Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Gomzy™
Some neednt been asked to arr.

1. I havent seen Mehboob working for a very long time now. Correct me if i
am wrong.

2. He definitely has a music library but doesn talk about it like others do
:)

3. Good music sounds different in different mediums like headphones or
speakers. Headphones
is obviously better. Its ARR's arrangement that makes it special.

14. Not necesary. It happens with SEL too. And many others. I have observed
that when the music is
 original this happens.

On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 2:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@yahoo.com wrote:


 I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I wud ask.
 Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not exhaustive...
 some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me if i thought
 of a question which was already answered :o)

 --

 1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the success of
 Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working together
 again ?
 --

 2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in their
 repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song tunes with
 him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and tunes
 come spontaneously ?
 --

 3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different systems
 (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we had not
 heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq Bina
 from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15 and 5:17. Do
 you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the listners ?
 --

 4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen, discover and
 enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
 --

 5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your interviews on
 TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not happy
 with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those directors
 ever come back to you again ?
 --

 6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
 Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work on such a
 movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?

 --

 7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise they
 deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of a one
 that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2 k 4, Gang
 Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
 overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be repetitive, how do
 you repond to it.
 --

 8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on
 other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar to yours ?
 --

 9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly listen to
 music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone recommends
 it.
 --

 10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies with the
 Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the current music
 directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal shekar from
 Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active fan in the
 yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your songs.
 (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired other MDs
 yet :o)
 --

 11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in India who
 insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd credits
 (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great gesture,
 but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
 --

 12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the
 music royalities issue ?
 --

 13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
 Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early critics
 wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman. But a few
 years after their release, these albums are suddenly considered master
 pieces in Indian music history. Do you think that this is the mind setup
 of the critics or if something is wrong somewhere ?
 --

 14. It happpens only with your music that the more you listen to it the
 more you like it, why?
 --

 15.
 a) A lot of today's top music artists swear by the statement that it is
 ONLY because of you that they are what today.
 b)Until Roja, the producers never dared to experiment to with new music
 directors
 c) Until you, the artists never got any credit on the music 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Reformed Sinner
most of these questions resonate with me. even i want to ask these questions
and not the same questions asked in most of the interviews.

On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 8:05 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@yahoo.com wrote:


 I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I wud ask.
 Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not exhaustive...
 some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me if i thought
 of a question which was already answered :o)

 --

 1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the success of
 Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working together
 again ?
 --

 2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in their
 repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song tunes with
 him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and tunes
 come spontaneously ?
 --

 3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different systems
 (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we had not
 heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq Bina
 from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15 and 5:17. Do
 you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the listners ?
 --

 4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen, discover and
 enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
 --

 5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your interviews on
 TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not happy
 with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those directors
 ever come back to you again ?
 --

 6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
 Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work on such a
 movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?

 --

 7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise they
 deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of a one
 that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2 k 4, Gang
 Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
 overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be repetitive, how do
 you repond to it.
 --

 8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on
 other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar to yours ?
 --

 9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly listen to
 music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone recommends
 it.
 --

 10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies with the
 Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the current music
 directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal shekar from
 Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active fan in the
 yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your songs.
 (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired other MDs
 yet :o)
 --

 11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in India who
 insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd credits
 (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great gesture,
 but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
 --

 12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the
 music royalities issue ?
 --

 13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
 Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early critics
 wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman. But a few
 years after their release, these albums are suddenly considered master
 pieces in Indian music history. Do you think that this is the mind setup
 of the critics or if something is wrong somewhere ?
 --

 14. It happpens only with your music that the more you listen to it the
 more you like it, why?
 --

 15.
 a) A lot of today's top music artists swear by the statement that it is
 ONLY because of you that they are what today.
 b)Until Roja, the producers never dared to experiment to with new music
 directors
 c) Until you, the artists never got any credit on the music cassette/CD
 inlays
 d) You are one who has taken the initiative in demanding the royalities to
 the music director from music companies
 e) You took Indian music to the global arena
 f) Your name itself sells music either with the music lovers or the music
 companies

 Of all the above examples you are a trendsetter. How does it feel, do you
 feel 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Krishna Kanth Kristam
Vinod..superb topic..and superb questions..

one question from me -

- After the release of Thakshak audio, I remember reading an AR interview
in which he said- Had the Thakshak audio been a bigger success than it were
(in terms of reaching common people or audio sales etc..), the music
compositions would have taken a different turn. have you ever composed music
in that flavour again? If so, which movie? (I guess En Swasa Katre was also
on the same lines..released in that year.)

guys..write in..your questions as well..hopefully one day we will get the
answers..from AR himself..

§ Krishna.


On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 3:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@yahoo.com wrote:


 I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I wud ask.
 Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not exhaustive...
 some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me if i thought
 of a question which was already answered :o)

 --

 1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the success of
 Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working together
 again ?
 --

 2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in their
 repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song tunes with
 him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and tunes
 come spontaneously ?
 --

 3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different systems
 (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we had not
 heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq Bina
 from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15 and 5:17. Do
 you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the listners ?
 --

 4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen, discover and
 enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
 --

 5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your interviews on
 TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not happy
 with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those directors
 ever come back to you again ?
 --

 6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
 Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work on such a
 movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?

 --

 7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise they
 deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of a one
 that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2 k 4, Gang
 Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
 overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be repetitive, how do
 you repond to it.
 --

 8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on
 other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar to yours ?
 --

 9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly listen to
 music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone recommends
 it.
 --

 10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies with the
 Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the current music
 directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal shekar from
 Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active fan in the
 yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your songs.
 (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired other MDs
 yet :o)
 --

 11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in India who
 insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd credits
 (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great gesture,
 but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
 --

 12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the
 music royalities issue ?
 --

 13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
 Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early critics
 wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman. But a few
 years after their release, these albums are suddenly considered master
 pieces in Indian music history. Do you think that this is the mind setup
 of the critics or if something is wrong somewhere ?
 --

 14. It happpens only with your music that the more you listen to it the
 more you like it, why?
 --

 15.
 a) A lot of today's top music artists swear by the statement that it is
 ONLY because of you that they are what today.
 b)Until Roja, the producers never 

RE: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread S, Karthik
Vijay/Gops,

ARR should answer these great  questions. I wonder what an interview it would 
be to see ARR answer these sort of pointed , specific questions.

ARR can use his website arrahman.com to answer some of the filtered queries, 
time to time.

You know what, 95% of the interviewers in media are not aware of most of the 
gems of ARR and they see ARR's work only superficially. The result is interview 
after interview we hear only same sort of questions and ARR must have got 
extremely bored by now.

I say, its awesome Vinod, to come up with such questions. As a fan I too have 
many such questions. Can this be the begining?

Regards,
Karthik

From: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com [arrahmanf...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of 
vinod sagar [dvsagar_2...@yahoo.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 8:05 PM
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Sagar
Subject: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask


I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I wud ask. 
Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not exhaustive... some 
more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me if i thought of a 
question which was already answered :o)



1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the success of Bombay 
and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working together again ?


2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in their 
repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song tunes with him). 
Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and tunes come 
spontaneously ?


3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different systems (eg. 
Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we had not heard 
before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq Bina from Taal 
you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15 and 5:17. Do you mix them 
in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the listners ?


4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen, discover and 
enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.


5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your interviews on TV. In 
that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not happy with your 
music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those directors ever come back 
to you again ?


6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like Shankarabharanam. 
Do you think that you will ever get to work on such a movie in today's trend of 
commercial cinema?



7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise they deserve 
because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of a one that flopped 
(eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2 k 4, Gang Master, Palnati 
Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these overlooked songs in other 
movies, critics slam you to be repetitive, how do you repond to it.


8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on other 
music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar to yours ?


9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly listen to 
music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone recommends it.


10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies with the 
Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the current music 
directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal shekar from 
Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active fan in the 
yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your songs.
(We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired other MDs yet 
:o)


11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in India who 
insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd credits (eg 
keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great gesture, but how 
open was the music industry to this concept ?


12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the music 
royalities issue ?


13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida, Thakshak, 
The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early critics wrote them off 
with comments such as Not expected from Rahman. But a few years after their 
release, these albums are suddenly considered master pieces in Indian music 
history. Do you think that this is the mind setup of the critics or if 
something is wrong somewhere ?


14. It 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Thulasi Ram
s, thankshak is a great album and till date, it never got its recognition it
deserved. situations like this deeply affect the MD.

On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Krishna Kanth Kristam 
krishna.kris...@gmail.com wrote:

   Vinod..superb topic..and superb questions..

 one question from me -

 - After the release of Thakshak audio, I remember reading an AR interview
 in which he said- Had the Thakshak audio been a bigger success than it were
 (in terms of reaching common people or audio sales etc..), the music
 compositions would have taken a different turn. have you ever composed music
 in that flavour again? If so, which movie? (I guess En Swasa Katre was also
 on the same lines..released in that year.)

 guys..write in..your questions as well..hopefully one day we will get the
 answers..from AR himself..

 § Krishna.



 On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 3:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@yahoo.comwrote:


 I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I wud
 ask. Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not
 exhaustive... some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me
 if i thought of a question which was already answered :o)

 --

 1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the success of
 Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working together
 again ?
 --

 2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in their
 repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song tunes with
 him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and tunes
 come spontaneously ?
 --

 3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different systems
 (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we had not
 heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq Bina
 from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15 and 5:17. Do
 you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the listners ?
 --

 4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen, discover and
 enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
 --

 5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your interviews on
 TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not happy
 with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those directors
 ever come back to you again ?
 --

 6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
 Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work on such a
 movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?

 --

 7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise they
 deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of a one
 that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2 k 4, Gang
 Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
 overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be repetitive, how do
 you repond to it.
 --

 8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on
 other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar to yours ?
 --

 9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly listen to
 music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone recommends
 it.
 --

 10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies with the
 Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the current music
 directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal shekar from
 Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active fan in the
 yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your songs.
 (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired other MDs
 yet :o)
 --

 11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in India
 who insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd credits
 (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great gesture,
 but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
 --

 12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the
 music royalities issue ?
 --

 13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
 Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early critics
 wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman. But a few
 years after their release, these albums are suddenly considered master
 pieces in Indian music history. Do you think that this is the mind setup
 of the critics or if something is wrong somewhere ?
 --

 14. It happpens only with your music that the more you 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Chord
I appreciate this post.  Great questions and I would hope ARR would
someday answer them.



--- In arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com, Gomzy™ gomtesh.upad...@... wrote:

 Some neednt been asked to arr.
 
 1. I havent seen Mehboob working for a very long time now. Correct
me if i
 am wrong.
 
 2. He definitely has a music library but doesn talk about it like
others do
 :)
 
 3. Good music sounds different in different mediums like headphones or
 speakers. Headphones
 is obviously better. Its ARR's arrangement that makes it special.
 
 14. Not necesary. It happens with SEL too. And many others. I have
observed
 that when the music is
  original this happens.
 
 On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 2:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@... wrote:
 
 
  I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question I
wud ask.
  Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not
exhaustive...
  some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls excuse me if i
thought
  of a question which was already answered :o)
 
  --
 
  1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the
success of
  Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working
together
  again ?
  --
 
  2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes in
their
  repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song
tunes with
  him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music and
tunes
  come spontaneously ?
  --
 
  3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different
systems
  (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we
had not
  heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina Ishq
Bina
  from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15
and 5:17. Do
  you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the
listners ?
  --
 
  4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen,
discover and
  enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
  --
 
  5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your
interviews on
  TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are not
happy
  with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those
directors
  ever come back to you again ?
  --
 
  6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
  Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work on
such a
  movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?
 
  --
 
  7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the praise
they
  deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie of
a one
  that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2
k 4, Gang
  Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
  overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be
repetitive, how do
  you repond to it.
  --
 
  8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any pressure on
  other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar
to yours ?
  --
 
  9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly
listen to
  music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone
recommends
  it.
  --
 
  10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies
with the
  Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the
current music
  directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal
shekar from
  Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active
fan in the
  yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy your
songs.
  (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired
other MDs
  yet :o)
  --
 
  11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in
India who
  insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and cd
credits
  (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a great
gesture,
  but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
  --
 
  12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry about the
  music royalities issue ?
  --
 
  13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
  Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early
critics
  wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman.
But a few
  years after their release, these albums are suddenly considered master
  pieces in Indian music history. Do you think that this is the mind
setup
  of the critics or if something is wrong somewhere ?
  --
 
  14. It happpens only with your music that the more you listen to
it the
  more you like it, why?
  --
 
  15.
  a) A 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Chord
Boondon Se Baatein, Khaamosh Raat, Dholna3 of my all time favorite
Rahman songs.  



--- In arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com, Thulasi Ram karoke...@... wrote:

 s, thankshak is a great album and till date, it never got its
recognition it
 deserved. situations like this deeply affect the MD.
 
 On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Krishna Kanth Kristam 
 krishna.kris...@... wrote:
 
Vinod..superb topic..and superb questions..
 
  one question from me -
 
  - After the release of Thakshak audio, I remember reading an AR
interview
  in which he said- Had the Thakshak audio been a bigger success
than it were
  (in terms of reaching common people or audio sales etc..), the music
  compositions would have taken a different turn. have you ever
composed music
  in that flavour again? If so, which movie? (I guess En Swasa Katre
was also
  on the same lines..released in that year.)
 
  guys..write in..your questions as well..hopefully one day we will
get the
  answers..from AR himself..
 
  § Krishna.
 
 
 
  On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 3:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@...wrote:
 
 
  I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question
I wud
  ask. Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not
  exhaustive... some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls
excuse me
  if i thought of a question which was already answered :o)
 
  --
 
  1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the
success of
  Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working
together
  again ?
  --
 
  2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes
in their
  repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song
tunes with
  him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music
and tunes
  come spontaneously ?
  --
 
  3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different
systems
  (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we
had not
  heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina
Ishq Bina
  from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15
and 5:17. Do
  you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the
listners ?
  --
 
  4. What according to you is the  best music set-up to listen,
discover and
  enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
  --
 
  5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your
interviews on
  TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are
not happy
  with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those
directors
  ever come back to you again ?
  --
 
  6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
  Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work
on such a
  movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?
 
  --
 
  7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the
praise they
  deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie
of a one
  that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2
k 4, Gang
  Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
  overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be
repetitive, how do
  you repond to it.
  --
 
  8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any
pressure on
  other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar
to yours ?
  --
 
  9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly
listen to
  music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone
recommends
  it.
  --
 
  10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies
with the
  Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the
current music
  directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal
shekar from
  Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active
fan in the
  yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy
your songs.
  (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired
other MDs
  yet :o)
  --
 
  11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in
India
  who insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and
cd credits
  (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a
great gesture,
  but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
  --
 
  12. How successful have you been  in convincing the industry
about the
  music royalities issue ?
  --
 
  13. When the music of Lagaan, Jodha Akbar, Rang de Basanti, Zubeida,
  Thakshak, The legend of bhagat singh etc... was released, early
critics
  wrote them off with comments such as Not expected from Rahman.
But a few
  years after their release, 

Re: [ARR] If I were to Interview Rahman - Questions I would ask

2009-02-05 Thread Krishna Kanth Kristam
very true Chord..! Jaan meri jaane jaanaa..in Thakshak..the arrangements are
mind boggling..

On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 4:20 AM, Chord purev...@yahoo.com wrote:

   Boondon Se Baatein, Khaamosh Raat, Dholna3 of my all time favorite
 Rahman songs.

 --- In arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com arrahmanfans%40yahoogroups.com,
 Thulasi Ram karoke...@... wrote:
 
  s, thankshak is a great album and till date, it never got its
 recognition it
  deserved. situations like this deeply affect the MD.
 
  On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Krishna Kanth Kristam 
  krishna.kris...@... wrote:
 
   Vinod..superb topic..and superb questions..
  
   one question from me -
  
   - After the release of Thakshak audio, I remember reading an AR
 interview
   in which he said- Had the Thakshak audio been a bigger success
 than it were
   (in terms of reaching common people or audio sales etc..), the music
   compositions would have taken a different turn. have you ever
 composed music
   in that flavour again? If so, which movie? (I guess En Swasa Katre
 was also
   on the same lines..released in that year.)
  
   guys..write in..your questions as well..hopefully one day we will
 get the
   answers..from AR himself..
  
   § Krishna.
  
  
  
   On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 3:35 PM, vinod sagar dvsagar_2...@...wrote:

  
  
   I was just thinking if I were to interview Rahman, what question
 I wud
   ask. Here's a part of the questions I thought of.. they are not
   exhaustive... some more are to come.. hope you to add some... pls
 excuse me
   if i thought of a question which was already answered :o)
  
   --
  
   1. You and Mehboob made a great combination, proved with the
 success of
   Bombay and Vandemataram, why is that we do not see you working
 together
   again ?
   --
  
   2. Music Directors often say that they have n number of tunes
 in their
   repository (one Telugu MD I heard said that he had 10,000 song
 tunes with
   him). Is this the same with you as well. Or do you think music
 and tunes
   come spontaneously ?
   --
  
   3. Why is it that whenever we listen to your music in different
 systems
   (eg. Headphones, 5.1, Stereo etc), we discover new sounds that we
 had not
   heard before in that song. For example in the song Ishq Bina
 Ishq Bina
   from Taal you had mixed the sound of a CPU speaker between 5:15
 and 5:17. Do
   you mix them in your songs as a puzzle - to be solved by the
 listners ?
   --
  
   4. What according to you is the best music set-up to listen,
 discover and
   enjoy your songs completely, with all the special effects.
   --
  
   5. When I was a teenager back in the 90s I saw one of your
 interviews on
   TV. In that interview you had said that a lot of Directors are
 not happy
   with your music, but the music went on to become hits. Did those
 directors
   ever come back to you again ?
   --
  
   6. You had expressed your wish to do music for a film like
   Shankarabharanam. Do you think that you will ever get to work
 on such a
   movie in today's trend of commercial cinema?
  
   --
  
   7. We have seen many of your greatest tunes not getting the
 praise they
   deserve because either they were part of a non-commercial movie
 of a one
   that flopped (eg: Ada, Zubeida, Bose-TFH, Meenaxi, Tehzeeb, one 2
 k 4, Gang
   Master, Palnati Pourusham etc). But when you use any part of these
   overlooked songs in other movies, critics slam you to be
 repetitive, how do
   you repond to it.
   --
  
   8. Do you think your style of music has indirectly put any
 pressure on
   other music directors to keep-up with you and make music similar
 to yours ?
   --
  
   9. We all know that you are a very busy person, do you regularly
 listen to
   music of other music directors by your instincts or when someone
 recommends
   it.
   --
  
   10. You had once said that you can make enough songs for 5 movies
 with the
   Background music created in one movie. We see that some of the
 current music
   directors are copying from your back-ground music (Eg: vishal
 shekar from
   Swades to salaam nameste- my dil goes mmm.. caught by an active
 fan in the
   yahoo group). How do you feel when other music directors copy
 your songs.
   (We don't know how many of your background scores have inspired
 other MDs
   yet :o)
   --
  
   11. Shivamani once said that you were the first music director in
 India
   who insisted on printing the names of artists on the cassette and
 cd credits
   (eg keyboard player, sound engineer, flute etc). That was a
 great gesture,
   but how open was the music industry to this concept ?
   --
  
   12. How successful have you been in convincing the