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Indiatimes Movie - Interview
A. R Rahman on the Oscar trail!
GAUTAM BURAGOHAIN

Yahoo! Movies : Monday September 1, 7:20 PM


He's called the Mozart of Asia. In simple words, the 37-year-old is a phenomenon. India's most famous musician alive sells over 100 million albums worldwide - that's more than singing sensation Madonna and Britney Spears put together, placing him in the same place as Michael Jackson. Coincidently, Rahman has composed and performed with Jackson.He made his claim to fame at the tender age of 24, with `Roja', which bagged him the nation's most prestigious award – the National Award for Best Music; this he repeated five years later with `Minasaru Kanavu'. Awarded with the highest civilian honour of the Padma Shree by the president of India, he followed it up with Filmfare's Best Music statuette for `Lagaan'; a year later, he went global with `Bombay Dreams'. As we chatted, the news trickled in that his Chinese film, `Warriors Of Heaven And Earth' is going to the Oscars as China's official entry. Over to the maestro himself...

Congrats, we just heard that your Chinese film, `Warriors Of Heaven And Earth' is going for the Oscars?

Thanks, I just got the news some time back, as I was waiting for this interview in my room.`Warriors Of Heaven And Earth' will be China's official entry for this year's Oscars. It feels great. Let's hope that what `Lagaan' couldn't do, `Warriors Of Heaven And Earth' does.

Tell us something about the film?

As you are aware, it's a Chinese's film called `Warriors Of Heaven And Earth'. It's been produced by Columbia Pictures, the same company which produced the Oscar winning `Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon'. It's been directed by He Ping. The USP of the film is that it has Japanese actors, an American producer and an Indian composer. (Laughs). Truly international, one must say. The film traces the infamous silk route from China to Turkey and to India.

And the music?

The music is a mix of everything - right from Indian, Turkish and Chinese. It's mostly background score.

Did you go to China to record the music?

No, I recorded the music in Prague and Chennai. But I did travel to China. I have always been fasicinated by Chinese films.

You also have the famous Taiwanese singer, Jolin singing for you?

Yeah, there is one song in the Mandarin language, the official language of China, sung by Jolin,which I have recorded in my studio at Chennai.

How did you get hold of a Chinese film?

The director, He Ping had some of my composition like `Vandhe Mataram', `Lagaan' and the more recent `Bombay Dreams'and I'm told he liked it so much that that he made a temp-track and wanted to use it in the film. The head of Sony's classical unit was instrumental in fixing up a meeting with him. I was very apprehensive of meeting him, as the language was totally alien to me. But when he showed me the film, I was immediately drawn towards it. I saw this huge scope for music. And we decided to carry it forward from there.

What about other Hollywood offers?

I will be giving music for Shekhar Kapur's `Pani', if and when he decides to make it (He shows me a dummy copy of the film's poster.); then there are some other Hollywood offers - I will disclose it when it happens. I have just refused an offer from Miramax's film, as I found theme very dark.

Are the Hollywood producers willing to pay your market price?

Money is never the idea behind my decision to do these projects. Some pay, while some take it up by publishing my music,making it larger than life. I'm okay with it. Anyway, when I'm trying to break into the international scene, I have to compromise on many things, and money is one of them. For instance, way back, I signed my first film `Roja', with only Rs24,000, while I used to make Rs2,000 in a day by composing jingles.

The general perception is that Indian producers can no longer afford you?

(Laughs) No, I'm still doing Indian projects. I'm doing Subhash Ghai's next, Mani Rathnam's `Yuva', Ketan Mehta's `1857 –The Uprising', Khalid Mohamed's `Tahzeeb', Krisha Shah's crossover film and couple of other films. But, yes, I have drastically cut down on assignments to keep the quality going. I'm at a stage where I can't take up any project just for the heck of doing it.

How do you react to the accusation that Rahman has become monotonous?

That's why I have cut down on my assignments. I guess it happened around 1995-`96, when I was giving music to every other film. Some of the work I did was mediocre, but I myself am to be blamed for that.

Is it true that you have this typical habit of working at night?

Yeah, I work best at night. No phone calls, no meetings. Night is calm. I get my creative flow at night. My whole group is used to working at night only. And the best thing is that I can catch up with my morning prayer before retiring to bed at 7 am.

You seem to be a very religious man...

I'm a pious Muslim. I pray three times a day. But I'm not a fanatic.

Your personal life has always been under wraps...

It's because nobody has asked me anything about it.

Ok, we are asking it now...!

(Laughs) What do you want to know? Mine is a typical Muslim family. I have a wife, a son and two daughters, but no girl friends (laughs again).