Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Movies and TV 25 November, 2008

N.E.E.T./Interscope Records To Release Renowned Composer A.R. Rahman's Slumdog Millionaire Soundtrack Available In Stores December 23, 2008

Hot Songs Around The World

Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
994 entries in 25 charts
Pink Pony Club
Chappell Roan
177 entries in 11 charts
That's So True
Gracie Abrams
500 entries in 22 charts
APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
681 entries in 29 charts
Anxiety
Sleepy Hallow & Doechii
143 entries in 24 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
903 entries in 30 charts
Luther
Kendrick Lamar & SZA
173 entries in 14 charts
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
868 entries in 22 charts
Abracadabra
Lady Gaga
224 entries in 27 charts
Camino Por La Selva
Luli Pampin
186 entries in 3 charts
Messy
Lola Young
367 entries in 25 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
349 entries in 13 charts
Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me)
Train
246 entries in 18 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
1191 entries in 27 charts
NEW YORK, NY. (Top40 Charts/ Interscope Records) - In composing the music for acclaimed director Danny Boyle's intoxicating new film Slumdog Millionaire, now playing in select theaters, A.R. Rahman has conjured the sound of a city, fusing the frenetic scramble of daily life in Mumbai, India into beautiful fugues that ride upon the dust clouds kicked up by its everyday people.

From the movie's first frames - with children racing through alleyways, knocking over merchants and pottery, police kicking loose clay roof tiles, disrupted birds fluttering from gutters - we hear the sound of their commotion made manifest in "O ... Saya." It's a rumbling hybrid of Bollywood and hip-hop, a brand new collaboration between Rahman and M.I.A. It's the kind of cinematic moment where image and sound coexist. And that's only the first five minutes.

Filmed in the streets and slums of Mumbai, India, Boyle needed just the right music to complement the film's cinema verite urban realism. He turned to internationally renowned composer A.R. Rahman (a huge star in South Asia - selling more than 100 million albums worldwide and 200 million cassettes - Rahman is one of the world's top 25 all-time top selling recording artists.) The film's score is central to the propulsive modern grit that pervades the story, but is also a nod to classic Bollywood productions where the music is front and center. And loud. Says Rahman, "We wanted it edgy, upfront. Danny wanted it loud."

M.I.A.'s appreciation for Bollywood music led her to record much of last year's Kala inside A.R. Rahman's studio in India, although the two had never worked together until now. Referring to him in URB magazine as "the Indian Timbaland," M.I.A. obviously jumped at the chance to work on "O ... Saya" with the famed composer. Rahman says, "She's a real powerhouse. Somebody played me her CD and I thought, 'Who is this girl? She came here and knew all my work, had followed my work for ages. I said, 'Cut the crap, this "my idol" crap. You have to teach me.'"

M.I.A. crops up again, later in the film, with the remix of her worldwide hit "Paper Planes" seemingly made for Slumdog, as the lyrics pronounce, "Sometimes I feel like sitting on trains ... " while a light blue locomotive chugs and hurls its way through India, young boys perched up top in the sepia sunlight scoping out for a scrap of food.

Other songs on the soundtrack include "Gangsta Blues," featuring hip-hop artist BlaaZe, which flutters with the rhythms of a film projector, capturing a bit of the madness of crowds as they disperse in a thousand directions to escape the claustrophobia of back alleys. And nothing quite prepares you for the triumphant climax, the overarching ode to joy that is "Jai Ho," closing out the film in a rousing sing-a-long that's had film audiences burst into spontaneous applause. As Rahman told Variety, "The energy of the film takes you through a roller coaster, and that's one of the main inspirations for the whole music."

"The propulsive score, by Bollywood soundtrack auteur A.R. Rahman, is hip-hop fusion of a very up-to-date kind." - Kurt Loder, MTV.COM

"The film is a visual wonder, propelled by A.R. Rahman's hip-hopping score and Chris Dickens' kinetic editing." - Peter Travers, Rolling Stone

"Danny Boyle has upped the ante by hiring the great A.R. Rahman, the king of Bollywood music, to contribute one of his unmistakable propulsive scores." - Kenny Turan, Los Angeles Times

The full track listing for Slumdog Millionaire Music From The Motion Picture:
1. "O ... Saya" Performed by A R Rahman & M.I.A.
2. "Riots" by A R Rahman
3. "Mausam & Escape" by A R Rahman
4. "Paper Planes" Performed by M.I.A.
5. "Paper Planes" DFA REMIX Performed by M.I.A.
6. "Ringa Ringa" by A R Rahman featuring Alka Yagnik & Ila Arun
7. "Liquid Dance" by A R Rahman featuring Palakkad Sriram & Madhumitha
8. "Latika's Theme" by A R Rahman featuring Suzanne
9. "Aaj Ki Raat" Performed by Sonu Nigam, Mahalaxmi Lyer & Alisha Chinoi
10. "Millionaire" by A R Rahman featuring Madhumitha
11. "Gangsta Blues" by A R Rahman featuring BlaaZe & Tanvi Shah
12. "Dreams on Fire" by A R Rahman featuring Suzzanne
13. "Jai Ho" by A R Rahman featuring Sukhvinder Singh, Tanvi Shah & Mahalaxmi Iyer






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0045240 secs // 5 () queries in 0.0069944858551025 secs