After Rahman’s win at the Golden Globe, fingers are crossed for the Indian sounds in line for the Grammy
Despite a huge reservoir of musical talent, international honours in the field haven’t exactly been our forte. Until the Golden Globe met AR Rahman last Sunday. Now, the focus is on the Grammy Awards — the biggest music awards in the world — which take place in February and where India has scored four nominations.
Apart from Debashish Bhattacharya’s Calcutta Chronicle and Lakshmi Shankar’s Dancing in the Light in the Best Traditional Music Album category, those in line for the gilded gramophone include the Bob Belden-produced Miles From India and John McLaughlin’s (picture) Floating Point under Blue Frog Records India, both in the Contemporary Jazz album category. “With Rahman’s win, all eyes will be on us,” says Louis Banks, co-producer, Miles from India. The Grammys are not alien to us though few Indian musicians have managed to secure the trophy in its 50-year history. Percussionist Bickram Ghosh, a four-time nominee, says, “An Indian album has the maximum chance of winning a Grammy when it’s recorded abroad. Even when Pandit Ravi Shankar and I won the award in 2002 for Full Circle, it was under the Angel Music label.”
He adds that though India has an age-old musical legacy, it’s only collaborative albums that work. The Grammy is given for albums released in America between October 1 and September 30 every year and, at most times, is directly proportional to the popularity of the artist in the US, feels Banks. “If it isn’t popular in the West, an album won’t get nominated. If not in the World Music category, there’s no other section where we stand in the Grammys,” says the jazz artist, adding, “Bob Belden is a seven-time Grammy nominee and three-time winner who knows the tricks of the trade.”
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