*"He talks, smiles at clicking cameras and then spots an old lady in torn
cotton sari,
standing silently in a corner. He rushes across leaving everyone behind. She
flashes him a
toothless smile, gives him a rose and kisses him. "I am so honoured you
came," he says. "*


Salaaam Namaste ARR .... You are an excellent Human being.

God is sure to Bless u with more.... Inshallah Ameen...
On Sat, Jan 31, 2009 at 10:35 PM, Gopal Srinivasan <catchg...@yahoo.com>wrote:

>   Jade Tete-a-tete
>
> Jade February 2009
>
> From creating a revolution in INdian film music to composing for
> international plays and films
> A.R.Rahman has done it all. As we go to press, his original score for the
> critically acclaimed
> Slumdog Millionaire has won him the Golden Globe Award.
>
> Vee Jay Sai gets to know the man behind the acclaim.
>
> A bylane in Kodambakkam, Chennai, is filled with people holding boquets,
> candles and cakes. A
> sleek car pulls up, a man hops out with a wide smile on his face. Greeting
> the crowd that mobs
> him. He talks, smiles at clicking cameras and then spots an old lady in
> torn cotton sari,
> standing silently in a corner. He rushes across leaving everyone behind.
> She flashes him a
> toothless smile, gives him a rose and kisses him. "I am so honoured you
> came," he says.
>
> In the living room, a Yamaha CLAVINOVA electronic piano sits in the corner.
> THere is a ROland
> D5 editing console, the size of a TT table. A glass-enclosed case holds
> dozens of awards and
> citations.
>
> Slumdog Millionaire
>
> "So sorry to keep you waiting," says A.R.Rahman. "But lets sit and talk
> now." Outside the glass
> door are a hundred eager faces watching him. Bagging the Golden Globe award
> for Best Original
> Score in Slumdog Millionaire, has his whole office excited as his fans
> across the world. Rahman
> talks about how the assignment happened.
>
> "I got a mail one morning from Danny. He said that he knew my music and
> wanted to work with me
> on a project. I had no clue who he was or what he did. I did a Google
> search and found out that
> he was a well known director. Slumdog Millionaire is about suffering, hope
> and redemption.
> Danny was very sure what he wanted from me and what he didn't want. The way
> he projected my
> music is terrific. I don't think any other city has been portrayed as
> vibrantly as Mumbai has."
>
> So, what didn't he want? "Oh, he didn't want romantic and sentimental
> stuff. He likes edgy
> music and that's what we worked on, so it's like a terrific discotheque."
>
> And the response to his music? "They loved it. LA is a place that people in
> the entertainment
> industry say things that they don't mean. So, I thought they were just
> being polite. But then I
> found that those biggies of Hollywood actually meant every word they said.
> Although some of the
> songs are in Hindi, it didn't seem to matter. Jai Ho, O Saya and Ringa
> Ringa are all in Hindi,
> but they responded to them wonderfully."
>
> How important is the knowledge of classical music for a composer? "Well,
> knowing is good. But
> then not knowing is also good. Knowing and pretending not to know is also
> good. When one knows,
> ones pride often takes over and doesn't allow one to proceed with one's
> work. When one doesn't
> know, there is no pride and the constant process of learning keeps bringing
> out one's best.
> Either way, the quest for learning must go on."
>
> Early Times
>
> Born as Dileep Kumar, he converted to Islam after the illness of his father
> was miraculously
> cured with the healing of a Sufi saint. His father was a musician who
> "almost killed himself
> working. In those days, he did 90% of the job and almost all of it went
> unrecognized or under
> someone else's name. What was worse, he used to be called an 'Assistant'.
> This sort of a
> treatment never let him live a peaceful life. His health deteriorated till
> he passed away. His
> life has taught me not to take on too much work. I get lots of offers every
> day. But I am fine
> doing two or three films a year rather than running around doing twenty.
> One learns from
> life..."
>
> After the death of his father, the family survived by hiring out the
> musical instruments which
> their father used. This continued till young Rahman started making music
> himself along with
> some close friends.
>
> He had a band called Magic, in the 1980s, which included Sivamani, the
> drummer, TV
> Gopalakrishnan, mridangam and Deva on the drums. They released a private
> music album called
> Disco 82 which was popular with the young crowd.
>
> The Sufi philosophy
>
> Having grown up with problems, one cannot help notice how down to earth
> Rahman is. Trying to
> understand life philosophically helped him heal. He says, "I took to Sufism
> for the one
> question that we all ask. The eternal question: who am I? What was I
> created for? And in this
> search I started opening up and found light and love. THe turning point is
> to question one self
> and start the inward journey to find the answer. At some point, all your
> intellectual pride
> crashes. You feel a power from within. It's this power that drives you."
>
> A devout muslim, Rahman never misses his namaz five times a day however
> busy the schedule he
> has. It was after his first pilgrimage or the Haj that his son was born.
> And as if it were a
> true blessing, the father and son both share the same birthday! It's the
> strong Sufi
> inclination that gets him to creates his unforgettable melodies.
>
> Revolutionary music
>
> Rahman brought about a revolution in Indian film music. There are rumours
> about the way that
> Rahman composes his music, from accusation of plagiarism to the practice of
> mysterious rituals.
> " I love classical music. I love Bach, Beethoven, Verdi. Classical music is
> like an ocean. All
> the other genres of music are mere droplets in it. So there are bound to be
> influences of
> classical music in my work. I also attend music concerts where I can. My
> favourite musicians
> are L. Subramanian and L. Shankar. There are the real heroes of Indian
> music if you ask me.
> It's mind boggling, the phenomenal work they did of taking our music to the
> world, In those
> days when INdian music did not have any global exposure. As for secret
> rituals..." he laughs.
> "It's just that I need complete peace and calm when I compose , so I do it
> in the night.
> Another thing is, I am a father of three kids, they often fight, and I am
> summoned to make
> peace between them in the day time. So, all this is avoided at night."
>
> Rahman scores music across geographical boundaries by composing for
> languages like Hindi,
> Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam. Does he mind if sometimes his music is thought
> to be a flop?
> Rahman shrugs. "I didn't know about that. I only know that I make music.
> Like there was this
> movie made by Mani Ratnam called IRuvar, for which I composed. People
> suddenly realized that
> they music was good one year after the film released! So, you never know.
> What is flop for one,
> works for another. As for me, if I haven't invested in myself wholly and
> felt satisfied about
> my music, then I term it as a flop."
>
> The inheritance of music
>
> As for music legacy, Rahman doesn't believe in it. "I think music has to
> change time and again.
> RD Burman became himself not because he tried to be his father. Similarly,
> I dread to be anyone
> else or have anyone else take over from me. I keep worrying about my
> children having a father
> like me. People start expecting from them what they see in me. You can be
> influenced, but you
> have to make your own music in the end. "
>
> Other than film music, Rahman has done a great deal of work in non-film
> music. "I have been
> working with the Hamburg Orchestra, to compose a great Sufi mystic Fareed
> Al din Attar's
> Conference of the Birds. It's not an easy thing. I mentioned it to them and
> they immediately
> commissioned it. It's only after I started working on it, that I realized
> what I was getting
> into. I haven't done much work on it. I feel I need to be spiritually ready
> for it.
>
> Are there any specific music directors or singers that he likes. "Mohd.
> Rafi, Whitney Houston,
> Ofra Haza, the Jewish singer, Kylie Minogue..." He also takes time out to
> watch a film once in
> a while. "A good movie I saw recently was Takwa, a Turkish movie and then I
> saw Waris Shah -
> Ishq da Waris by Gurdas Mann, on the Sufi saint Hazrat Waris Shah. I loved
> them."
>
> The Philanthropic Composer
>
> It's difficult to practice Sufism without constant detachment and charity.
> It was this
> philosophy that got him to start the A.R.Rahman Foundation.
>
> "I was inspired by the El Systema project in Venezuela. They take poor kids
> from the slums and
> train them as classical musicians. This is a movement. There is immense
> participation and in
> the end they come out with some of the best music. So, the foundation I set
> up is on those
> lines. It works to make poverty history in India. If we all put our heads
> together, we can do
> it. We only plant the seed and water it with good intentions. What it grows
> into is not in our
> hands."
>
> He came up with his first English composition "Pray for me Brother" to
> raise funds for the
> foundation. "I feel that more than anything every person in the world needs
> love. I hope the
> song will create awareness and make a difference in the life of
> underprivileged children."
> Rahman's formula for love and his Sufi philosophy also got him to endorse
> the famous "Free
> Hugs" campaign started by Jason Hunter.
>
> Rahman took time out along with his old buddy drummer, Sivamani to compose
> Jiya Se Jiya, the
> popular track and video that promotes this campaign. "Believe in the power
> of love and love
> your fellow humans. This is what the world needs now."
>
> A.R.Rahman chooses top 5 romantic favourites
>
> 1. When I fall in love by Celine Dion
> 2. Theme music of Kal Ho Na Ho
> 3. Chopin's Hungarian Rhapsody
> 4. Love Theme from Cinema Paradiso
> 5. The Theme music from Love Story
> 
>



-- 
regards,
Vithur

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