A hitch in A.R. Rahman's trajectory to global superstardomThe Bollywood
megastar and film composer hoped to capitalize on his 'Slumdog Millionaire'
success with a world tour. Then the bottom fell out, thanks to a collapsed
lighting rig.
[image:  ]

*SPECTACLE:* A.R. Rahman woos a Chicago audience with his traveling show,
which is one part Bollywood, one part Broadway and one part rock 'n' roll
circus. (Chris Salata / Chicago Tribune)


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By Chris Lee, Los Angeles Times

June 27, 2010

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Nobody expected the bottom to drop out on A.R. Rahman's world tour.

A Bollywood megastar and prolific film composer estimated to have sold more
than 350 million albums worldwide, he's revered as a musical demigod across
the Indian Diaspora. In the U.S., of course, Rahman is best known as the guy
behind the "Slumdog Millionaire" soundtrack who nabbed two Oscars, a Golden
Globe and two Grammys for his propulsive scoring contributions to the hit
2008 indie romance.

So, earlier this month, as he embarked on his "A.R. Rahman Jai Ho Concert:
The Journey Home World Tour," which was scheduled to reach the Forum in Los
Angeles on Sunday night, Rahman's plan was twofold: to connect with his
adoring Desi <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desi>— South Asian — fans while
also tapping into his newfound popularity among non-Desis, packing sports
arenas across North America and Europe along the way.

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Steeped in spectacle and exerting a high-tech razzle-dazzle more in step
with, say, Lady Gaga than a composer dubbed "the Mozart of Madras," the tour
went off without a hitch in New York, New Jersey and Chicago. But disaster
struck when Rahman hit Detroit on June 19.

According to artistic director Amy Tinkham, the infrastructure at the Motor
City's Pontiac Silverdome was not strong enough to support a lighting rig
and buckled beneath its weight. The apparatus came crashing down, destroying
part of the stage. Worse still, equipment and sets specially designed for
the tour were rendered unusable.

"It's a miracle my team escaped with minor injuries," Rahman said via
Twitter <http://twitter.com/arrahman> last Monday.

After initially postponing dates in Detroit and Toronto, Rahman made the
agonizing decision Tuesday evening to postpone his remaining North American
tour stops in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Vancouver, Canada and Houston
while sets are rebuilt and producers scramble to ascertain which elements of
the current show can be salvaged. A spokeswoman for Rahman said there is no
plan to cancel the tour's European dates; North American "Jai Ho Concert"
dates will most likely be rescheduled for September.

The predicament represents a significant setback for Rahman in his quest to
connect with Western audiences like no South Asian pop star before him,
while still relatively hot off his "Slumdog" success. He was named to Time
magazine's list of the world's most influential people last year.

Combining Bollywood, Broadway and a rock 'n' roll circus, "Jai Ho" was
intended as a gateway into the American mainstream. His plan to cross over
with non-Indian audiences also includes continuing soundtrack work in
Hollywood (after "Slumdog," Rahman was hired to score the 2009 romantic
comedy "Couples Retreat") and a potentially lucrative deal with Interscope
Records.

Two years have passed since "Slumdog" became a cultural touchstone and
Rahman's triumphant closing anthem "Jai
Ho"<http://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv=nikw8HG8J8I> became
a smash hit (an alternate version recorded with the Pussycat Dolls hit No. 1
in four countries). He spent much of 2009 collecting awards and basking in
the glow. Still, reached by phone in Chicago earlier this month, before his
Detroit set disaster, the soft-spoken composer, 44, acknowledged that he
might have been slow off the mark to capitalize on that momentum with a
world tour.

"In practice, it should have been last year," Rahman said. "But creatively,
we needed time to put this together."

Rahman's manager Amos Newman said before the Pontiac Silverdome mishap that
the tour was to be a sort of introduction to American audiences. "His shows
in the past were very much geared for Indian audiences. This show was
designed for everybody. We've done extensive marketing and PR outside the
ethnic market. We intentionally designed the show to appeal even to someone
unaware of who A.R. Rahman is."

The tour incorporates elements of Sufi mysticism, traditional folk, reggae,
jazz and rock grafted to a distinctly Indian musical mainframe. And despite
its culture-crossing intent, each song is sung in its original Tamil, Hindi
or Tegulu. But unlike his earlier performance programming — and in implicit
acknowledgement of the historical difficulties Bollywood has had trying to
break through in America — Rahman and his career overseers upped the ante by
incorporating new technology and Western-style performance flourishes.

They hired Tinkham, who has directed and choreographed tours for the likes
of Madonna and Paul McCartney, plus the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
Circus, to help provide, in Newman's terms, "a fan experience commensurate
with any other experience at a major rock show or pop concert."

"The concept of the show was a visual experience that takes you through
ancient and modern India and held the spirit of Indian culture in every
way," Tinkham said.

The team whittled Rahman's set list down to 35 songs, subdividing them into
distinct chapters that focus, variously, on India's religious life, rural
culture, festivals and political conflicts.

As well, no expense was spared on cutting-edge technology. The tour employs
a three-dimensional mapping projector (capable of virtually transforming
stationary objects into, say, waterfalls or climbing vines) and a
light-emitting diode display screen — both of which might or might not have
been damaged at the Pontiac Silverdome.

"We're trying to mix three different things: a Broadway show, a rock show
and a circus," said Rahman. "My music with moments of spirituality,
festivity, celebration and love. To celebrate India."

Regardless of the tour's postponement, Rahman has already begun carving a
presence for himself outside the subcontinent by collaborating with such pop
luminaries as Sri Lankan alt-hip-hop superstar M.I.A. and Aussie pop diva
Kylie Minogue as well as lending his vocals to the star-studded charity
single "We Are the World 25 for Haiti."

The performer's manager and Interscope Records head honcho Jimmy Iovine both
envision a career trajectory for the composer partially modeled on that of
Timbaland. The American hip-hop producer-songwriter (born Timothy Mosley)
parlayed his status as a multiplatinum-selling hitmaker for the likes of
Mariah Carey, Justin Timberlake and Nelly Furtado into a self-sustaining
career as an artist by showcasing his collaborations with other performers
on such hit albums as "Timbaland Presents Shock Value" volumes I and II.

"Indians in the U.S. have taken a big step forward in the past decade in
entertainment, corporate America and politics," said Gitesh Pandya, head of
the South Asian media consulting firm BoxOfficeGuru.com, via e-mail. "There
is still so much more to achieve, but our place in this country is a bit
more prominent now and our musicians and actors still face the challenge of
being accepted as just artists, and not brown artists."

To that end, Interscope is enlisting some help in building that bridge.
"Jimmy Iovine's idea from the get-go was for A.R. to make a record in
collaboration with well-known Western artists," Newman said. "He's writing
now, collaborating with a couple of people, multiplatinum artists. But at
its core, it needs to be an A.R. Rahman record. It's important we don't lose
his essence."

But in the short run, Rahman and tour producers have their hands full trying
to pick up the broken pieces for the remaining European dates.

"All the artists, singers, musicians, dancers, technicians (myself included)
have been almost given a second life," Rahman said in a statement released
Wednesday, "…maybe it's a blessing in disguise, as we will have the
opportunity to perform for you with even more energy and perfection."

[email protected]

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