Resul Pookutty - 'After the Oscar, people are scared of me, I am losing out
on work!'
  By: Chirag Sutar    28 Jan 10 18:53 IST

[image: 
image]<http://www.radioandmusic.com/sites/radioandmusic.com/files/images/c7a943524817d2ecbbf42039f9a1c454.jpg>
Resul
Pookutty - 'After the Oscar, people are scared of me, I am losing out on
work!'

Almost a week before *Resul Pookutty* was honoured with a Padma Shri on
India's 60th Republic Day, *Radioandmusic.com's Chirag Sutar* dropped into
Resul Pookutty's suburban Mumbai studio - uninvited- for an interview. To
Chirag's pleasant surprise, within five minutes a casually dressed bearded
man walked in and introduced himself as 'Resul' - no airs- while he
chattered away in Malayalam with his staff.

The well known sound engineer who made headlines through 2009 probably
believed in 'atithi devo bhavo'? Or was Chirag just plain lucky? Either way,
Pookutty, who has almost made history by being the first Indian to win an
Academy award in 80 years of its history, gamely fielded questions on
Rahman's Grammy nomination (he sounded very confident about Rahman winning
the award), how life changed after winning the Oscars, and the
responsibilities that recognitions bring.

*Excerpts from a short conversation....*

*What makes you so confident that A R Rahman will win the Grammy?*

I think on an international level, a song has never been celebrated like
this. No other motion picture soundtrack has been as well received as Jai Ho
and that gives me the confidence that Rahman will pick the Grammy for this -
there is no doubt about it... The last time an Indian won a Grammy was Pt.
Vishwamohan Bhatt and I still remember the nature of the track that they
played, and compared to that, this is 110 times more of a celebration of
life - it's todays sound, today's energy, that's what the world is looking
out for - to celebrate life and love and that's what Jai Ho is all about -
what a stupendous energy that song has!

*Don't you think the west is just discovering Rahman's music?*

Exactly.. because we have heard Rahman's music. I feel very proud to say
that I have worked with him closely because Rahman taught us... the entire
generation about how to love and respect other traditions... even when he is
working on a Bollywood masala flick with a great star and all that ... the
music and its soul is not compromised... you take the example of the tracks
of Dil Se which has a superstar but he is always trying to find and explore
more and learn from other traditions.

For example, in Dil Se he used a lot of North Indian sounds, (cuts in)
(remember, he is a South Indian) he is using the sounds of different
cultures and bringing an element of Sufism and spirituality into his very
'mainstream work'. when I hear Rahman's music, I feel I have heard it
somewhere - it has a quality of triggering a nostalgia at one level, so for
me his music becomes memorable. I think his music has the greatest ability
to poke my memory at one level and mind it - he doing all this while working
in mainstream - what we call 'the popular culture'.

I understand that classical musicians have a great tradition, but it is also
very niche, but Rahman is able to provoke people in a larger context - so
for me, that makes me feel that music per se is no longer a complex thing -
it's very accessible for everybody and that I think is the biggest
contribution of Rahman. He has done that it in India, and now he is doing
that internationally...

*And now he is also nominated for the Oscars for Couples' Retreat sound
track...*

Yes.. the songs in that film have Tamil words in it.. it's amazing.. and the
west is grooving to it. You see, suddenly language is being introduced as a
sound and it's crossing international barriers and that's exactly what what
the politicians and visionaries are trying to do - cross barriers. On one
hand, technological developments are diminishing international barriers and
borders, but Rahman has done that with sound - and at a much deeper level.
For me, that's his biggest contribution as an artiste. I can see that he
will bring Oscars to the country like he has collected Filmfares, he is
already there in the run and I can see that he is going to make the entire
country and its people proud.

*Speaking about Grammys and Oscars... most musicians back here believe that
one has to work with an American in order to get a Grammy - it's very biased
in that sense. Agree?*

See, an award is an recognition, and especially when it comes from outside
your country, it means that a certain section of people have noticed your
work and they think that your work was important 'to the time that you are
living in' - that's how I look at recognitions. We can't make such
allegations because there is bias  in every award - we can say it's there in
Filmfares and even the National Awards. Did you know it's a rule that the
National Award has never been given to a foreigner? Even if he has done
stupendous work? Doesn't it mean that we have a bias?

The fact that the award committee's in the west have agreed to see our work
means they are looking at our excellence - rest, everything is a problem of
their system - I don't want to look into that.

If someone is recognised at a given point, whatever that is - small or
big... it is still a statement from a section that they are looking up to
you, therefore, I will respect every award that is given to me, and I will
respect every award that is being given to anybody else.

*OK... after receiving these awards... in what way has life changed for you?
*

Now, you came out of nowhere and said you want to do an interview - that is
a great change for me. If you look at this from another level... you know I
am a technician, an artiste who uses technology as a tool, and we have been
looked down upon for a long time - and I think all that is changing with
these awards.

If you look at 80 years of the Academy's history, not a single Asian has won
an Oscar for 'sound mixing' - it took 80 years for us to get that and Rahman
is only the third Asian to win an Oscar Award - I don't thing it's a small
achievement.

*Do you feel the awards bring with them a lot of responsibility?*

Of course, with the awards, a lot of responsibility comes in, for me, the
most important thing is that a lot of youngsters are looking up to me and I
am very proud to say that I am a product of a public school - I have never
been to an English medium school, I could barely speak English when I joined
the FTII and then I went on to win an Oscar... and my speech was selected as
the most eloquent speech of the evening at the Oscars by the American
Broadcast Corporation - it was a long way, and that of course people have
taken in a positive light.
Wherever I go, whichever college I visit, I get a lot of appreciation from
the youngsters... but that comes with a lot of responsibility because one
has to also live up to people's expectations by conduct and by the way you
practise your craft and your life - then the recognition you have achieved
glitters more with your light. So well, this is an added responsibility that
I have but otherwise, I am doing the same kind of movie... of course, I have
better say these days... and also people are scared of me (laughs) I am
losing out on work (laughs) people think that I have gone too big.... I just
the same person.

*Are there any international projects that you are working on at present?*

The nature of my work is such that I am already booked for the next year...
I just finished my last commitment that I had taken before I received the
Oscars. I will start shooting from January onwards for an independent
production from Los Angeles and I am also doing an big international project
that is going to be shot in India. Besides that, I am beginning to start an
association in Los Angeles so that I can have a foothold there because it's
very difficult to break into the technical community there and to be
accepted there. Of course, with the Oscar recognition I am readily accepted,
but one has to be there and work there .. otherwise you are only a visiting
face.

*Do you plan to shift your base then?*

No, I don't want to leave India, I'll never leave India to earn big bucks.
Since 97' I have been working in various international studios in London,
Los Angeles, Australia and France. I have worked in all these places, but I
never left India because the moment you leave your country you become a
second hand citizen - I never wanted to do that no matter what that country
has to offer me. In India, I am a free bird, and can do whatever I want and
whatever problems this country has are also my problems, and I am very proud
of that. But having said that, I definitely would like to build associations
internationally and share with the younger generation whatever I have learnt
and seen - I would like to pass that on to the younger generation.
When I work, I basically execute all my work sitting in Mumbai, or I can sit
in LA and work in my studio in Mumbai - we are that equipped and we have
been working like that. Some of the big studios are opening their doors for
me and Rahman to work there because they want us - it's a great change- but
I am not shifting my base.

*In the west, sound engineers receive an equal cut from the film's profits,
don't you think that's missing here? And is it possible to introduce such
models here?*

There's a huge difference in how one gets professionally paid abroad and
here. In the west, they call it 'sharing a creative pie' - so, there's a
creative pie and a producers pie and that kind of a model has obviously not
come in here, but we have attempted it, for example with small budget films
like Mithya, Mixed Doubles and Bheja fry we had shared our profits equally,
and I hope such a model will be adapted more often.

Professionally too, we are changing. See, I look at it this way... I began
to work in a film industry in 1995 and not a single film was shot in live
sound then. Now more than 40 per cent of the movies are shot live sound, and
in 14 years we have won an Oscar in that category. For me, it only shows one
thing - my fraternity is willing to except challenges and I think as a
fraternity we have been great at it. Looking at the fair share of what we
are putting in, my industry will accept new models like these also - I want
to believe that it's going to come and I want to believe that my country is
no less than any other country.

*Are we technically at par with the rest of the world when it comes to
sound?*
If you asked me this question 10 years ago... I would have told you that 'we
are 10 years behind', but fortunately... that's not the case today, we have
access to the latest technology. When I was working on Blue, a microphone
company had designed a microphone for me. For the new film that I will be
doing now, again a company is designing a microphone for me. Even when I was
working on Black, a new hard disk based workstation was introduced and I was
one of the five technicians around the world to field test the product and I
recorded Black in machine - you know people are looking up to us - the
difference is only in the way we are using it.

*What kind of difference?*

You know .. sound mixes don't sound they same (as in the west) because we
have a set pattern, or people don't want to change, or don't want to take
risks. In the west, the first concern is that you make a 'creatively
satisfactory' product, and then they think about selling it, but here you
make a package first.. we try to sell it first.

*And the remuneration that technicians get now, has that been changed?*
Compared to what it was - there is a huge change. I won't say we are paid
badly - but we are not paid on par with the west.

http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/just-talk/resul-pookutty-after-oscar-people-are-scared-me-i-am-losing-out-work#story

-- 
- Regards

~ ~ A.R.Rajib ~ ~

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