THe latest issue of Outlook has a cover story on ARR. Unfortunately, they used 
the same image
as their sister publication, People did a couple of week ago.

Rahmaniat 

And so it is that a shy, diffident man arrives on the world stage with a bang 

NAMRATA JOSHI, LATA KHUBCHANDANI ON A.R. RAHMAN
February 22, 2009: India rejoices as A.R. Rahman lifts two Oscars at the Kodak 
Theatre in Los
Angeles.
Flashback to 1992: India is taken by storm when Mani Ratnam’s unassuming film, 
Roja, gets
everyone hooked to its fresh, irresistibly lilting soundtrack. The film debut 
of a shy
jinglemaker, it bags Rahman the national award for best composer, and years 
later gets picked
as one of Time magazine’s 10 best soundtracks of all time.

The two milestones to the left span a 17-year-long journey that has not just 
been about
personal achievement but also about spearheading a musical revolution, breaking 
old moulds and
setting new trends, giving a fresh face to that much-reviled entity called 
Hindi film music.
All this managed almost with a remote control, in the peace of A.R. Rahman’s 
famous recording
studio in Kodambakkam, Chennai.

Tamil film music had been flourishing thanks to the genius of Ilaiyaraaja, when 
Rahman stepped
in and took it in another direction. In Bollywood, however, things were not as 
happy. "He came
in at a time when Hindi film music had become a parody of itself," says 
composer Vishal (of the
Vishal-Shekhar duo). Rahman’s arrival brought to it a new vigour, vitality and 
finesse,
broadening the narrow horizons in which Bollywood melodies operated. He showed 
new
possibilities and creative ways of making a song, bringing in fresh sounds, 
voices and
instrumentation. "He took music on an entirely different path," says composer 
and singer
Shankar Mahadevan.


Jai Ho lyricist Gulzar

Such has been Rahman’s influence that many contemporary music composers openly 
acknowledge that
they owe their careers to him. "I had only heard R.D. Burman; for me the whole 
cheesy ’80s
music was just noise; I didn’t want to get into film music at all. But after 
Rahman, it became
okay to head for the film industry," says Vishal. Music director Shantanu 
Moitra found the
courage to leave advertising for films because Rahman showed that there was a 
place for
"melodic and contemporary" sound in Hindi films.

Rahman began to be noticed abroad too. Mihai Chirilov, Romanian film critic and 
artistic
director of the cutting-edge Transilvania International Film Festival, 
remembers watching
Ashutosh Gowariker’s Lagaan in Locarno’s majestic Piazza Grande back in 2001. 
"What blew me was
the sophistication of Rahman’s music, the sharpness of its beats and orchestral 
richness, that
was miles removed from the Bollywood music I had been exposed to," he says. No 
wonder people
took to it across the world, and Rahman went on to collaborate with the best of 
talent—from
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (for Gurus of Peace) to Andrew Lloyd Webber in Bombay 
Dreams, his biggest
shot in the global entertainment arena before Slumdog Millionaire. "Classical 
music has always
received respect worldwide, but Rahman took our film and popular music on to 
the global map,"
says music composer Salim (of Salim-Suleiman fame).


Jai ho: Slum kids hail AR at his Chennai music school-cum-studio

In his own unique way, the shy and deeply spiritual man who creates music from 
the silence
surrounding him has reached across and interacted with the entire world. "His 
music knows no
boundaries," says filmmaker Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra. Having defied localism 
with his easy
mobility between the south and the north, he has now effortlessly bridged the 
global East-West
musical divide. "He understands the global pulse," says classical musician Anil 
Srinivasan,
"his songs work as well in Paris as in Mali or in NY."

There have been other film composers who have looked westwards for inspiration, 
but the
cross-cultural pitch did not define their work as acutely as it does Rahman’s. 
Having a strong
grounding in diverse forms of music, his creations show a medley of musical 
influences—from
jazz and rock to gangsta rap and Asian Underground. So it is that a hip-hop 
groove uplifts a
folksy Genda Phool in Delhi-6, just as reggae rhythm spliced through a simple 
tune and turned
it into the very catchy Chinna chinna asai in Roja. From Arabic to jazz to Sufi 
to bhajans,
just a single Rahman album (Delhi-6) can encompass his magically eclectic 
approach and ability
to harmoniously mix different genres. "He uses Western instruments to echo 
Indian sounds
whereas the others are doing just the opposite," observes Chirilov. Take his
favourite—Chhaiyyan Chhaiyyan from Dil Se. "It’s not just ear candy or 
instantly catchy. It is
refreshingly modern in the way it updates the traditional Indian rhythms to 
more contemporary
sounds, without making them sound like cheap disco or techno tracks," says 
Chirilov.

Whatever the influences, the Indian core has always remained significant in 
Rahman’s music. As
Time magazine film critic Richard Corliss said of Roja, "The astonishing debut 
work parades
Rahman’s gift for alchemising outside influences until they are totally Tamil, 
totally Rahman."
Or as Anu Malik puts it, "He turned world music into Hindi music."


Dancing to his beat: Rahman performing at the Oscar ceremony

In many ways, then, Rahman’s career reflects the journey of modern India. He 
has been the right
man at the right place and the right time. Rahman’s career took off just when 
India opened its
doors to the world—he could be said to be a true child of liberalisation and 
globalisation,
confident about its identity yet open to diverse influences. He is both global 
citizen and
patriotic Indian. In Roja, he might have worked with reggae rhythms but he also 
came up with a
very stirring patriotic track—Bharat hum ko jaan se pyara hai. His work with 
bhajans, Sufi
music and gurbani also reflects the influence of the syncretic Indian tradition.


Honoured: Danny Boyle arrives with Rubina, Slumdog’s young Latika, for the 
guv’s ball

With two Oscars, a Golden Globe, a Padmashree, four national and 21 Filmfare 
awards behind him,
43-year-old Rahman has become synonymous with musical excellence—and with 
exciting
experimentation and innovation too. "He has made it easier for us to try out 
new stuff," says
Salim. This has been Rahman’s other significant contribution—opening the door 
to new voices,
new sounds and even a new way of writing and phrasing lyrics. Amazingly for a 
man who does not
understand Hindi or Urdu, lyrics took a fresh turn under his baton. "He was not 
committed to
the mukhda/antara format of a Hindi song—he chose to make antara the mukhda," 
says Malik. This
offered new challenges to lyricists. "He liberated us and allowed us to 
experiment by breaking
the fixed structure of the song," says lyricist Gulzar. The free-flowing and 
meandering tune in
Rehna Tu in Delhi-6 made Prasoon Joshi discover a new way of writing lyrics.

Existing moulds were broken in other ways as well. Mani Ratnam broke the 
Ilaiyaraaja monopoly
when he gave Rahman a break in Roja, and Rahman, in turn, broke the monopoly of 
star singers by
introducing a range of fresh voices. Once upon a time, a Kishore Kumar would be 
the one and
only voice for a Rajesh Khanna or an Amitabh Bachchan.However, with Rahman, an 
Aamir can sing
in several voices—be it Shankar’s or Javed Ali’s. Rahman gave primacy to the 
song, not the
voice singing it or the actor enacting it. "He made many dreams come true, made 
many careers
take off," says Chennai-based playback singer Chinmayi Sripada. "It became like 
the IPL of
music, anyone could shine and make it big," comments music composer Shaleen 
Sharma.


Millionaire feeling: The Slumdog cast gets onstage as the film wins best 
picture Oscar

"Whenever Rahman listens to somebody, the voice registers in his mind, and when 
he has a song
fit for that voice he calls you," says Harshdeep, who sang the shabad gurbani 
for him in Rang
de Basanti. Having heard Mohit Chauhan at a Channel V concert in 1998, Rahman 
turned to him for
Khoon Chala in Rang de Basanti. As a composer, he is unusually open to 
give-and-take from his
singers. The laughter in Masakalli, for example, was Chauhan’s own suggestion, 
which Rahman
decided to retain. "He has a vision and has the art of drawing out the best 
from the artiste,"
says singer Naresh Iyer.

One way he does it is through generosity to those he works with. Sivamani, who 
has played for
Rahman since Roja, recalls how every artiste who works for him is acknowledged 
on the CD
covers. "Naveen who plays the flute, Javed Ali who does the guitar, became 
individual
performers under him," says Srinivasan.

His studio is said to house a range of instruments from across the world and he 
has introduced
several of them in film music. In Masakalli, for instance, he has revived the 
accordion. Cello,
harp, sarangi, electric violin and a variety of percussion instruments—all have 
found a place
in Rahman’s music.


Sound decision: Resul Pookutty with his Oscar for best sound mixing

A great sound engineer and mixer, Rahman has also leveraged technology to bring 
in new clarity
and detailing to music. He is known to record an entire song with just one 
singer, and later
back it with music. "He works with the textures of voice. If the voice is thin, 
he fills up
with instruments like a low cello," says music composer Shantanu Moitra. "He 
has a
magician-like quality in the way he transforms a song by adding layers to it; 
its complexity
comes across with deceptive simplicity," says filmmaker Srinivas Bhashyam. No 
wonder a Rahman
song grows on you with each listening.

Rahman also displays a rare understanding of the context in which his music is 
set, absorbing
the characters, the situations, the emotions in a film before composing. In the 
lathicharge
sequence in Rang de Basanti, for instance, he chose to go with a hauntingly 
simple Khoon Chala
instead of a dramatic percussive track, and managed to create an ironic, 
melancholic atmosphere
for the sequence. For Bombay, he had used a simple violin track for the moving 
riot sequence.

It’s always difficult to pin down in words the appeal of a Rahman song. It 
speaks to different
people in different ways. The best of music eventually is not about perfection 
but passion. It
is not just about the intricacy of sur, taal or laya but capturing a feeling, 
touching the
listener’s core. If good music is all about a song becoming a listener’s best 
friend, then
Rahman has made us richer by many.

By Namrata Joshi and Lata Khubchandani

http://www.outlookindia.com/fullprint.asp?choice=1&fodname=20090309&fname=Cover+Story&sid=1

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