http://www.mid-day.com/specials/2009/dec/131209-went-rahman-head-play-mumbai.htm
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*
*
THE countdown to the Grammys has begun. Double nominee A R Rahman has just
returned after a whirlwind trip to America, which included a performance at
the State Dinner at the White House. True to what filmmaker Shekhar Kapur
said last week about getting over the giddy-headed feeling of being a double
Oscar-winner or a double Grammy nominee, Rahman sounds unfazed as Jai ho is
celebrated all over again.

He's brooding over the deep edge with thoughts about meaningful art that
lives on after the artiste and going back to the roots. Over an hour-long
phone conversation from Chennai, the man who laid out a blazing new road
with his progressive sound wants to go back to where it all began the
organic sound. In a first, he also opens up about not wanting to live in a
uni-dimensional sphere and wanting more from life. As always, Rahman sounds
like a calm riddle.

*Was there a moment during the Oscars when you thought 'Hey I'm an Indian,
my religion is in question world over and the track is in Hindi. What chance
do I stand?'
*
It's hard to make people accept things until something phenomenal happens
and has that impact. We're all lucky. We're sailing on the same ship and a
lot of good things are happening which is great. It's a question of timing.
It's set by destiny, God. There have been even brilliant films that have got
lost like the case of The Legend of 1900 which released in the same year as
Titanic if I'm not mistaken. It's a film about a pianist who was born on the
ship and died on the ship. There have been scores of mine, which haven't got
their due. We can never orchestrate all that. It has to happen by itself.
Most of the time we plan, 'Oh we should make it a hit,' and it never
happens. So we just let things take their natural course. We can never plan
anything.

*When did you last get into the studio thinking you wanted to belt out a
hit?
*
I just want to make every song in a satisfying way for myself. I know
certain songs won't get their due immediately but I know that the honest
effort that has gone into them will be appreciated in the long run. Even
when I look back I should know that I've done justice to the track within my
own limitations. When you want to do something good and you never get at it
and get distracted, that's when the problem arises, isn't it?

*What do you do in a situation like that?

*I get the blame for delaying the project. (Laughs). No it doesn't happen to
that extent.

*What were your learnings from America post the Oscar run?

*We all want the same thing. The destination is the same. We want something
great. We want something that's honest. Nobody wants anything that's
contrived or mediocre. How we get that is the only difference. So they
(America) too want something that is exciting and new.

*How does the music industry function?

*I think in a place like LA or New York, there's precedence for everything.
Few break those rules. So artistes can't be less than that whether it's in
filmmaking or music. Like everywhere else, sometimes you put in all the
money into an artiste, make a great album and nothing happens to the
artiste. The artist is abandoned and ignored until finally he or she does a
number with somebody and that becomes a famous hit.

The thing with Slumdog Millionaire was that it was completely different from
the orchestral soundtrack. It's experimental and as a theme, we all focussed
on something that excited us. We didn't place huge stakes on it. It's not a
$100 million film. It's a low budget film so we gambled on it. We didn't
think it was too risky or it'll be good to have a sound that's worked
before. We wanted something that stood apart. It was same in the case of
Roja. It's the same formula so to speak.

*The soundtrack of Couples Retreat also sounds like a world music album more
than an OST
*
It was fun doing Couples Retreat. There wasn't much scope to use the
soundtrack in the film. It's a comedy so dialogues are more important than
anything else. I had the freedom to create the music I wanted. It's not a
masterpiece. It's a fun film. Not everything is a masterpiece here either,
so I have no regrets doing the film. Those who heard the soundtrack loved
it. I don't think people ever buy a soundtrack of a comedy and don't expect
much from a comedy music-wise.

*How did Grammy-winning vocalist PJ Morton fit into the soundtrack?*

Instinct really. I wanted to work with Joss Stone and Damian Marley
(youngest son of Bob Marley) But Joss Stone was doing a TV serial and Damian
Marley's girlfriend was having a baby. So finally, things changed. A couple
of big names were interested in doing the song but the deal was not made in
time. PJ sent in the demo and everybody loved his voice and I wanted to make
sure PJ sang the song. That's it. PJ wants to sing Hindi songs. He loves
India.

*You and PJ must have hit it off, both being spiritually inclined and all
that
*
He's into gospel. He wrote songs for an album but it's too early to talk
about it. It's based on a special subject. It'll take a couple of years. So
we're looking at a future album.

*Can you tell us a little more your performance at the White House?
*
I did three numbers Intervention from Couples Retreat, Latika's theme with
the Philharmonic Orchestra and then Jai ho. I met the President and he went,
"Oh we're all big fans." We took photographs with the couple. It was a good
feeling being at the White House, such an important seat of politics.

*You sound grounded just before the Grammys.

*I knew that after the Oscars, it will (the music of Slumdog) will go
further and have an impact. Even at the White House, we came to know that
Michelle Obama had heard all the stuff on the soundtrack, which was could
have also been the main reason for the performance I guess, which is great.

The high comes when you do good work. It has its own vibrations. It might
get recognised tomorrow. It might get recognised a hundred years later. Are
you satisfied with what you've done? Are you doing justice? I know that some
of my work may not get recognised, may get overrated. From my childhood,
I've been in a steadfast sort of state not jumping too much or hiding too
much, so that I get a feel of everything. I get to play a father, a husband,
a composer, a principal of a school, a son, a brother. I wear different
hats. I do want to be a part of everything and not single-handedly focus on
something and be destroyed later. This life is a mortal life. We need to
play everything equally.

*Springsteen's been co-nominated alongside Jai ho. Have you heard him?*

I've only heard his big hit Born in the USA and he won the Golden Globe for
The Wrestler. I met him at The Golden Globe Awards

*What do you think of The Wrestler?
*
It's a great song. I like it very much. The feel and the character match the
film very well.

*Do you think the Slumdog sound will spin a wave?
*
It's a very complicated answer. Take the food we eat. We eat dal chawal but
we can't suddenly replace that and say we'll eat fried rice for the rest of
our lives. We won't.  We need to provide the dal chawal and somewhere you
have to be exotic. It all depends on where the music is planted, mounted. I
don't think you can predict it.

*Is there a new sound that is gaining new ground?

*I think there's an opportunity for everyone. There's too much innovation.
Substance-wise you always want to listen to songs with great lyrics, great
tunes and simple arrangements. Those are the kind of songs that live forever
and change the way you live, your outlook so that's cool.

These are the qualities that add to a song's longevity and make it a
classic. I haven't spotted another Lennon or Paul McCartney or Simon &
Garfunkel or acts like Queen even. U2 has a great audience too. Maybe that
kind of talent is around somewhere but is yet to be found.

In the film scene as well, it depends on the equations really. Very few
people say that I want to be remembered for this movie even after I'm dead.
How many people have that now? Now we're talking about a movie making these
many crores.

But are you proud of it? We celebrate the west or classics but what is our
contribution? I'm not talking about filmmakers or lyricists here. I'm
talking about audiences who have changed. The younger people want to just
have fun and not be part of the creative process. They just want to talk
about some film that's not been made here. We're not allowed to show sex or
violence and within those limitations I think we are doing some great work
out here.

*You've always been a few steps ahead in terms of the format on which your
music is released or technology. What do you imagine will be the next
technological leap for music?
*
It's become too easy to do anything on the computer whether it's changing
your voice or producing a new sound. How much can you listen to that? How
much does it move you organically is the question. Does it change the way
you think or get to your feeling? I met Vangelis, the great electronic
musician in Greece. I admire him for the great quality of bringing a heart
to synthesizers. He'd put in so much feeling into it that it would sound
like the synthesizer's singing. That's great. In a way the Continuum is
trying to achieve the same thing. It's an electronic instrument that's
trying to achieve something that's an acoustic expression.

*You've also said in an interview that the voice is the best instrument. How
did you make Sukhwinder emote in Jai ho?
*
Sukhwinder has a very unique voice. Kailash too has that kind of a voice. It
has a good and bad side to it. The good quality is that it's unique but you
could make any song sound the same. Since our combination  Sukhi and me
worked and people look out for it I was very careful in selecting which song
he would sing. I wanted a completely new sound for both him and for me and
for the movie. Jai ho he starts at a very low pitch, which is very different
from his style. He usually begins at a very high note, which would make one
think, 'Hey this sounds like Chaiyya Chaiyya or sounds like something else
we've heard before.' So we were very conscious of that.

*What are the anthems that changed your vision?

*I'm very inspired by Bharatiyar's poetry. Bharathiar is a Tamil freedom
fighter. Most of Roja's songs were composed to his poetry. I'd always ask
Mani for dummy lyrics and Mani would bring me Bharathiar poems and say, 'Ok,
tune to this.' Since I did my schooling in Tamil Nadu we studied Bharathiar
it was soul-stirring ad simple in a way. My growing up was based on that
poetry and Tamil songs. Regarding English songs, I'm not a big follower of
any band but there's always been Queen and Pink Floyd. Almost everything by
Jackson in his earlier years.

On Sun, Dec 13, 2009 at 1:35 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

>
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> Todays sunday midday will carry a special interview of a r .......
>
> Vijay
>  
>



-- 
Praveen

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