His master’s voice
A.R. Rahman deserves all the awards he has been getting for Slumdog 
Millionaire. But he has
done better work before. Here are a few of his soundtracks that the Oscar jury 
should lend
their ears to first.

Roja (1992): The big breakthrough album that instantly created waves across the 
nation. But
what it did more importantly was having Mani Ratnam switch to Rahman from 
Illayaraja. The two
would go on to do some of the best film music produced in the country. From 
Chhoti si asha to
Roja jaaneman, the film was a bravura feat from a 25-year-old genius. No wonder 
Roja was
featured on Time magazine’s 10 best soundtracks of all time.

Song for the feet: Rukmani rukmani

Song for the soul: Yeh haseen vaadiyan

Thiruda Thiruda (1993): One of Rahman’s few Tamil soundtracks that got heard in 
Mumbai and the
rest of India, thanks to MTV, which couldn’t have enough of Thee thee and 
Chandralekha. The
other wonders were the buddy song Kannum kannum, the immensely chatty 
Veerapandi kottayile and,
of course, the brilliant Raasathi, where Rahman uses only voices and a choir in 
the background
to create the desired effect.

Song for the feet: Chandralekha

Song for the soul: Raasathi

Bombay (1995): The Rahman-Ratnam magic continued with this film, where Rahman 
recorded his
first of the many translated soundtracks, where the tunes remained the same and 
the Tamil
lyrics were converted into Hindi. From the intimate Kehna hi kya to the chaotic 
Kuchi kuchi
rakamma, Rahman showed his versatility yet again and by picking Remo for Hamma 
hamma, he
stressed again — after Baba Sehgal and Shweta Shetty in Rukmani rukmani — that 
he was not
afraid to experiment. The masterpiece of the album was arguably the Bombay 
theme.

Song for the feet: Hamma hamma

Song for the soul: Tu hi re

Dil Se (1998): Yet another Mani Ratnam film. Yet another gem of a soundtrack 
from Rahman. While
Chhaiyya chhaiyya initially overshadowed every other song in the soundtrack, 
one possibly
couldn’t keep songs like Jiya jale and Satrangi re under wraps for too long. 
With Jiya jale,
Rahman first showed his keenness to give Lata Mangeshkar a reason to sing 
again. Chhaiyya
chhaiyya, of course, also saw the advent of singer Sukhwinder Singh, who would 
become Rahman’s
constant collaborator. One listen and you don’t need to be a genius to figure 
out why Spike Lee
used the song in Inside Man.

Song for the feet: Chhaiyya chhaiyya

Song for the soul: Ae ajnabee

1947 Earth (1998): One of Rahman’s most underrated soundtracks, this one was 
period yet very
contemporary, slow yet very moving. While the kite-flying song Rut aa gayee re 
was the instant
hit, the quaint cycle song Dheemi dheemi grew with every hearing. The other 
gems in this Deepa
Mehta film — the harmonium-driven Banno rani and the smouldering paean of pain 
Raat ki dal dal.

Song for the feet: Rut aa gayee re

Song for the soul: Dheemi dheemi

Zubeidaa (2001): Shyam Benegal’s first film without composer Vanraj Bhatia had 
Rahman producing
one of his best works. Whether it was the chirpy gypsy song Main albeli or the 
pristine love
song Hai na or the moody Mehendi hai rachnewali or the liberating Dheeme 
dheeme, this was a
must-listen collection. But what took the cake and the entire confectionery was 
Lata
Mangeshkar’s So gaye hain with the grand symphony structure.

Song for the ear: Dheeme dheeme

Song for the soul: So gaye hain

Saathiya (2002): Shaad Ali’s remake of Mani Ratnam’s Alaipayuthey not only had 
the same shots
and the same cut points, it had the same soundtrack, it’s just that Gulzar’s 
lyrics took the
Hindi album to Level Next. While Sonu Nigam shone in the title song, Adnan Sami 
made his entry
into Rahman territory with the breezy Aye udi udi. The hidden gems? Chupke se 
and Naina
milaike.

Song for the ear: Oh humdum suniyo re

Song for the soul: Saathiya saathiya

Yuva (2004): If Thiruda Thiruda was a trailer of what Rahman could do to a 
youthful soundtrack,
Yuva was the full picture. While the two Vivek-Kareena songs Fanaa and Khuda 
hafiz used trance
and jazz to the hilt, the Abhishek-Rani songs Kabhi neem neem and Dol dol had a 
very rustic
lilt to them while the Ajay-Esha numbers Badal and Dhakka laga buka rode high 
on percussion.
The film didn’t deliver but the soundtrack was wow!

Song for the feet: Fanaa

Song for the soul: Kabhi neem neem

Swades (2004): Ashutosh Gowariker helped Rahman be heard in the West with 
Lagaan and the two
stuck together for more great work. Swades was another Rahman masterpiece 
starting with the
stirring title song, the spiritual Yun hi chala chal, the joyous Yeh tara woh 
tara, and the
bouncy Saawariya.

Song for the feet: Yeh tara woh tara

Song for the soul: Yeh jo des hai tera

Rang De Basanti (2006): With new partner in rhyme Prasoon Joshi, Rahman got 
super-chatty with
RDB. From Khalbali to Masti ki pathshala, it all sounded like a gang of guys 
having a lot of
fun. The title track used Punjabi robustness to the full while Mohit Chauhan’s 
Khoon chala left
us shaken and stirred. Plus the veteran Lata Mangeshkar’s Lukachupi and the 
newcomer Naresh
Iyer’s Rubaroo.

Song for the feet: Masti ki pathshala

Songs for the soul: Rubaroo, Lukachupi, Khoon chala

Jodhaa Akbar (2008): Could Rahman do a Naushad was the question? Well he 
perhaps went one step
further with a soundtrack which was both tour de force and yet very tender. 
From the
sword-hitting-sword beats of Azeemo shah shahenshah to the uplifting Khwaja 
mere khwaja to the
simmered In lamhon ki daman mein to the dulcet Jashn-e-baharaa, it was an 
incredible musical
trip.

Song for the ear: Jashn-e-baharaa

Song for the soul: Khwaja mere khwaja

Jaane Tu... Yaa Jaane Na (2008): After a slew of period films, Rahman sunk his 
teeth into the
Jaane Tu... score, peppering it with peppy songs like Pappu can’t dance saala, 
Nazrein milana
and, of course, Kabhi kabhi Aditi. The title track sung by Rahman himself again 
sees the
composer go big with jazz and how!

Song for the feet: Pappu can’t dance saala

Song for the soul: Kahin toh

The magic continues...

Well, the Academy and the rest of the awards honchos hopefully would tune in to 
this one for
their consideration next year, because Rahman’s latest OST — Rakeysh Mehra’s 
Delhi-6 is one of
his best till date and that’s counting the other soundtracks on these pages. 
From Masakkali to
Dil gira dafatan to Maula mere maula to Genda phool, this is clearly one of the 
crests of
Rahman’s career. And Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan enters Rahman’s world with Bhor 
bhaye...


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