A.R.Rahman (Fan Club)-Part2 - Page 7

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dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#61

A.R.Rahman recorded the 1st song of Subhash Ghai's new film on 21st October for the occasion of the 21st anniversary of Mukta Arts Ltd


Mumbai, 24th October 2002: Following tradition like every year, this year too Mr. Subhash Ghai announced his new film, yet to be titled on the occasion of the 21st anniversary of Mukta Arts at a puja in Mumbai. Today, Mukta Arts has launched two films - one to be directed by Subhash Ghai and the other to be directed by Abbas Mastan, both of which are still untitled. Mr. Ghai's film stars Dilip Kumar and will have music by A.R Rahman, the first song for which was recorded on the 21st of Oct. The remaining star cast comprising three male stars and 2 heroines will be announced on 24th December. At the religious venue of Hare Rama Hare Krishna Temple in Juhu, Mumbai, Mr. and Mrs. Ghai performed puja for all six movies to be made in the coming year. Each movie will be launched separately on the 24th of every month starting 24th December 2002. Speaking on the occasion, Mr. Ghai said, "God has blessed us with challenging growth and new work. Now with a brilliant team of directors and writers we plan to announce their movies on different dates with special launch events. Though we have done the puja today, we would prefer to announce each project individually at the right time to give full identity to each creation of every director".

He further added on his film, "My film is a big budget multi-star cast project and I have just completed my script. I have yet to complete the final sketching of my characters in detail. This is the best script I have ever got, that much I can say today and it will have many surprises for the audience as well as for the trade and exhibitors."

source: www.rahmania.net
dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#62
Subhash Ghai flies down to Chennai to record the music of his Dilip Kumar Starrer with A.R Rahman!

After 'Taal' the hit combination of Ghai and the Mozart of Chennai A.R Rahman is back making music. Subhash Ghai took the first flight early morning on Wednesday to the whizkid's abode in Chennai to record songs for his movie. A.R Rahman so far has refused tempting offers for Bollywood's assignments owing to his busy schedule with Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber's Bombay Dreams but he made an exception for the showman. We are sure Rahman will create magic again with the Showman!

Source :www.rahmania.net

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#63

Rahman sells more than Madonna and Britney


02nd Aug 2002 11.20 IST
By ApunKaChoice Bureau


Latest estimates of UK-based paper 'The News of the World' puts music wizard A.R.Rahman among the highest selling musicians in the world.

Rahman is said to have sold a mind-boggling 200 million albums worldwide, a figure that surpasses the collective sales of albums by pop stars Madonna and Britney Spears.

According to the estimate Madonna's albums sold 130 million copies while Britney ranked low with 20 million copies. That puts Rahman's album sales 50 million more than album sales of Madonna and Britney collectively.

Yet, it is surprising that in spite of such whopping sales Rahman is not in Billboard top ten list. Reason? Explains Andrew Lloyd Webber (producer of hit play 'Bombay Dreams') that there is probably "no proper mechanism to log the sales of Rahman's albums in US and UK".

source: www.apunkachoice.com
dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#64
Rahman's Bombay Dreams is a musical sizzler

24th Mar 2002 17.27 IST By ApunKaChoice Bureau

Talented music composer A.R. Rahman has churned a number of catchy melodies for Andrew Lloyd Webber's West End musical play Bombay Dreams. The play, being directed by Steven Pimlott, tells the story of a poor boy who comes to Bombay to make it big in Bollywood. It will have fourteen numbers composed by Rahman. Out of these, five are familiar movie tracks like "Chhaiyya-Chhaiyya" and "Shakalaka Baby" while others are new tracks – including a wedding song and a tapori number with eunuchs – that Rahman has composed exclusively for the play. The idea for Bombay Dreams was born about three years ago when Shekhar Kapoor introduced Webber to Rahman's music. Webber was particularly captivated by Rahman's "Chhaiyya-Chhaiyya" number from Dil Se". He has labeled Rahman's music as the best he has heard since the Beatles. Presently Bollywood choreographer Farah Khan is working along with British dancer Anthony Van Laast to work out a fusion between contemporary western dance and the typical Bollywood steps for the play.

"Bombay Dreams" will open in India on June 19.

source: www.apunkachoice.com
dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#65
'Bombay Dreams' maestros

The English press hailed him variously, as the "Mozart of Madras" and "the other little Indian genius," (the "other" in this case obviously putting him in the same league as Sachin Tendulkar). And the main hoarding at the theatre, where his musical was presented, read: "Andrew Lloyd Webber presents AR Rahman's Bombay Dreams."

Having taken London by storm, the Indian sensation, AR Rahman is now back. While in Mumbai on a brief stopover, en route to Chennai, Rahman and his Bombay Dreams teammate, choreographer Farah Khan were almost run over by a flood of soundbyte-hungry local presscorps at Insomnia, at the Taj Mahal Hotel. With characteristic modesty, a trait he no doubt shares with Tendulkar, Rahman reacted as if he didn't understand what all the fuss was about.

Dressed casually in jeans and a loose-fitting dark shirt, Rahman seemed to make light of the sensation that Lord Webber's musical has become in the UK, well, but for the rare aside about its weak script and "cheesy" dialogue. Farah chipped in to say, "We're proud of Bombay Dreams, we wanted it to be everything the Mumbai film industry stands for and means."

Rahman told us he was yet to sign another international venture after Bombay Dreams. "I don't think I shall, at any rate not this year because I have a backlog of Hindi films to finish," he said. But Lord Webber, we're told, has requested that he collaborate with him on his next project as well.
The chat with the media over, they screened a 16-minute clipping from Bombay Dreams including scenes featuring heroine Priya Kalidas and Ayesha Dharker.

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#66
Rahman among top ten Asian pay earners in UK

PTI [ MONDAY, NOVEMBER 04, 2002 08:10:54 AM ]


LONDON: Indian music director and composer A R Rahman is among the top ten Asians who figure in this year's Sunday Times Pay List of the United Kingdom, with an annual income of two million pounds. Famous for his scores in south Indian and Bollywood movies, the 36-year-old Rahman hit the international circuit after Andrew Lloyd Webber chose him for his latest musical Bombay Dreams which has become a hit and money spinner. Rahman, who has scored for 60 films is now paid one million pounds per movie, has sold over 100 million albums. A graduate of Trinity College, Oxford, he qualifies for the Pay List because he has lived in London for most of the last two years, the newspaper said.

The top ten Asians in the list are Gurchait Chima (9.5 mn pounds), business; Gurnaik Chima (9.5 mn pounds), business; Naguib Kheraj (five mn pounds), finance; Manish Chande (4.11 mn pounds) business; Raj Kumar (four mn pounds) business; Rana Talwar (3.2 mn pounds), benefits; Tom Singh (2.87 mn pounds), business, Ranjit Boparan (2.76 mn pounds) business; Baljinder Boparan (2.5 mn pounds), business and A R Rahman (two mn pounds), music.

Source : Times of India

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#67
Rahman rocks the small screen in Airtel ad

FILMFARE.COM [ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 03, 2002 ]


After watching Adnan Sami pirouette on the small screen with his Dil Ki Naiya Doobe Doobe song for a Pepsi commericial, it's time for another musician to stir up the small screen.

Thankfully it's not another cola campaign. Ace music director A R Rahman has been signed on by Bharti Cellular for its new Airtel television campaign.

And it doesn't stop at sporting Rahman on-screen with an Airtel. It seems Rahman will be composing five exclusive symphonies downloadable as ring tones for all consumers of the Airtel service.

Now that sounds like a mind boggling idea that's totally out of the ordinary. Sure those topping the Airtel consumer list will be die-hard Rahman fans.

Well, in that case it will be most of our population, huh? Anyways guys, get ready to talk to Rahman's tunes!

Source : www.filmfare.com

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#68
Viva grooves to Rahman tune

TIMES NEWS NETWORK [ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2002 11:34:59 PM ]


After storming the Indipop charts with its debut album, girl band Viva is set to rule the film music scene. The five girls have just recorded a track for — hold your breath — A R Rahman! ''He is truly a musical genius,'' gushes Mahua Kamat, the redfrizzy-headed Viva. The track was recorded for choreographer Ahmed Khan's as yet untitled debut film as a director. Rahman prefers to work at night and this is exactly what he did for this track too. ''He recorded different bits of the song over two days, though, in total, it took just four hours to record. Yes, we worked late into the night,'' recalls Seema Ramchandani. Adds Pratichee Mohapatra, ''It is a very 'cheer-leader' sort of a number. A typical Viva song.''

Well, well that, of course, is music to Bollywood's ears! The girl band is swinging from one track to another!

Source: Times of India

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#69
Unforgettable Outing:
President Kalam and A R Rahman


NEW DELHI, Nov. 14

IT was a sight that would have warmed the cudgels of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru. Throwing security to the wind, President Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, stepped down from the podium and walked around the main hall of Vigyan Bhawan mingling freely with close to a 1,000 children and answering questions which were being thrown at him thick and fast.

The setting of the event could not have been more apt — the President mingling with children on the birthday of the person who children around the country refer to as Chacha Nehru.

The questions asked of him were of all kinds — a youngster sought guidance to become a music director, another wanted to know whether he could serve the country by joining the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), yet another asked the President his vision for the development of the country by the year 2020.

Not only did the President take the trouble of answering each query, but he also repeated each question so that the entire sea of children in the far corner of the huge hall could hear the words loud and clear.

The President sharing a moment with music director A.R. Rahman, who composed music to a poem written by Dr Kalam, which was rendered by school children at the function.

To the young man seeking guidance on becoming a music director, the President's advice was simple "Music director A.R. Rahman is also here, you should seek guidance from him. But remember, you need to work hard in whatever you decide to do".

The excitement of the occasion and the enthusiasm about an interaction with the first citizen got the better of the young ones. Throwing classroom decorum by the wayside, questions came from all corners at one go, this despite repeated requests from the podium and the teachers for orderly behaviour. In the bedlam neither the questions nor the answers could be heard clearly.

But on a special day like this one would expect kids to be kids and that is just what they were. Before the official function began, the children who had arrived from almost every nook and cranny of the country, were busy trying to take up vantage positions so that they could be seen live on television screens.

The star stuck child audience also went beserk at the sight of A.R. Rahman entering the hall. Children ran, autograph books in hand, to the 'star'. It was then the turn of the organisers to form a human shield around the music director very much in the same way that Prime Ministers and Presidents are protected.

Appeals from the children that this was unfair and that the elders should remember that it was "their day" fell on deaf ears. Yes, it was a special day for them — what with getting to see the President and A.R. Rahman at the same event. And for the close to 1,000 children it was going to be an outing that they were unlikely to forget in a hurry.

Source: The Hindu, November 2002

dayita thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#70
A R Rahman composes ''Ignited Minds''
of President Kalam


As a young citizen of India,
armed with technology, knowledge and love for my nation,
I realize, small aim is a crime.
I will work and sweat for a great vision,
the vision of transforming India into a developed nation,
powered by economic strength with value system.
I am one of the citizens of the billion,
only the vision will ignite the billion souls.
It has entered into me,
the ignited soul compared to any resource
is the most powerful resource
on the earth, above the earth and under the earth.
I will keep the lamp of knowledge burning
to achieve the vision - Developed India.
- President Abdul Kalam

Music director A.R. Rehman's composition of Dr Kalam's song 'Ignited Minds' sung by a group of school children won him a thundering applause by the audience and earned him compliments from none other than the President.

Addressing another gathering of school students on the opening day of the First Child Education Summit at Ashoka Hotel on Children's Day, Dr Kalam gave the children his mantra for success — curiosity, thinking, knowledge, hard work and perseverence.

Sharing his inspiring and thought-provoking philosophy about hard work and thinking, Dr Kalam said, "Hard work has not killed anyone, less work may have......Thinking is progress, non-thinking is destruction.''

The star stuck child audience also went beserk at the sight of A.R. Rahman entering the hall. Children ran, autograph books in hand, to the 'star'. It was then the turn of the organisers to form a human shield around the music director very much in the same way that Prime Ministers and Presidents are protected.

Appeals from the children that this was unfair and that the elders should remember that it was "their day" fell on deaf ears. Yes, it was a special day for them — what with getting to see the President and A.R. Rahman at the same event. And for the close to 1,000 children it was going to be an outing that they were unlikely to forget in a hurry.

Source: The Hindu, November 2002

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