Since Roja hit movie screens in South India in 1992, A.R.  Rahman
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/AR-Rahman/c/312914/>  has been
redefining the country's widely popular film music.  Generally regarded
as the finest Indian film composer of his time (and certainly  the most
commercially successful), Rahman produced music for nearly 35 
widescreen releases during his first five years in the industry. He has
worked  with many of his country's brightest music stars and a growing
list of  international luminaries like Nusrat  Fateh Ali Khan
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Nusrat-Fateh-Ali-Khan/c/67449/>
, Zakir  Hussain
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Zakir-Hussain/c/133046/> , L. 
Shankar
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Lakshminarayana-Shankar/c/168048\
/> , Apache  Indian
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Apache-Indian/c/93847/> , and
David  Byrne
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/David-Byrne/c/67890/> .

Born A.S. Dileep Kumar on January 6, 1966, in Madras, India,  Allah
Rakha Rahman was exposed to music from the time he was a child, entered
in  classical piano studies by his parents at the age of four. At 16, he
quit school  and was following in his father's footsteps (K.A. Sekhar
was a successful film  musician, arranger, and conductor himself),
working full-time as a session  musician on soundtracks under the
popular South Indian composer Illaiyaraja. The  monotony soon grew
tiring however, and at the suggestion of a colleague, Rahman  tried his
hand at television commercials, eventually composing over 300 jingles 
in just five years.

It wasn't until 1989 that Rahman planted the first  seeds of his film
career. That year, he began acquiring the equipment and  organizing the
sound library for his Panchathan Record Inn. When Sharada  Trilok's ad
for Leo Coffee (for which Rahman penned the music) won her an award, 
she introduced the young composer to her cousin, Mani Ratnam. Impressed
with his  work, the director signed Rahman to compose the music for K.
Balachander's 1992  film Roja. Rahman's score, a colorful, uncluttered
combination of pop,  rock, reggae, and his country's traditional music,
reshaped the genre, winning  him three awards for Best Music Director.
Roja became the equivalent of  an Indian crossover success. Originally
filmed in South Indian Tamil, it was  re-dubbed (and its soundtrack
re-recorded) in Hindi, the language of North  India's famous Bollywood
film center.

His star on the rise, Rahman  proceeded to compose music for six films
in 1993 and nine in 1994, including the  score for Ratnam's Bombay
(1995), the story of a Hindu/Muslim marriage in  a time of heated
relations between the two cultures. Rahman's score displayed a 
characteristic (and appropriate) disregard for the confines of culture,
be they  Eastern or Western, once again mixing traditional and modern
elements.  Bombay was hugely successful and the movie's theme was
featured on Talvin  Singh
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Talvin-Singh/c/169435/> 's
Soundz of the Asian Underground compilation. Rahman became  the first
Indian artist to sign with Sony Music, negotiating a three-year 
contract in 1997. His premier release for the label, Vande Mataram (his 
first collection of non-film music), was a tribute to India,
commemorating 50  years of the country's independence. The album reached
record stores in 28  countries on August 15th of that year.

Rahman finally seemed poised on  the brink of the international success
he desired. Performances were booked in  Europe, Canada, and the United
States during the final years of the century and  a session was arranged
with singer David Byrne (owner of the Luaka Bop label and  a Rahman
fan). Andrew  Lloyd Webber
<http://music.barnesandnoble.com/Artist/Andrew-Lloyd-Webber/c/414014/> 
chose Rahman to compose the music for his Bombay Dreams,  a musical
based on the Bollywood film industry. The pair began work on the 
project during the second half of 2000, and the musical opened in London
during  2002. Bombay Dreams also ran for 284 regular performances at the
Broadway  Theatre in New York from April 29, 2004, to January 1, 2005.

Since the  turn of the millennium, Rahman has only seen his global
recognition and acclaim  continue to grow, as he has truly risen to the
upper echelon of film composers  worldwide. In 2005 he opened AM Studios
-- regarded as one of the foremost  recording facilities in Asia -- as
an adjunct to Panchathan Record Inn, and the  following year the
composer established his own record label, KM Music. Rahman  served as
musical director for nearly 50 films from 2001 through 2008, the 
majority being Hindi- or Tamil-language movies, including noteworthy 
collaborations with Roja and Bombay director Mani Ratnam  (Kannathil
Muthamittal, Ayutha Ezhuthu/Yuva, Guru),  and other directors including
Rajiv Menon (Kandukondain Kandukondain),  Shaad Ali (Saathiya), Ashutosh
Gowariker (Swades), and S. Shankar  (Boys, Sivaji), the latter of whom,
like Ratnam, also directed a  number of films scored by Rahman during
the 1990s.

He also scored the  2003 Chinese (Mandarin-language) film Warriors of
Heaven and Earth  directed by He Ping and co-composed (with Craig
Armstrong) the score to the 2007  English-language film Elizabeth: The
Golden Age, directed by Shekhar  Kapur and starring Cate Blanchett.
However, Rahman's widest recognition thus far  -- at least with Western
audiences -- came with British director Danny Boyle's  2008 hit film
Slumdog Millionaire, which won eight Academy Awards in the  United
States, including Best Picture and Best Director as well as two for 
Rahman, one for Best Original Score and one for Best Song. Two Rahman
songs from  the film had been nominated for Oscars, "O... Saya" and "Jai
Ho," the latter of  which won the statuette for Rahman and for lyricist
Gulzar. ~ Nathan Bush, All  Music Guide


Source
: http://music.barnesandnoble.com/search/artistbio.asp?CTR=312914

Jai Ho !!! [=D>]
Sathiyenthira Boopathy.H
Ella Pugazhum Iraivan Oruvanukke...

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