‘Music is the greatest energy given by God!’
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*Rajiv Vijayakar <http://www.screenindia.com/columnist/rajivvijayakar/>*Posted:
Feb 27, 2009 at 1803 hrs IST
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*His debut song Pappu can’t dance saala made even non-dancers tango. And his
subsequent songs said Tu hi to mera dost hai to the charts. Screen checks
out Benny Dayal, who still refuses to market himself because music “is not
an imposition”*

*What does music mean to you?*
Music is one of the greatest energies given to us by God. It has the power
to make us laugh and cry and create emotions within us. It can change our
life and even heal sickness. I decided on music as a career after I attended
a A.R.Rahman concert in Dubai, where we were based then. It was the
turning-point.

*Did you formally train in music, and if so, in which genre?*
I learnt Carnatic classical from the age of three-and-a-half in Dubai
itself. My teacher was a South Indian. I am now based in Chennai right from
my college days and now I am learning Hindustani classical music from a
North Indian teacher!

*Rahman inspired you - but that’s not a passport to sing for him. How did
you get to sing for Rahman?*
I was part of a band called S5. We sang songs for a Malayalam movie called
By The People with music by Pravin Mani, who was Rahman-sir’s assistant.
Rahman-sir heard them and called me. My first song was Balleilakka in Sivaji
as a chorus singer. After that I sang Maduraikku pogadhedi and Nee Marylin
Monroe, both in Azhagiya Thamizhmagan composed by A.R.Rahman.

*Have you sung for all the South languages?*
Yes, but strangely, I had not sung solo in my mother-tongue Malayalam. And
frankly, I have not tried too hard.

*Actress Asin hails from Kerala but has done just one Malayalam film too.
Why is this?*
One reason is that I am based in Chennai, and most of the music for Tamil,
Kannada and Telugu films is also done there because we have better studios
and technicians. But the Malayalam industry operates out of Kochi and
Thiruvananthapuram. I am also not averse to Malayalam songs. But music
cannot be like an imposition. It is something that is beautiful and I
believe that we cannot force it. We have to let it happen and work towards
it, that’s all.

*How did your Hindi break happen?*
I speak, read and write good Hindi. Rahman-sir mentioned this to Abbas
Tyrewala when the song Pappu can’t dance saala came up in Jaane Tu...Ya
Jaane Na. This was way back in November 2006 when we recorded the song.
After that I have sung in his Yuvvraaj, Ghajini and Delhi-6.

*Have you tried approaching other composers in Mumbai?*
No, but Pritam called me for the song Is there a vacancy. But maybe I will
soon meet composers with a demo.

*Why is there the need for a demo after giving so many hits, including all
your Hindi songs?*
Why not? That’s the proper way because then music directors get a complete
picture. Remember that I have yet to take off, so there’s no harm in
considering myself a baccha, for that way there’s more scope to grow!

*Music directors seem to be shifting to trained singers after a short phase
when training wasn’t really considered vital.*
Training consolidates your command on sur and taal. But it is not a
hard-and-fast rule in playback singing. Today’s music directors look at how
much you can sing from the heart, and sometimes you have to actually forget
your classical lessons to get the song right. Music directors like singers
who are very fast at work, and those jo harkatein dil se lete hain, gale se
nahin. They want a human element, but they do not want a main sab kuch
jaanta hoon attitude. Look at Shankar Mahadevan and Kishore Kumar - the way
they bring emotions into songs is just superb. So I too approach a song as
if it is my first-ever, but on the other hand, I put in my best - as if I
have been singing for the last 20 years!

*Are you into strict riyaaz?*
Frankly, I do not do much riyaaz. But I listen to a lot of music, and the
effect is largely the same. I love R & B. I hear lots of Blues, Arabic and
African music. I listen to Mirza Ghalib and Mehdi Hasan. I am absolutely
crazy about Rajasthani folk. Apart from that, from childhood I have been
exposed to Hindi film music. I love Rafisaab and O.P.Nayyar and
Kalyanji-Anandji are special favourites, especially for the songs of Shammi
Kapoor and Amitabh Bachchan respectively, but even otherwise.

*Coming from a double classical background, so to speak, how do you view the
way our music is becoming increasingly influenced by the West? Aren’t we at
one level making music that is a pale shadow of theirs and at another losing
our identity?*
We will never lose our identity! On the contrary, we are very soon going to
be at par with Western music in reach and fame. Today, Indian music is
played at discotheques all over the world. In London, every week there is a
Desi Nite when only Hindi and Tamil music is played in so many pubs. And at
the end of the day, it’s about knowing and not forgetting our roots, while
learning and incorporating new things. Portraying our roots all the time is
not needed. And I know that I can sing Carnatic classical any time I want!

-- 
-A
http://viewsnmuse.blogspot.com

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