Answers to a lot of question that we were asked in the group.

And it great to know CR offer came much before the Oscars and other major 
awards.




 


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________________________________
From: Gopal Srinivasan <[email protected]>
To: arrahmanfans <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, October 15, 2009 6:43:48 AM
Subject: [arr] Here’s A.R. Rahman Unplugged

  
Here’s A.R. Rahman Unplugged 
On Jai ho & Vince Vaughn, Kylie Minogue & Farhan Akhtar, Mani & money 
 
A.R. Rahman at Hyatt Regency on Tuesday. Picture by Aranya Sen 
You will be performing in Calcutta after more than six-and-a-half years. Has 
the Rahman sound changed in this period?
I have never changed my sound intentionally. Most of my soundtracks reflect 
what film I am doing. It’s only that. It’s never like I want to beat this sound 
or I want to do something better. But I do change myself. I do not want to do 
the same thing. I want to keep my job interesting to me.
There have been reports that you have been hiding in Los Angeles…
The three months immediately after the Oscars were hard to handle. Everyone 
wanted to felicitate me and have me over at social functions and congratulate 
me in ceremonies. I went to Los Angeles and went back to my music. Now, life is 
back to normal.
 
Mani Ratnam with Aishwarya Rai Bachchan on the Calcutta sets of Raavan. A 
Telegraph picture 
Why did you choose the Vince Vaughn rom comCouples Retreat as your first 
Hollywood project afterSlumdog Millionaire?
I got that offer before I got all the awards for Slumdog Millionaire. Vince 
Vaughn came to me much before the Oscars. He just saw the movie and he became 
very emotional and he said: “I want your music for my next film!” I was 
contemplating whether to accept the movie or not. Then after the Oscars, I went 
and saw the movie. I felt that it wasn’t a musically sympathetic movie but it 
was a comedy. And nobody would ever think that a person who did Slumdog would 
do a comedy next. And I just wanted to experience the whole process of 
Hollywood. It was a great experience.
 
Vince Vaughn and Malin Akerman in Couples Retreat: “Vince became very emotional 
and he said: ‘I want your music for my next film!’” 
What makes it a great experience?
You know just the opportunity to go and work in studios where Mary Poppins and 
Star Wars were recorded, it’s a great feeling. Also, it was fun working with 
Vince and with the director of Couples Retreat, Peter (Billingsley) . He’s a 
new guy and it was good.
But Couples Retreat the film has been very poorly received there and the 
reviews say your music has been under-utilised…
It is a comedy… it’s not a film where there were extraordinary musical 
situations. It’s also a complicated movie about four couples, who all have 
resolutions. And some of the score, which is significant in the film, is 
licensed stuff… like Ennio Morricone’s The Good, The Bad and The Ugly…. I know 
that this would happen but I had the opportunity of doing a great CD. And the 
CD is being liked by everyone.
Of the work that has been offered to you in the West, are they all asking for 
aSlumdog-like score from you?
No. Because they would never want to repeat the same thing. I am in a very 
extra-ordinary situation where I can do songs and I can do background scores. I 
have not been typecast… like “He’s a background score guy” or “He can only 
compose songs”. So, I have been trying to expand on that. Even in Couples, I 
have done three songs and then I have also done the background.
 
Dave Stewart: “He is a dear friend... we are trying to put up a band together.” 
Do you have a wishlist of producers or directors you want to work with?
No, I don’t want to have a wishlist. Because some things look very small in the 
beginning and they become bigger in the end. Like Slumdog. And some things look 
very big at the beginning and end up really small. So I don’t have any wishlist.
Was Slumdog ever small?
Honestly, I would have never sent the score to the Oscars. The makers did. I 
composed the soundtrack in three weeks flat and didn’t think that it would go 
on to do what it did.
Do you think it was all because of that one song, Jai ho?
When I saw the film, they had put another song (Shankar Ehsaan Loy’s Aaj ki 
raat fromDon) and all that dancing was part of the film. At that time, it 
looked like a mockery of our song and dance. But when they used it in the end 
credits with Jai ho, it looked really nice. See, Jai ho became Jai ho because 
it was apt for the film, not because it was a great song. It was the right song 
and that’s why it worked out so well.
 
Kylie Minogue: “She was very fast... it was all finished in three hours!” 
So, you haven’t given any brief to your Hollywood agent?
He is always surprised by my decisions. He said: “It’s (Couples) a comedy! 
Don’t do a comedy!” I said, why not? So, it goes like that.
How do you plan to balance your work here with your work there?
It’s difficult choosing. I want to keep that little chain of interest of people 
wanting to hear my music. I don’t want to overdo that. Also, I don’t want to 
underplay that. So there will be Tamil films, Telugu films, Hindi films and 
there will be English films too. I want to choose the best projects that 
complement my music.
Now when you compose for Mani Ratnam’s Raavan, is it like a return to roots 
because you started with his Roja?
It is, in a way. Also, Mani always surprises me. I think that now I know Mani 
Ratnam. But he surprises me. He keeps pushing me to a place where I am 
challenged and that’s a great creative spirit. And that’s what I need to keep 
going, rather than taking each other for granted. There’s something we always 
want to achieve as a team.
What motivated you to sign this Friday’s big release Blue?
I signed it before the Oscars. New people are really unpredictable. (Blue is 
directed by debutant Anthony D’Souza.) You never know. Sometimes they are great 
and sometimes they let you down. Blue also had a big production house like 
Ashtavinayak supporting the film. Then when I saw the visuals, it seemed like 
something genuinely interesting, something passionate.
What about the Kylie Minogue experience?
It was all finished in three hours (laughs). She was very fast. Actually it was 
also one week before the BAFTAs and I also had to finish recording the song.
Why didn’t Farhan Akhtar sing for the Blue soundtrack, as you had wanted?
The song changed from what we wanted to make it. And he wasn’t very sure that 
the song went with his style of singing and whether he would be able to pull it 
off. Whether it would be right for him. So I said, okay, we will work on 
something else later. The song was Fiqrana, actually. And I was happy that 
Vijay Prakash got a huge opportunity.
What are you planning with Dave Stewart of Eurythmics fame?
We are planning a lot of things actually. He is a dear friend whom I know for 
more than eight years now. We are trying to put up a band together, like a 
super band. Also, he is doing a movie for Nokia and I am helping him out on 
Indianising it.
What about your own English album?
I am currently working on it. It will have a lot of pop musicians. I am not 
sure who at this stage. But it is definitely the project I am really looking 
forward to, after doing so many film soundtracks.
If a director from Bengal walks up to you with his script, would you do the 
music?
If it’s something special, I would love to do it. If I find it inspiring, I 
would do it. I have seen a lot of great work coming from here.
But will you charge him a bomb?
Charge is never a problem (smiles)! 
Pratim D. Gupta
What is the one question you would like to ask A.R. Rahman? 
Tell [email protected] 


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