BRAVO!!!
The 'Barmy Army's" march continues...
Hail ARR! Jai Ho to our Grp...
swaps

--- On Sun, 6/21/09, Pradeepan R <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Pradeepan R <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [arr] Our man, Rahman
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, June 21, 2009, 9:53 AM











    
            
            


      
      Vow vow Vow... awesome :))

On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 at 12:09 AM, Gopal Srinivasan <catchg...@gmail. com> wrote:

http://www.flickr. com/photos/ arrahmanfans/ 3645226305/



Our man, Rahman

Musician A.R. Rahman has his own Barmy Army — some 15,000 diehard fans

who follow their idol’s every move. Anirban Das Mahapatra meets some

of them



ALL FOR ONE: Members of the A.R. Rahman fan club are all pepped up

before a concert in Calicut this year

Just in case you thought you knew everything about A.R. Rahman and

were his biggest fan under the sun, here’s a reality check. Surely,

you wouldn’t know anything about the ad jingles he once composed for

brands ranging from Hero Puch to Leo Coffee, would you? Or are you,

for that matter, aware that he’s lending the soundtrack to an IMAX

production titled Heart of India? And have you the distinction of

being physically present at all concerts the music director has had on

Indian soil till date?



Chances are you haven’t. That is what makes people like Gopal

Srinivasan and Vijay Aiyar a special breed — a breed that has been

steadily growing for the past decade or so to now include some 15,000

music-crazed men and women who live, breathe and swing to A.R.

Rahman’s magic for every living moment. Welcome to the “real” A.R.

Rahman fan club.



“It’s funny how a simple initiative on our part went such a long way

in bringing Rahman fans together,” says Srinivasan, a Hyderabad-based

software professional. “All we wanted to do was form a forum where

people could interact with one another and contribute to an

information pool about the life and works of our favourite musician.

But look how far it has come now.”



Srinivasan isn’t exaggerating. Even as Rahman, who won two Oscars for

the film Slumdog Millionaire, came to Pune last month to perform at a

high-octane concert that marked the beginning of his Jai Ho world

tour, the army of Rahman fans, led by Srinivasan and Aiyar, created a

unique record of attending each of Rahman’s concerts ever performed in

India. “Some of us have even made it a point to be present at his

concerts abroad,” says Aiyar.



For Srinivasan, who’s now at the helm of all activity undertaken by

Rahman’s own “Barmy Army” — a name for English cricket fans who follow

the team — the journey began over 15 years ago. As an impressionable

youth in his late teens, he was completely bowled over by music from

Roja, the 1992 film that made Rahman a household name across India.

“The music was so different, so new. It hooked me so badly that I went

mad hunting down every single bit of music that had ever come out of

Rahman’s studio.”



Once the Internet arrived in the late 1990s, he logged in only to

receive a pleasant surprise. “The net was full of Rahman trivia, much

more than I knew. Clearly, it looked like a nice platform for

exchanging ideas, and I decided to take my hunt online.”



Very soon, he had struck an online friendship with Aiyar, a music

promoter and another die-hard Rahman fan. The duo decided to form an

online fan club to “create a forum for like-minded individuals to

share thoughts about Rahman,” says Aiyar. That was 11 years ago.



“By 2000, when I joined, there were some 50 emails being swatted

around daily among members, with crazy details and trivia about

Rahman’s music,” says 28-year-old Bangalore-based software engineer

Gomtesh Upadhye. The group, reveals Aiyar, was eventually taken over

by Yahoo!. Recently, the group went on to open a page on Facebook,

where the membership quickly swelled to 3 lakh.



Meanwhile, other bonds were being struck. Sometime in 2003, almost

miraculously, Aiyar boarded a flight to discover Rahman seated beside

him. A personal bond was quickly forged. Rahman was slated to perform

in Bangalore — the city where most of the group’s fan base happens to

be. It was a golden opportunity for the group to get involved in a

more direct way.



“We helped out with dealing with sponsors, ticketing and even

backstage work,” says Upadhye. “There were about 40 of us. We did

everything we could do, for free.”



It didn’t go unrequited. The group was treated to a personal

interaction with Rahman after the show, an experience most of them

describe as “awesome.” Says Srinivasan, “We learnt that Rahman himself

had been closely following our activity on the Internet. Since then,

he’s reciprocated with great warmth to all our activities. It’s been a

very special association.”



Rahman eventually invited Srinivasan and Aiyar to handle parts of his

promotional initiatives. Srinivasan is now in charge of all content on

Rahman’s official website, while Aiyar manages KM Musiq, Rahman’s

music label, apart from doubling as his media coordinator.



After Bangalore, the group has followed Rahman to all his concerts in

India. “It’s a crazy thing, actually,” laughs Upadhye. “We get

information about the concerts much before the public does. So we

begin planning our trips and start hunting for air tickets and

accommodation.”



Normally, the resident members of the city where Rahman is scheduled

to perform are sounded out about the group’s plans. “These people then

work to organise our trips, arrange for our stays, sometimes in their

homes. And then we assemble at the concert venue, dress in a common

uniform (black T-shirts) that we’ve designed for ourselves, sing along

with Rahman and his team through the concert and generally have a

blast,” Upadhye says.



Of late, the group has even looked beyond Rahman’s concerts to do a

bit of do-gooding. “Some of us in Bangalore get together on Sundays to

do community service and we hand out food packets to the needy,” says

Srinivasan. “On Rahman’s birthday, we sponsor lunches in old age and

children’s homes,” he adds.



Then there are occasional meetings in different cities when the group

gets together to discuss music, or as Bangalore IT professional Arun

K.B. puts it, to cheer Rahman on in his quest for glory. “When he won

his Golden Globe, we met for coffee at a Café Coffee Day outlet to

celebrate,” says Arun. “Then, on Oscar night, we hired an entire

lounge bar in Bangalore, where 30 of us walked in at 6 am to watch the

Oscar ceremony. When Rahman got the Oscars, it was like a madhouse

inside. Everyone went crazy!” he exclaims.



Some might say that’s going one notch too far in the name of fanfare.

But clearly, this group isn’t listening. And given that it packs in

enough chutzpah to stand out from rank fan clubs, it probably isn’t

caring either. Jai Ho to that.





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-- 
Cheers,
Pradeepan.

"All you need to do is, decide what to do with the time that is given to you !"


 

      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


      
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