http://www.desipundit.com/baradwajrangan/2009/01/17/the-chosen-one/

THE CHOSEN ONE

It wasn’t mere lip service that AR Rahman was paying to the almighty after 
winning the Golden
Globe. It was a heartfelt acknowledgement of a guiding force that’s shaped his 
miraculous
career.

JAN 18, 2009 - “UNBELIEVABLE,” HE SAID, AFTER HIS NAME WAS ANNOUNCED, after he 
sprinted onto
the stage and fished around in his pocket for the piece of paper containing his 
acceptance
speech. That was the exact word in my mind. Unbelievable! We knew our cinema 
was going around
the globe, but who would have dreamt that one of its shining ambassadors would 
go to the Golden
Globes. AR Rahman’s subsequent words, too, appeared to have been lifted from my 
head. “I
thought I won’t win, so anyways…” he declared, to much laughter from the 
audience, and I knew
what he meant – for even if he deserved to win, would voting vagaries and 
political
considerations take their toll on a relatively unknown musician from a land 
far, far away from
Hollywood?

Thankfully they didn’t – and it was one of those moments we’re going to play in 
our minds over
and over. Thank you Rahman, for winning, for putting a face to the great 
tradition of Indian
film music. Thank you Rahman, for acknowledging, on that resplendent platform 
in Beverly Hills,
all your musicians in Chennai and Mumbai, those nameless faces that untiringly 
translate the
ideas in a composer’s head into concrete musical form. Thank you, Rahman, for 
that shout out to
the billion people from India, for raising a toast to the brown face amidst 
that sea of white.
“Thanks for all your prayers,” he concluded, with characteristic humility, as 
if it were simply
our outpourings of faith that propelled him to his win, and not his dazzling 
talents.

But the most touching aspect of Rahman’s acceptance speech was surely when he 
acknowledged,
“Thanks to the almighty God for bringing me here.” On one level, this is 
entirely expected, for
Rahman’s faith in the divine is no secret. But even otherwise, this invocation 
of God (or
destiny or providence or fate or however you wish to name the mysterious forces 
that shape our
lives) is entirely appropriate – for Rahman has been fortune’s favoured child 
in ways that no
Indian film music composer before him has been. A look at his miraculous career 
appears to
indicate that it may not be simple coincidence that he has always been guided 
to the right
place, and always at the right time.

When Mani Ratnam, the most visible and influential face of Tamil cinema, was 
shopping for a new
music director, Rahman found himself there. Roja was a spectacular musical 
success, not only in
Tamil but also Hindi. The fresh strains of music that emanated from Rahman 
were, it seemed,
just what a jaded nation wanted – even if it appeared, for a while, that dubbed 
versions of his
Tamil hits were all that would sneak through to the north of the Vindhyas. And 
then Rahman
found himself the chosen one again, when Ram Gopal Varma made Rangeela, and he 
got himself a
smash of a Hindi soundtrack – and beginning then, no composer before Rahman has 
bridged the
tastes and the terrains of the North and the South so spectacularly.

And the reach of Rahman’s sound just kept expanding – first from South to 
North, and then from
India to the world. When Dil Se became the first Indian film to break into the 
UK Top Ten, at
the box office, Rahman found himself, again, at the right place, at the right 
time. On the
strength of Chhaiya chhaiya, Andrew Lloyd Webber beckoned, the London’s West 
End beckoned. And
thus, with his global sound, Rahman became the global face of Indian film 
music, the way
Aishwarya Rai is the global face of Indian cinema – the one name that springs 
to the lips of
people outside the country when they refer to the curiously fascinating world 
of Bollywood.

But more than anything else, Rahman has been extraordinarily blessed to arrive 
as a musician at
a time the world has shrunk beyond recognition. The great composers before him 
were, at best,
cherished and celebrated within their states or perhaps, if they worked in the 
Hindi film
industry, within the country. But today, thanks to the Internet and a gaggle of 
news channels
traversing the breadth of the nation in search of stories – can you imagine a 
Tamil masala
movie named Sivaji, starring a Tamil hero named Rajinikanth, becoming a 
nationwide sensation
even ten years ago? – the world is clued into what is happening at our 
doorstep, and when we
raised a toast to Rahman, it’s was always only a matter of time before the 
world did too.

And Rahman continues to be at the right place (Bollywood) at the right time 
(the present day).
He still dignifies the odd project in Tamil or Telugu, but a significant 
portion of his
energies are channelled towards gilding the visions of Bollywood filmmakers who 
are ambitious,
who understand the value Rahman brings to their films, and who do not mind 
giving him the space
and the time and the collaborative creative inputs to bring out the best in 
him. Where a
composer from an earlier era may have burned out because of having to conjure 
up, for the
millionth time, a generic love song or a generic estrangement number, these 
directors today
have kept Rahman’s creative fires burning.

To say that Rahman is extraordinary is to state the obvious, but his 
circumstances have been
almost as extraordinary. The talented composers before him couldn’t have even 
imagined scaling
the heights that he has today, and that’s surely why Rahman chose to thank God 
at the podium.
The fates have shaped the story of AR Rahman into one that rivals the fictional 
happenings of
Slumdog Millionaire – a young lad is picked out of utter obscurity to become 
the beacon of
inspiration for millions. At the beginning of the film, a title card questions 
the titular
underdog’s unprecedented success: “How did he do it? A) He cheated. B) He’s 
lucky. C) He’s a
genius. D) It is written.” At least in Rahman’s case, the latter appears to be 
the answer.

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  • ... Gopal Srinivasan
    • ... ramakrisha laxmana subramanian siva gopala acharya iyer .aiyooo amma idli wada dosa sambar chatni .

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