The battle for Oscar's top tune
BRYAN BORZYKOWSKI, FOR METRO CANADA 
February 17, 2009 12:25



Most people tune into the Academy Awards for the glitz, glamour and 
the best picture trophy, but for music lovers the real show is all 
about best original song. 

This year's battle for Oscar is a little less fierce than in past 
years — two songs penned by Indian-born songwriter A.R. Rahman for 
Slumdog Millionare are up against a tune by Peter Gabriel from Wall-
E — but the songs might be the most interesting to vie for the prize 
yet. 

That's thanks to Rahman, whose songs O Saya, which features Sri 
Lankan songstress M.I.A. on vocals, and Jai Ho brilliantly fuse 
American-electro sounds with traditional Indian melodies, a musical 
combination that's never graced an Academy Award stage. 

While it's a good bet one of Rahman's tunes will win, Peter 
Gabriel's Down To Earth — a fun, but relatively laid-back affair — 
has history on its side. Some of the more recent winners haven't 
been boisterous over-the-top tunes like Slumdog's are, but rather 
quiet, introspective singer-songwriter sounds. 

Last year's winner Falling Slowly was a passionate duet by The 
Frames' Glen Hansard and Czech songstress Markéta Irglová. It was a 
victory for indie rock fans, but not so much for outside of the box 
artists. 

Melissa Ethridge, Jorge Dexler, Bob Dylan and Phil Collins have all 
taken home a trophy too, and while the songs were award-worthy, they 
all fit a similar singer-songwriter mold. 

If it's not guys or gals with guitars (or, in the '80s, pianos), 
it's ensemble musical numbers. Songs from the Little Mermaid, Fame, 
Mary Poppins and Dirty Dancing have all won Oscars; the most 
nominations and wins belongs to Sammy Cahn, a Broadway lyricist.

Despite the fact that plenty of the music world's most acclaimed 
tunes have won best original song (Take My Breath Away, I Just 
Called to Say I Love you, Que Sera Sera have all been victorious), 
some of the most memorable winners have come from unlikely artists. 

It's hard to forget Three Six Mafia's thrilling 2005 performance of 
Hustle and Flow's It's Hard Out There For a Pimp — and their even 
more stunning win, becoming the first African-American music group 
to ever take home an Oscar.  And, although they didn't snag the main 
prize, Beyoncé's pitch perfect, '60s-style pairing with Jennifer 
Hudson on Dreamgirls' Listen was easily one of Oscars' most 
memorable duets ever. 

So while Peter Gabriel could follow in the footsteps of many other 
big name solo artists — Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Carly 
Simon, Neil Young and Elton John have all been up for the award — 
Rahman's brilliant fusion of multi-cultural musical styles, and the 
fact that he's somehow not up against Springsteen's remarkable track 
for The Wrestler, likely means his name will be called on Sunday.

Even if one of his tunes is triumphant, though, it's doubtful we'll 
see an influx of cross-cultural sounds in the future. But, unlike 
the Grammy's, this will be one night where the best song will win. 


http://www.metronews.ca/halifax/entertainment/article/183075




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