A. R. Rahman returns to the Chennai stage with ‘Jai Ho’, a fund-raiser
concert for The Shakti Foundation on October 11. Divya Kumar reports

It’s taken close to eight months, but it’s finally here. On October 11,
double Academy Award winner A.R. Rahman returns to his hometown stage for
the first time since his incredible run at the Oscars this year with —
fittingly enough — the Chennai edition of his Jai Ho World Series concert.

The concert, to be conducted at the immense Marg Swarnabhoomi grounds on the
ECR, will be in aid of The Shakti Foundation, which champions the cause of
the physically challenged, a cause Rahman has been closely involved with in
the past.
*All for a cause*

“It’s a great cause, and what they’re doing is great work,” said Rahman, who
previously did the music for the foundation’s public awareness documentary
on the need for ramps directed by Mani Ratnam and featuring Sachin
Tendulkar. “They’ve been asking me to do a concert for them for a couple of
years, and I found this was the right time to do it.”

That sentiment does Rahman’s dedication to charity a great deal of credit,
considering that time is the one thing he hasn’t had a lot of these past few
months.

“This has been a very busy year for me,” he admits, sounding rather careworn
at the end of another long day of events and recordings. “If I don’t do this
now, I don’t think I will be able to do it next year. We evolve every
year... next year will be different from this year, just like the previous
year was different from this one.”

For the chairman of The Shakti Foundation, Vasanth Raghuvir, Rahman’s
decision is, quite simply, an incredible boost. “That he’s chosen to give
his first performance in Chennai for The Shakti Foundation — in spite of
several other offers — empowers the children of Shakti and lends tremendous
dignity to the cause,” she said.

Part of the Jai Ho concert series that has been travelling around India and
will soon be going abroad, this show promises to be something
out-of-the-ordinary. “Apart from vintage numbers such as ‘Roja’, this
concert will definitely be different from the ones I did here earlier,” said
Rahman.

Held on 60 acres at the heart of Swarnabhoomi, the concert will feature a
massive 80 by 120 foot stage, with pyrotechnics during the show and huge
fireworks afterwards, according to G.R.K. Reddy, chairman and MD of the Marg
Group, the sole presenting sponsor of the concert.

“The concert has a special meaning for us, because it raises funds to
provide equipment for The Adhiparasakthi Medical and Research Hospital in
Melmaruvathur,” he said. “That is where people living in the 200 villages
around Swarnabhoomi go for healthcare.”

For Rahman, this concert comes at the end of what was one of the more
challenging periods of his career. “The first three months post-Oscar were
difficult — there was so much socialising and so many things pulling me out
of focus that it took away a lot of my creative time,” he said. “And if I
didn’t go and do music, there wouldn’t be any new music next year!”

He added ruefully, “Everywhere I went, 500 people wanted to take
photographs, and sometimes I just wanted to be alone and be left alone!”
*Back in focus*

But now, returning after a four-month stint in Hollywood where he’s wrapped
up work on the movie “Couples Retreat”, he’s back in focus. “That was
definitely a great change — working with a totally different set of people
and a great orchestra,” he said. “Now, for the rest of this year and the
next, I’m going to limit myself.”

‘Limiting himself’, in the overworked Rahman’s book, means completing an
English album he was signed for post the success of the music of “Slumdog
Millionaire”, and finishing the movies he’s already taken on. “I’ll resume
work on new films probably next Diwali,” he said.

Meanwhile, there’s the concert on October 11 to look forward to, both a gift
of music and an ardent appeal by the Shakti Foundation for the inclusion and
integration of the physically challenged into mainstream society. “It’s a
great homecoming,” said Rahman.
 http://beta.thehindu.com/arts/music/article27030.ece

-- 
regards,
Vithur

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