Rah-Man of the Moment

At his first press conference on his return from Los Angeles, the Mozart of 
Madras A.R.Rahman
fielded questions with a new ease and flourish. SUDHISH KAMATH reports
PHOTO : COURTESY G. VENKETRAM 

“The first lesson we must learn from Hollywood: They take pictures without 
fighting among
themselves,” joked Rahman, trying to ease the tension on his delayed entry, 
with a hundred
lensmen jostling to get a clear shot of him and his gold-plated britannium 
babies.

“Ok, I am going to leave then. Save my face and don’t fight here,” he pleaded 
before giving in
and surrendered with a smile on his face, showing off his Oscars as the 
non-stop clicking
bathed him in strobe light.

Rahman fielded questions for an hour at his first press conference on his 
return from Los
Angeles — a trip that fetched him the priceless twins of the most coveted 
trophy on the planet.

“It costs only $500. I didn’t even have to pay duty at the airport,” he 
laughed. From the shy
composer who used to give single-line and near monosyllabic answers during 
interviews,
A.R.Rahman has come a long way indeed. The new Rahman is confident, articulate 
and even funny
as he demonstrated to the world with his now famous Oscar Speech.

Down-to-earth
But he still remains as down-to-earth as he has always been and cannot conceal 
his boyish
excitement about having made it to the headlines in a newspaper in Bosnia or on 
being
recognised everywhere from Starbucks to airports around the world.

What stops us Indians from winning Oscars, a journalist asked.

“Motivation to do something extra-ordinary and planning systematically. Look at 
you, if you had
planned this photo shoot systematically, you wouldn’t have been fighting among 
yourselves.”

But then, he also added: “Our films are made for our audience and not for 
Oscars. Let’s make it
for them and then see if we win or not.”

“The whole world’s eyes are on India. A lot of collaborations are possible. The 
West has
started listening to us. A single recorded with Pussy Cat Dolls (a remix of 
‘Jai Ho’ called
‘You’re My Destiny’) is out and will be available on Youtube,” he said.

>From Spielberg to Hans Zimmer to Michael Jackson, Rahman has made many of the 
>people he once
looked up to, look him up. Imagine growing up on Peter Gabriel and then robbing 
him of an
Oscar. “I am a representative of Indian aspirations,” he said.

“My dream is to connect people with music. We live in troubled times. There is 
a divide between
North and South India, East and West, Hindus and Muslims, and then, there’s the 
caste divide.
And in these times, we can only look towards love,” he said, to a question on 
what prompted his
speech.

What almost everybody wanted to know was if he considered “Slumdog Millionaire” 
to be his best.
“I’ve said this before too. If there’s a beautiful ornament and if somebody 
really beautiful is
wearing it, it makes the ornament look even better. I think ‘Slumdog’ matched 
their
sensibilities. According to your sensibility, you might have liked some other 
songs. There is
no language for music. Gulzar’s song has phonetic value apart from its 
extraordinary lyrical
quality and meaning.”

He believes that “Slumdog Millionaire” won because it made a stronger impact 
than the other
nominees as a film. “For them, it was a change of seeing something 
extra-ordinary.”

He recalled how initially there were no buyers for the film. “There was no 
budget either.
Hardly one-tenth of the money needed. But Danny Boyle is a legendary director. 
People watch
even his bad movies and they say this is his best.”

Though Rahman has received two or three offers from Hollywood, he’s yet to 
finalise his
schedule.

“The expectations have become higher. My priority is good films, the language 
does not matter.”

But at his studio, it’s business as usual. He had just finished a song and 
handed it over to
Mani Ratnam before he left for LA last week. He has the ‘Thirukkural’ and the 
‘Bharatiyar’
projects in the pipeline and his KM Music Conservatory and Foundation to keep 
him busy.

Looking back at “Slumdog” and the few weeks he spent on it, he says: “At that 
time, that’s all
the time I had and it was enough. I think it’s destiny.”

It was an opportunity he seized. Boyle came to him for two songs; Rahman gave 
him a full album.
In the end, it all paid off.

The OSCAR moment

I was like a zombie. I did my rehearsals for my performance. And slept only for 
three hours. I
woke up and had my Oscar rehearsal again in the morning. I think more than the 
awards, the
performance was historic. Later, when the award was announced, I just said what 
was in my mind.
When I got off stage, I didn’t have time to take in the happiness. I had to 
perform within
minutes. And performing there was a matter of pride. I had only 5 per cent 
expectations that it
would win the second award.

http://www.hindu.com/mp/2009/02/28/stories/2009022851531200.htm

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