Yamaha changed all that. Although Rehman is a whiz on the keyboard, others have been able to create stuff just as good because, says Ilayaraja's other son, Yuvan Shankar Raja, it's just a matter of who handles the Korg X3 work station better. Yuvan, 18, was working on the keyboard for a trailer for Aravindan when the director asked him to do the entire film. Fortysomething Deva, an also-ran in the age of Raja, is a changed man since the synth bug bit him in Aasai. Says Ghanshyam Hemdev of Pyramid Cassettes, which zoomed from nowhere to number one in five years, post-Rehman: "Computers have given the edge to the new guys." What has also helped is the rise of a crop of movie directors, choreographers, art directors and editors who visualise music better. In addition, says singer 'Malgudi' Shubha, car audio's come of age. Youngsters with low attention spans but large purchasing powers want attention-catching, fast-paced music. And they are getting it.