All Ye Bathroom Singers…
Here's calling all bathroom singers and wannabes who can't stomach being verbally slayed by a Simon Cowell or fielding an acidic comment from some Indian clone on a reality show. A R Rahman, who will be founder andprincipal of the conservatory, is going to give you a chance to showcase your musical talent in his twice-a-week preparatory class. You could be 16 or 60, but if you have what it takes, then show up at KM`, which will initially operate from a property beside Rahman's Kodambakkam studio.
Eventually, the campus will be in a leafy suburb of Chennai ("where there will be no noise from horns") and will include classrooms, a concert hall, recording studio and residential facilities for faculty and students who are out of towners. Among the advisors are music experts including RandelGiles (curriculum advisor), Czechoslovak musician Vadislav (who has made India his home for the last 12 years),Pushkar (singer, composer, pianist), Shreenivas Krishnan (associated with a music college in the US and also the founder of the Global Rhythms ensemble) and WendiParr (voice trainer). The MD is the first Apple Certified trainer from Audio Media Education, T Selvakumar.
The serious class is for the really talented, who will be picked after an audition, and will go into a foundation or diploma course depending on their musical level."Knowledge of music technology is a must in today's musical world, whether in Indian music or in Western music," says Rahman. Negotiations are on with the University of Madras to consider the possibility of the KM Conservatory getting a Deemed University status offering Bachelor's Degrees in Music and Music Technology. While the fees have not yet been decided, those who cannot afford but are musically talented will get a scholarship from the A RRahman Foundation.
So, what's Rahman's answer to whether young people will invest time and money to learn music when they get their 15 minutes of fame on reality shows? He says simply: "Where there is a will, there is a way."
On The Fast Track
Brangelina have it. So does Richard Gere. Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck picked up hisOscar (for The Lives of Others) driving it. The "it" is BMW, which made its market entry into India last year and has now raised the capacity of its manufacturing plant near Chennai to 3,000 cars from 1,700 cars after investing half a million euros.
Peter Kronschnabl, President, BMW India, says there is no typical buyer of the BMW in India unlike the rest of the world. Software czars, real estate developers, those with old money and the nouveau riche all buy the car that comes with a price tag of between Rs 25lakhs to 1.25 crore depending on which one of the nine models you choose. "Butthe pity", as one of the car showroom's test drivers points out, "isthat in India most BMWs in India are not owner-driven but driver-driven." Andthen again, as cynics point out, many in the construction and other businessesmight be able to afford it, but wouldn't buy a fancy car lest it comes under theIT department's radar. Still, BMW managed to sell 1,387 cars in 2007, exceeding its target of1000. And the target for 2008 is 2,000 and 80 per cent of these will come from the Chennai facility.
Vive la Chennai
Even as Anjuna in Goa, which could boast of an expat community that included a script writer in Hollywood, a musician of international repute, and even sometimes the likes of journalist and critic Philip Knightley, has now blotted its copybook with the ScarlettKeeling murder and rape, Chennai ranks up there with foreigners. A survey conducted by ECA Internationals Location Ranking Survey has ranked Chennai at 138, the highest among Indian cities. The annual survey compares living standards in different cities in the world on the basis of climate, air quality, health services, housing and utilities, social network, infrastructure, personal safety and political tensions.Benaguluru (153), Mumbai (156), New Delhi (169) and Kolkata (193) lag behind Chennai. Among Asian cities, Chennai gets 26th place. Here too other Indian cities likeBengaluru (29), Mumbai (30), Delhi (36) and Kolkata (40) lag behind. No wonder this metropolis is an expat-magnet.