Tag Archive for 'Peter Gabriel'

What Rahman should have said

Posted by Namita Bhandare:

A flat joke about his ‘ma’ and a bland generalisation about love. Here’s the acceptance speech that I would have written for A.R. Rahman for his two-Oscar win for best song (Jai Ho) and best soundtrack (for Slumdog Millionaire).

Jai Ho to this wonderful audience and to audiences everywhere, including at home in India.

This award represents something awesome. For me, it is the recognition that Indian sounds are truly global. And just as the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan sahib took the sounds of his native Pakistan and mixed it to a world beat, working with the talented Peter Gabriel who is my co-nominee for his work in Wall-E, I too hope to be able to use my music to unite one world in one harmonious sound.

Slumdog Millionaire, as you know, is set in Mumbai which was the venue of a devastating terrorist strike on November 26. I don’t wish to trade charges or get into a blame game but I do wish to point out that Slumdog Millionaire is ultimately an affirmative film about hope and love and optimism. This is also the spirit of Mumbai which rose to the challenge of responding to the strikes. And this is also the spirit of human beings everywhere in the world: we will not be cowed down by terror.

[Insert para of people to be thanked, including mother, Danny Boyle etc]

Finally, I wish to thank Allah. I know many of you in this audience are victims of Fox News propaganda. I wish to assure you that the vast, vast majority of Muslims in the world are people like me – people who go about doing their jobs quietly and honestly; people who pray for a better world through music and through love.

Thank you.”

Small change

The South Asian art of miniature painting just got a new lease of life by a new generation of artists, reports Abid Shah in The National [via 3QD]

miniIn the early 1990s in Pakistan, qawalli was one of those entertainments that one watched on television just because there was only one channel. A repetitious musical form that involved a bunch of men sitting cross legged, clapping and singing Sufi songs, qawalli never gripped young Pakistanis or the Westward-looking upper middle class.

Then Peter Gabriel jammed with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. A beautiful voice in an unfashionable art, Nusrat was a heavyset, obscure qawalli singer until a round of introductions put him onstage with the British pop star and world music maven. Suddenly, Nusrat was big. Young Pakistani men in ties started attending his concerts. Then young Pakistani men in ties started dancing at his concerts.

And so, after the age of Nusrat, it became fashionable to listen to qawalli – a whole art form made hip by the touch of the West.

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