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ha-neul
07-25-2006, 01:29 PM
Biography for
A.R. Rahman

Birth name
A.S. Dileep Kumar
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Nickname
The Mozart of Madras
Isai Puyal
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Mini biography
Allah Rakha Rahman was born A.S. Dileep Kumar on January 6, 1966, in Madras (now Chennai), India, to a musically affluent family. Dileep started learning the piano at the age of 4, and at the age of 9, his father passed away. Since the pressure of supporting his family fell on him, he joined Ilayaraja's troupe as a keyboard player at the age of 11. He dropped out of school as a result of this and traveled all around the world with various orchestras.

He accompanied the great tabla maestro Zakir Hussain on a few world tours and also won a scholarship at the Trinity College of Music at Oxford University, where he studied Western classical music and obtained a degree in music. Due to some personal crisis, Dileep Kumar embraced Islam and came to be known as A.R. Rahman. In 1987, he moved to advertising, where he composed more than 300 jingles over 5 years. In 1989, he started a small studio called Panchathan Record Inn, which later developed into one of the most well-equipped and advanced sound recording studios in India.

At an advertising awards function, Rahman met one of India's most famous directors, Mani Ratnam. Rahman played him a few of his music samples. Mani loved them so much that he asked Rahman to compose the music for his next film, Roja (1992). The rest, as they say, is history. He went on to compose several great hits for Tamil-language films before composing the score and songs for his first Hindi-language film, Rangeela (1995). The enormous success of his first Hindi venture was followed by the chart-topping soundtrack albums of films such as Albeli Mumbai (1931) , Dil Se.. (1998), Taal (1999), Zubeidaa (2001), and Lagaan: Once Upon a Time in India (2001), which was nominated for best foreign-language film at the 2002 Academy Awards.

More recently, he worked with Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber and Shekhar Kapur (director of Elizabeth (1998)) on a musical called "Bombay Dreams." At 36 years old, A.R. Rahman has revolutionized Indian film music and one can only expect this musical genius to reach greater heights.

ha-neul
07-26-2006, 09:36 AM
one of his tamil song, with the tune..
the blocked one is the tune and the remaining the lyrics

புது வெள்ளை மழை இங்கு பொழிகின்றது
ச ரி ம க மக ம மரி ச ரி ரிப மக ம மரி
இந்த கொள்ளை நிலா உடல் நனைகின்றது
ச ரி ம க மக ம மரி ச ரி ரிப மக ம மரி
இங்கு சொல்லாத இடம் கூட குளீர்கின்றது
ச ரி ரிப ப பம பத த ப ம க க ம ம ரி
மனம் சூடான இடம் தேடி அலைகின்றது
ச ரி ரிப ப பம பத த ப ம க மக ம மரி
நதியே நீயானால் கடல் நானே
த நி ச நி சநி ப ம ம ப த ப
சிறு பறவை நீயானால் உன் வானம் நானே
த நி ச ரி ச நி சநி ப ம ம ப த நி ச சரி

jjcourtright
07-26-2006, 02:34 PM
Ok, that's enough. You had already won the "Most incomprehensible noob" award with your first post. Your second is just gratuitous.

ha-neul
07-28-2006, 02:21 PM
Among the few Indians who are taking Indian music to an international level is A R Rahman. On Sunday, Rahman performed at the Hollywood Bowl, one of the largest natural amphitheaters in the world, with a current seating capacity of just under 18,000. Generally, Indian artistes attract NRI audiences or people other from Asia countries, but this time Rahman pulled in many Americans too. In fact, it was the Americans who formed majority of the audiences for the show.

The show titled 'Bollywood Night with AR Rahman' had doses of Bollywood movie clips, with guest artistes and of course dances. The song which rocked the evening was 'Chaiyya Chaiyya' performed by Sukhwinder Singh. Other performers at the show were Hariharan, Sadhana Sargam and Madhushree.

Reportedly, people from Warner Bros., Fox, and Universal Studios were also present at the concert and were highly impressed. It is even said that they are thinking of adding a Bollywood touch to Oscars next year
http://www.oakparkjournal.com/stories2004/rahman-2004.jpg

phit_demon
07-28-2006, 02:42 PM
Pfft, he's no Trilok Gurtu (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilok_Gurtu). Now he plays the tabla like a god.