Remembering Sridhar

Sridhar Hariharan Padmanabh or more popularly, H.Sridhar, to the people who
would look for his credit either on a CD cover or in the credits of an
Indian feature film, was a mathematics graduate whose love for music finally
drove him into an area, where he will be remembered as a pioneer of sorts.
Like Mangesh Desai and Daman Sood. My association with him was also through
the credits as well, especially of albums by the talented AR Rahman. Not
only the music but also the sound of Roja had made everyone sit up and take
notice. I recall hearing an interview of Sridhar's' where he mentions that
while he was mixing some stuff at AR's Panchattan Studio, upstairs AR was
making music for Roja. He would hear some interesting music wafting down,
whenever the door opened. Finally AR turns up and informs him that he had
got a movie score to do and would Sridhar be interested. They both wanted to
change the audio quality of Indian film music and were thinking along the
same lines. The rest, as they say, is history.

During the making of Chachi420, a Kamal Hasan adaption of the Tamil film.
Vishal Bhardwaj, the music director, was going to Chennai to record some
stuff and we had booked Media Artist Studio, where Sridhar doubled up as the
resident Chief Sound Engineer. I was looking forward to meeting this man in
flesh and blood. Due to some booking mess up we could not work there but we
shook hands and discovered that he spoke hindi as a true north Indian!
Slowly over a period of time we met over emails and phone calls through
another friend of mine Rohit Kulkarni, who knew Sivakumar, the other
engineer at Panchattan. That is how things work.

In 2003 I got a call from him to say that he was feeling burdened by the
upcoming AR Shows, the first in India. I told him to get another engineer.
Soon I was in Chennai, discussing the show. Never, for once, did I feel that
he seemed threatened by another engineers' presence? He shared openly and
took suggestions in his stride.

Together we pulled off one of the biggest show in India and of an Indian
artist abroad. We discovered similar taste in music, in the mixes we wanted
to do and even in the way tracks were named and color-coded! Soon I was
invited by AR to come help mix Rang De Basanti. Sridhar and I would take
turns mixing songs. If he stopped I would take over and visa versa. People
still ask me as to which song Sridhar had mixed and which were done by me.
And the beauty was that no one could tell.

Our telephonic conversations usually began with " Hi. I have a question for
you...." or if he was in a relaxed frame of mind, he would ask me "Are u
Santa Singh, Milka Singh or Relax-ing?" An engineer with a passion for music
and a photographic memory, he would remember intricate details of dates,
venues, list of musicians, song mixes, files and even chord progressions of
a song. One of his duties, apart from being an FOH engineer for AR's shows
was to check AR's keyboard rig by playing all the patches that AR would end
up playing on the various keyboards. A keen guitar player, many a times
people would find us roaming the music shops of LA, NY, Singapore or Hong
Kong. To our delight we would end up playing all kinds of guitars,
especially the ones we could not afford!

He was a stern taskmaster of people who failed to do their job. HE would
gladly teach the new engineers at the studios he worked in and then expect
them to come up with more relevant questions. His word was the final word
for AR. If Sridhar had said that he had heard the master and felt it was
fine,
AR, when time not permitting, would take his word for it. He would also
fight for the musical integrity of the piece that AR had composed, whether
it was a song or the background piece for the movie. That was the level of
trust and respect he commanded. He was the teacher and virtual guru of so
many audio students. His fan site at Orkut is testimony to that. A four time
National award winner and a man with only grey and white shirts, as I teased
him, he was a techie who was on top of gadgets and emerging technologies.

His musical and engineering skills saw him work with the likes of George
Harrison, John Neptune Kaizan, Pt. Ravi Shankar, Zakir Hussain, L.Shankar,
John McLaughlin, Louis Banks, Sivamani, ...
U.Srinivas and many more upcoming as well as established artists of India
and abroad. I miss the cigarette and coffee breaks we used to have. Time to
catch up on new stuff, plan things and bitch, as well! I miss his
re-assuring presence that I could turn to him, whenever I needed an answer
to a technical problem. Most of all I miss my fixed drop car-ride to my
hotel, late after work and then sitting in his car and chatting for another
hour or so. I miss you my friend! I know he is mixing his next great work
somewhere up there. May his soul rest amongst celestial harmony and peace.

*Kanwaarjit Singh Sawhney is a Sound Engineer/Designer who worked closely
with H Sridhar*

http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/opinion/remembering-sridhar#story

-- 
regards,
Vithur

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