Originally posted by: Sudha_rn
hi doly, dayita..
thanks for the article !!
Have you listen the CD's Sudha?Which tracks are there?
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Originally posted by: Sudha_rn
hi doly, dayita..
thanks for the article !!
Have you listen the CD's Sudha?Which tracks are there?
Originally posted by: Sudha_rn
u mean the tracks mentioned in that URL... I'm unable to open that URL
Yeh and me too
Originally posted by: doly_455
the url opens after some time..........
hi dayita......i havent heard the songs......
Do you know which tracks are included?
'You will not find the usual Rajni opening song in Sivaji, where he will advise his fans on how to live ,'' says AR Rahman. Instead, the ace music director says he has come up with five rollicking numbers, which are out and out entertainers.
Rahman is awestruck with the picturisation of two of the songs in the film, of which he had a sneak preview with director Shankar.
''They are simply amazing,'' he confesses. After the stupendous success of Rang de Basanti, everyone's expectations of Rahman have gone up, have they not? Rahman gives his trademark laugh. ''The minute you say Rajni or Shankar, you can be sure everything will be spectacular. For my part, I paid special attention to the songs. I wanted them to be powerful,'' he says.
Anything else that we can share with our readers? ''I have not seen such a good-looking, handsome Rajni as this. He looks fabulous,'' says Rahman, whetting further everyone's appetite for the film, which is being produced by AVM.
http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems.asp?ID=IEE2006090501432 0&Page=E&Title=Startrek&Topic=0
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Allah Rakha Rahman | |
By SHALINI DORE He's been variously described as the John Williams of India and the Mozart of Madras; he has sold more than 100 million albums, comprising scores from more than 50 movies; and helmers Spike Lee and Andrew Niccol have used his music in the films "Inside Man" and "Lord of War," respectively. If Rahman isn't exactly a household name outside his native country, you wouldn't know it following his sold-out Hollywood Bowl concert in July. "Music goes beyond language," he said backstage afterward. "It sounds cliched, but it's true. Today when they heard music, they didn't know if it was Tamil or Hindi or anything, but they were grooving with it." It's that groove from his work with director Mani Ratnam -- whose collaborations have included "Roja," Rahman's film debut in 1992, as well as "Dil se" -- that piqued Andrew Lloyd Webber's interest, leading to the musical "Bombay Dreams" and a showcase for his work on the West End and Broadway. The 40-year-old Rahman, who started out playing the keyboards professionally as a boy in Chennai, India, says he enjoys straddling the worlds of movies and theater. "Being a film musician and always being inside a studio, I think it's good for me to move toward live performance," he says. But working in the West posed its own challenges. Although his wife and three children joined him in London during school holidays, Rahman found the environment and the deadlines daunting. "In India, there is no (rush) -- if you want to write a piece, you just call the musicians and you just sit and do your stuff and finish," he says. "My studio, orchestra are all there. Abroad, you're staying in a hotel room. It took me probably four years to get used to writing music there." His upcoming film work includes Shekhar Kapur's "The Golden Age," a sequel to 1998's "Elizabeth," along with a number of Bollywood features for which he has promised to compose the music. And though the musical version of "LOTR" received less than stellar reviews in Toronto, it is headed for a London run -- that is, after Rahman has made some musical changes. Date in print: Thurs., Aug. 31, 2006, Los Angeles Source : http://www.variety.com
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