He has proved that music may have languages but not boundaries. Here’s the 
reticent A.R.Rahman, who has left no award unturned in the last six months, in 
a midnight chat from Chennai that brims with rare candourFor two years in 
succession, you have clinched both the Best Music and Best Background Music 
Screen trophies. What do you have to say about this unique achievement?
I always feel that nothing can be planned, and sometimes things just fall into 
place! Just a few years ago, a lot of things seemed to be going off-track. Mani 
Ratnam’s Lajjo, Shyam Benegal’s Chamki and Krishna Shah’s Baiju and one or two 
other musicals were wonderful subjects that inspired me then - and none of them 
even took off! On the other hand, Jaane Tu...Ya Jaane Na that got me your Best 
Music trophy this year was almost shelved - till Aamir Khan took over its 
production. Last year, a lot of my films came all together - Jaane Tu..., 
Jodhaa Akbar, Yuvvraaj, the music of Ada, Ghajini and then Slumdog Millionaire.
So I have stopped expecting anything in life. If good things happen, it’s okay, 
but if they don’t, at least you are not frustrated! (Laughs).Do two background 
music trophies indicate that the background score is gaining more importance 
nowadays?
Background music is something that needs ten times more energy than making 
songs. You can do songs for four more films in the time you take for composing 
a background music score for just one movie! In the West, they are amazed that 
in Indian films the same person composes both the songs and the background 
score. But over here, whether it was Naushadsaab in Hindi films, Ilayaraja down 
here or most other composers, we have had this tradition almost as a culture.
Speaking for myself, I like to do both and it is about my credibility and 
sometimes when I get both right, it is a great high for me!Why do you use the 
word “sometimes”? Why are you so modest, almost Bachchan-esquely so, in your 
statements?
I have so much to learn and so much to achieve. And things can go wrong despite 
hard work so often. You can’t orchestrate results and the magic just happens 
sometimes. When it does, every aspect of the film and the music blends 
together, sometimes intentionally, sometimes unintentionally!“Unintentionally”!
Well, sometimes you are trying to do your part right and it may or may not 
happen. Or things can just go wrong elsewhere. Just one slip - like in an 
expression on the face of one actor, or in the way a director expresses 
himself, or even some technical point can prevent everything from falling in 
place. So when everything turns out perfect, as in my Tu hi re in Bombay or as 
in Pyar kiya to darna kya in Mughal-E-Azam, you feel blessed like an 
angel.Gulzarsaab tells us that you light a candle when your singer enters the 
recording cabin. Have you always done this?
I began to do it after my first visit to Khwaja Gharib Nawaz at Ajmer Sharif. 
The candles lit there have an effect I cannot describe. In my studio too, it is 
so inspirational and organic amidst all the electronic gadgets.He also tells us 
that over the decade since you first worked with him in Dil Se...., you have 
become much more familiar with the Hindi film mijaaz or temperament. Would you 
agree?
I have become more conscious of the language. Subhash (Ghai)ji and some others 
made me conscious about that when I began working with them. I always had this 
belief that music has no language and that a tune could be converted by 
extraordinary lyrics into a great song in any language. But Subhashji taught me 
otherwise. In Taal, Anand Bakshisaab wrote most of the lyrics before I made the 
tunes. The same was the case with The Legend Of Bhagat Singh and Sameerji. I 
realised that you cannot express certain words just anyhow.. The elongation of 
syllables or of words - the syntax, that is - is something that is peculiar to 
every language. So I am learning Urdu for the last 2-3 years and my Hindi 
vocabulary is also up by 40-50 per cent!And did that also apply to English?
English was easier for me, though when I took up Bombay Dreams, I did not know 
whether I could pull it off. But I managed, I think, though the first song, 
Journey home, was already made before I took up the project. And with the 
passage of years, as you get the time to evolve and be more of yourself, you 
begin to learn which song to hold back, even if you have liked it yourself, 
when you are offering a director your compositions.How upsetting is it when a 
film like Delhi - 6 does not work and your music does not get its due?
Initially I would find such a contingency very painful, but now I have learnt 
to be detached. I explained to myself that the next assignment is waiting and 
that you can’t spoil it by brooding on this but should aim to score there 
instead! With Rakeyshji, I was very happy with both Rang De Basanti and 
Delhi-6, but when a film does not work I think that all of us should admit that 
we have gone wrong somewhere. Music alone may not have ever helped a film 
become a hit, but it is definitely one of the major factors.
And yet, even success or failure of a film is relative: I know people who have 
watched Dil Se... 30-40 times just for one sequence and I know of people who 
loved Delhi-6. Like I said, it’s all about the right timing. Society’s state of 
mind and its concerns are all important. People do not like darkness in films 
now because I guess there is so much of it in real life! (Laughs)And coming to 
Slumdog Millionaire, a cliché that you will have to answer again for us, Did 
you expect the film and your songs to reach where they have?
No way! (Laughs). But yes, I loved the film when I watched it. All I was 
thinking about is that I wanted to work with a filmmaker as loved and respected 
as Danny Boyle. There was something strangely positive about the film - I 
remember feeling inexplicably relieved at the end of the movie.So you worked on 
the music after the film was complete.
Yes and after putting in the songs Danny re-cut the film.How did you get the 
idea of working with M.I.A.?
I find her an extraordinary artiste who makes political statements with her 
music. Some years back, she had come down to record her music at my studio 
because she needed some specific kind of percussion and had expressed a wish to 
work with me then because she liked the energy in my music. At that time, I was 
busy. But when this opportunity arose, I naturally took it.How do you react to 
Indians slamming Jai ho as nowhere compared to your best songs, even though its 
versions abroad have rocked charts too?
Well, I had to make something that was right for the film. It wasn’t a 
situation that demanded a Beethoven’s Symphony or a Ba-ba black sheep! 
Composing for films is not about showing the world what you can do. You have to 
get something right first and then try and excel in it. The reverse way would 
be disastrous.The other criticism is that you have reworked Choli ke peeche 
from Khal-Nayak as Ringa ringa. But despite the story you gave to a section of 
the press, it just had a similar flavour.
I was misquoted in that story - I never said that I was remixing the song. I 
only said that I was influenced by that song as the most important anthem of 
the 1990s, which is the era being shown when Ringa ringa is playing in the 
film. That was the reason why I chose not to compose a completely diverse song 
for this situation and also why I took the same singers - Alka Yagnik and Ila 
Arun. It was my ode to Laxmikant-Pyarelal, Subhash Ghai and the song’s 
team.Digressing a bit, don’t you feel that Subhashji’s Yuvvraaj was very 
underrated among your scores from last year?
I agree. Of late, Subhashji has been repeatedly unlucky - in the 1990s, I was 
to do a fantastic subject called Shikhar with him. In 2003, there was 
Motherland. Neither film took off. And now it is Yuvvraaj, on which we worked 
for almost two years and made some extraordinary songs, that went unnoticed for 
various reasons, while Slumdog..., on which I worked for two weeks, went so 
far. Life can be so unpredictable!And what were your first thoughts when you 
won first one trophy and then another - and we do not mean the words you spoke 
at the Oscar ceremony where you also have to keep in mind the audience?
I was extremely happy that my mother, my wife and my sister Ishrat, who is a 
singer, were all there with me. Such occasions are less about personal 
happiness and more about what precious people around you, especially your 
family and friends, feel. My first thought when the first award was announced 
was nothing - my mind went blank since I was due to sing in some 20 seconds! 
(Laughs) When the second award was declared, I just wanted to take the trophy, 
go into my room and sleep!! (Laughs again). The one week of anticipation, 
rehearsals and tensions all dissolved into that!And what do you feel - sorry 
again for the clichéd query - about being the first Indian to clinch two Oscars?
I can’t gauge anything now - maybe I will know after a couple of years. Let’s 
see what good things come out of it.And now we have so many fans in India 
depressed because you will be working here for a less here.
(Laughs) Honestly, after Bombay Dreams I had scope to do work outside but never 
used the opportunity. I was not ready then - not that I am ready now! 
(Chuckles) - but I came back here then and as it happened did some pretty 
ordinary work! But now I want to work there - for me, it’s more about 
developing relationships, collaborating, culturally connecting and doing the 
right organic stuff. I have an agent there and have taken up one major 
assignment that I can reveal only after a while because of a non-disclosure 
clause in my contract. All I can say is that it is a proper American film that 
will also demand music of the kind that I am at home with.And what are the 
Indian films in your bag?
I have Anthony D’Souza’s Blue, Mani Ratnam’s Ravan, Abbas Tyrewala’s 1 - 800 - 
Love and one more film. In Chennai. I have Robot and the animation film Sultan 
with Rajnikanth and a film with Gautham Menon.What changes do we get to see in 
your music after the Oscar win?
There will not be a change in my music but I have to be more careful - because 
I guess my music will be noticed by more people now. I guess we have to 
culturally accommodate as much as we can. There is definitely a sense of 
pressure but that’s good. Good music always comes with honesty and when made 
directly from the heart and by being conscious of melody.A lot of new composers 
have come in of late. Have any of them impressed you?
I like their spirit and also their desire to experiment. At the same time, 
however, I miss excellent melodies and life-changing lyrics in today’s music 
and I am looking forward to hearing some of those. Lyrics, for example, should 
be much more than about Soniye and Maahiya! The new music directors must also 
realise that it is a team that consolidates your work - you need a director who 
understands you. Ismail Darbar got one in Sanjay Leela Bhansali and 
Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy in Farhan Akhtar. A composer cannot be like an island. The 
director has a huge hand in decisions about both creativity and also dignity - 
dignity about what you should and should not do, about a mission for reviving 
something good and other 
http://www.screenindia.com/news/i-miss-those-lifechanging-lyrics/441299/



      

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