hear percussion, a
singing voice," Rahman says. For a sequence featuring two young boys
running from the police, Rahman collaborated remotely with British-Sri
Lankan artist M.I.A., e-mailing vocal and instrumental takes back and
forth, resulting in the song "O . . . Saya." And Rahman's "Jai Ho"
(May You Win) gets the whole cast dancing.

"I take music very seriously. If it's not done, it doesn't leave the
studio." 

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