Sunday, September 20, 2009

Scoring the sounds of Bollywood



Brothers Salim and Sulaiman Merchant are award-winning composers of songs and background music for high-profile Bollywood films. Photo: Courtesy of Salim and Sulaiman Merchant

As young boys, Salim and Sulaiman Merchant enjoyed watching their father, Sadruddin, sing and perform in public.

A composer and 14-year veteran of the Telugu-language film industry in South India, Sadruddin Merchant moved to Mumbai in 1969 where he manufactured musical instruments. He also played the piano, saxophone, guitar and drums, recorded devotional albums, led the Darkhana Scouts orchestra and often performed during Jamati celebrations.

“He was fondly known as the Mohammed Rafi of the Ismaili community,” noted the brothers, referring to the famous Bollywood singer who recorded more than 4 500 Hindi film songs during his career. “People still remember him singing his heart out during the Khushiali dandia raas.”

Salim, now 35, and Sulaiman, 38, later decided to follow their father’s example and pursue a career in music. Their dad, who is no longer alive, encouraged them from the very beginning. “Seeing our interest in music, he helped us develop it into a career, giving us the choice to pursue what he had always dreamed for us.”

Both brothers were students at St Peter’s High School and KC College in Mumbai. But outside the classroom, Salim learnt piano through a correspondence course, while Sulaiman studied tabla with various mentors including Taufiq Qureshi, son of Ustad Allarakha and brother to tabla prodigy Ustad Zakir Hussain.

The pair started their career composing “jingles” — short pieces for television advertisements: “Selling a product in 30 seconds is an art in itself, and we probably did a few hundred of these commercials.” In the mid-1990s, they moved into pop music, producing albums for Voodoo Rapper, Style Bhai, Shweta Shetty, Jasmine Bharucha and other musicians.

Their big break came one day when they were working in the same studio building as Bollywood director Sanjay Gupta, who was editing his 1997 film Hameshaa next door. Gupta overheard their work and approached them. “He came up to us and said he wanted us to do a piece for his film…within the next few days we recorded the theme of Hameshaa,” the brothers recall.

Since then, Salim and Sulaiman have built a solid career in Bollywood, where they regularly compose songs and background music for high-profile films.

Together, the brothers say they have worked on approximately 65 movies, including Bhoot (2003), Ab Tak Chhappan (2004), Mujhse Shaadi Karogi (2004), Dhoom (2004), Neal ‘N’ Nikki (2005), Kaal (2005), Krrish (2006), Aaja Nachle (2007), Fashion (2008) and Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi (2008). Their work has earned them industry recognition and garnered numerous accolades including Filmfare, Zee Cine, Screen and IIFA awards.

Read the full article at: The Ismaili

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