A R Rahman Urgently Needs To Rejuvenate  His Creative Batteries

Of late, A R Rahman, considered the most revolutionary Indian music composer since Salil Chowdhury  and Ilayaraja ,has been dealing his own reputation of  a genius  blow after  blow.

I know. No one is supposed to say this. Rahman’s reputation is  so sacrosanct,any  hint of criticism is  given a communal  colour.  But to say Mohammed Rafi or Rahman are immunized against criticism by their  religion is  ridiculous. These  musicians are  way beyond such narrow assessments.

   Friends call him A.R.  And he took the  nation  through a musical revolution.  A score by Rahman is not only rare but also habitually pathbreaking. In 1992 he brought  a fresh sound in Roja. In 2001  the maverick composer scored resoundingly in  Lagaan.  2002 it  was Saathiya.  …and now he’s beyond count.

 To what do we  attribute the magical longevity of A.R Rahman?

“God has been kind,” sighed  Rahman in a past  interaction with  me.  “But this  reputation is a great responsibility. I try  to combine traditional and contemporary styles. But at times the  outcome isn’t in my hands. Everything depends on the project.There’re too many pressures on the entertainment industry in India. Music composers can’t function freely. I  try to do my own  thing.”

        “I guess I’ve become used to the brickbats,” the softspoken creator laughed.  “I’m praised for my innovations,” he continues after a pause. “But there can’t be too much of that quality.. Some praised me for breaking the antara-mukhda-antara format of a film song. Others criticized me for it. .”

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 Rahman’s  father too was a composer. He died before he could see success. On the day his first film as  composer was released he passed away.  Rahman was only 9, and  the only son.  He  started working at the age of 11. At 13  he started playing music and by 19  he was composing jingles.”

 In the same interaction Rahman bemoaned the slump in the music industry. “When  the whole business is on the blink  you can’t prosper.  On the other hand there’s a lot happening in the West, including  soundtrack offers from Hollywood.  It’s a tough decision to take. I can’t chuck everything here and leave. For me it was a  dream ten years back to study  music and work abroad. It’s a different high to see your work been appreciated  abroad. But more important is the work I’ve done at home in the last ten years because that’s what’s got me Western attention. I can’t leave my home behind. But at the same time  I must move on.”

     Rahman sounded like  Lataji when he said good songs don’t have an expiry date. “ If you have  durable melodies and good poetry people do respond to it,  even  if not immediately. When I see the so-called difficult songs being sung effortlessly by children on television’s talent-scouting contest Sa Re Ga Ma I realise  the most hummable songs are those that touch on life.  Composers take the easy way out. They make tunes that hit the charts for a month and then exit, therefore nothing memorable happens. Tragically if a movie doesn’t do well everything including the music falls by the wayside.”

Rahman admitted  he’s a slow worker. “I can only do one thing at a time. Even if a track is  transferred all other work stops. I guess different people like different things in my music.  And I’m  open  to more offers in Mumbai. For me music is music. It doesn’t belong to any region. My theme for Mani Ratnam’s  Bombay   was done in Tamil, then it went into Hindi and soon it was playing all over Europe and Australia. If a tune comes to me it takes wings. The problem is  with the shrinking film market in India. Because the budgets for films are shrinking, so are the funds to compose music. So my creative vision has to be tailored to suit the altered financial state. This is the first time I’m facing this situation in the last ten years, and I don’t relish it.”

Once when I had pointed out that Rahman’s slow pace of work bothered Bollywood filmmakers he had reacted with characteristic candour. “How can my working methods be  a problem to anyone ? It’s like saying, sitting and eating is a  problem, so let’s stand and eat.  Every  person has his own rhythm  of work. I believe Naushad Saab did just only 47 films  in his lifetime. And he never regretted  it.  And look at what he  did  to film music. I’ve my own way of working.  It’s a matter of priority.  When I’m doing something that  I don’t enjoy doing, when  I’m not  in  control  then   the quality  of  work  might suffer.  I’m at my best when I’m in control  of  my work.  Change of course is inevitable. That’s why I keep renovating and  innovating.”

    As the musical ground-breaker turns a year older we salute his splendid innovative spirit. This is the man who broke the conventional mould of the film song.He is no ordinary musician.This is why he needs to sit back and reassess his  recent output. It reeks  of laziness and worse, mediocrity. This  should be  cause for concern  for every Indian.

Subhash K . Jha

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