What Rahman means to India
By: S R Ramakrishna     Date:  2009-02-23       


Bangalore: 
Like Sachin Tendulkar, he represents the aspirations and energy of a young 
India. Slumdog's
music composer may be less rooted in tradition than his precessors, but he is 
our first rock
star

Many say Rahman's music for Slumdog Millionaire is "noisy but nice". That 
phrase could come in
handy when you look at his oeuvre as a whole, and try to put in perspective 
what he has come to
represent to his fans in India.

When India turned 50, A R Rahman gave Vande Mataram a new, aggressive musical 
interpretation. A
year on, Kargil fund-raisers used the song extensively at their shows. His 
style won
appreciation from the unlikeliest quarters: Swapan Dasgupta, then columnist for 
India Today,
felt the young composer had finally freed the song from "Nehruvian distortions" 
by setting it
to an attacking tune. Another columnist, Tavleen Singh, said Rahman's song was 
the only
cheering item at the 50th year Independence Day celebrations in Delhi.

Rahman's fame seems to come from his ability to repackage Indian music for an 
audience slowly
drifting away from an idiom rooted in its classical and folk music. His work 
represents the
energy of a post-liberalisation generation sceptical about Gandhi and all that 
his pacifist
philosophy represents.

You may have noticed that Rahman's work is strong on rhythm, and his hit tunes 
are not touched
by regret or sadness of any sort. In Vande Mataram, Rahman is not awed by all 
the beauty Bankim
celebrates -- of the streams, the lush greenery or the grand mountains. It does 
not dwell in
romantic subtlety. Rahman sees the song in military terms, and not as a prayer, 
as All India
Radio's interpretation does. AlR has based its tune on Desh (meaning 'country', 
a raga which
must have suggested itself when they set out to make a patriotic tune. But 
Rahman breaks free
of raga ornamentation, and all the nostalgia it brings with it.

For an older generation, Rahman's music may be no patch on what Ilaiyaraja or 
the great Hindi
film music composers have accomplished, but remember, not one of them had got 
the world so
excited. Rahman is India's first rock-star music composer!

http://www.mid-day.com/news/2009/feb/230209-AR-Rahman-first-rock-star-india-hindi-fim-music.htm

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