A R Rahman was at his candid best while interacting with the
students at Berklee College of Music, where he was bestowed with a honorary doctorate in music for his contribution to the field over the years. Talking about his curiosity to leave everyday, Rahman confessed that he kept pushing himself throughout his career. "Learning should never stop...My mindset was never that I was going to be a permanent film composer. I always thought, 'Okay, this is the last one, and then I'll go.' I don't know where I would go, but that feeling of liberation—that I could leave—was great until 2007, when [film work] consumed me. And that's one of the reasons that I switched over in my prime to do [the musical theater production] Bombay Dreams with Andrew Lloyd Webber, which was a huge step for Indian music abroad," he said
students at Berklee College of Music, where he was bestowed with a honorary doctorate in music for his contribution to the field over the years. Talking about his curiosity to leave everyday, Rahman confessed that he kept pushing himself throughout his career. "Learning should never stop...My mindset was never that I was going to be a permanent film composer. I always thought, 'Okay, this is the last one, and then I'll go.' I don't know where I would go, but that feeling of liberation—that I could leave—was great until 2007, when [film work] consumed me. And that's one of the reasons that I switched over in my prime to do [the musical theater production] Bombay Dreams with Andrew Lloyd Webber, which was a huge step for Indian music abroad," he said
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