Glamour is not shedding clothes: Vidya Balan | Link Me (New)

Posted by admin | Bollywood, Celebrity Corner, Interviews | Tuesday 25 December 2007 12:20 am

vidya2_big.jpgVidya Balan is one of the busiest actors in Bollywood. She takes a breather for a heart-to-heart with Subhash K Jha…

Life looks good to you?
Yeah. I’ve just completed Raj Kumar Santoshi’s Halla Bol. He’s a wonderful director, so much to learn. Ummmmm….And what an experience Guru was.

IIt’s every actor’s dream to work with Mani. I’m blessed to have worked with him so early in my career. No matter how busy I’m, I take time off every day to say thanks to God for making so many dreams come true.

The more he gives the more I wish to thank him. You and John Abraham seemed like a strange combination in Salaam-e-Ishq?
That’s what makes it so exciting. Nikhil’s entire team was within the same age group as me. I had a blast on the shoot. It was like being at a party. Touchwood, so far I’ve been comfortable with every unit I’ve worked with.

I’d rather remain non-controversial and focus on my work. From Pradeep Sarkar to Mani Rathnam… I’ve learnt so much ! It may be a cliché to say so, but I’m growing every day.

And such a wide spectrum of actors, from Mr Bachchan to Madhavan.
Ha, I can’t call Mr Bachchan my co-star. That’s a little too much. As for Madhavan, I was supposed to have worked with him in a couple of Tamil films some time ago. Those didn’t work out.

Now we finally did Guru. My equation with Maddy is completely coloured by my affection for his son Vedaant. He’s an adorable child with big blue eyes.

 One keeps hearing of you being in this and that project?
I think I’ve been very honest with every producer who has approached me. What I need to do is learn more tact while saying I don’t have dates. I’ve had a very big producer telling me I had no business to turn down his assignment because I’m a newcomer. But as an individual it’s my right to say no rather than be evasive.

vidya_john_big.jpgOne keeps seeing you doing glamorous photo shoots. Trying to move away from the Parineeta image?
Yes, I’ve been doing different photo-shoots. They want the other side of me. I’m only doing what I ‘m comfortable with. There was one picture where the outfit was much too revealing for me.

I went around hiding the magazine from my father. I don’t think glamour is about taking off clothes. If it was Madhubala, Rekha or Sridevi wouldn’t have been glamorous. Rekha in all her finery and jewellery is so glamorous!

And Aishwarya Rai… she’s the epitome of grace. We hardly had scenes together in Guru. But on many occasions I felt she was my sister. I truly admire the way she conducts herself. Even her sneeze is written about. That can’t beeasy.

 vidya_balan_big.jpgAnd Sanjay Dutt?
(bursts into laughter) I heard about my affair with him. Wonder where that came from! I think we were linked because he’s the only hero with whom I’ve done three films. I don’t think anyone took it seriously.

Whether it’s John, Saif or Sanju, I’m not in touch with them outside the sets. People take my link-ups with Dada (Parineeta director Pradeep Sarkar) more seriously. I’ve come to terms with the rumours about us. I guess I’ll just have to live with that.

Who’re your friends in the industry?
None except Raima Sen. We click because we’re like chalk and cheese. I pamper her to no end. We don’t meet that often these days. She’s one madcap. I restrain her quite often.

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David Beckham | Link Me (New)

Posted by admin | Celebrity Corner, Hollywood, Interviews | Friday 21 December 2007 12:55 pm

david-beckham.jpg“Beckham” redirects here. For other uses, see Beckham (disambiguation).
David Beckham
 
Personal information
Full name David Robert Joseph Beckham
Date of birth 2 May 1975 (1975-05-02) (age 32)
Place of birth    Leytonstone, London, England
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Playing position Right winger
Club information
Current club Los Angeles Galaxy
Number 23
Youth clubs
1991–1993 Manchester United
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1993–2003
1995
2003-2007
2007- Manchester United
Preston North End (loan)
Real Madrid
Los Angeles Galaxy 265 (62)
005 0(2)
116 (13)
005 0(0)   
National team2
1994–1996
1996– England U21
England 009 0(0)
099 (17)
1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 22:12, 16 November 2007 (UTC).
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of 21 November 2007.
* Appearances (Goals)
 
David Robert Joseph Beckham, OBE (born 2 May 1975) is an English professional football (soccer) midfielder who plays for and captains Major League Soccer’s Los Angeles Galaxy.[2] He is also currently a member of the England national team.

He has twice been runner-up for FIFA World Player of the Year, and as recently as 2004 was the world’s highest-paid footballer.[3] He was Google’s most searched of all sports topics in both 2003 and 2004.[4] Such global recognition has made him an elite advertising brand and a top fashion icon.[5][6] Beckham was captain of England from 15 November 2000 to 2 July 2006. He made 58 appearances as captain, and ended his tenure in that role after the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals. He continued to make contributions for the England national team in 2007 competitions.[7]

Beckham’s career began when he signed a professional contract with Manchester United, making his first-team debut in 1992 aged 17. During his time there, United won the Premiership title six times, the FA Cup twice, and the UEFA Champions League in 1999. He left Manchester United to sign for Real Madrid in 2003, where he remained for four seasons. In his final season, Real clinched the La Liga title (Beckham’s only major trophy with the club) in the final game of the season. In January 2007, it was announced that Beckham would leave Real Madrid and sign a five-year contract with the Los Angeles Galaxy.[8] He played his final match with Real on 17 June, after which the team was awarded the 2006–07 La Liga championship.

Beckham’s new contract with the Galaxy, effective 1 July 2007, gave him the highest salary of any MLS player in history. He debuted for the team on 21 July in a friendly versus Chelsea FC at the Home Depot Center[9], and on 15 August, he had his first start with the team, scoring his first goal and first assist in the 2007 SuperLiga semi-final. His first league start then came on 18 August, where he recorded two more assists against the New York Red Bulls in front of a record crowd at Giants Stadium.[10]

Contents [hide]
1 Childhood and early career
2 Manchester United (1993-2003)
3 Real Madrid (2003-2007)
4 LA Galaxy (2007-present)
4.1 Joining LA Galaxy
4.2 First season at LA Galaxy
5 NFL (2007-present)
6 International career (1996-present)
7 Discipline
8 Sporting titles and awards
8.1 Individual
8.2 Club
8.2.1 Manchester United (1993–2003)
8.2.2 Real Madrid (2003–2007)
8.2.3 LA Galaxy (2007–present)
9 Special recognition beyond sport
10 Personal life
10.1 Affair claims
11 Fame beyond football
12 Charitable work
13 Appearances in films
14 Records
15 Tattoos
16 See also
17 References
17.1 Books
17.2 Internet
18 External links
18.1 Articles
 
Childhood and early career
Beckham was born at Whipps Cross Hospital in Leytonstone, London, England; the son of David Edward Alan “Ted” Beckham (b. Edmonton, London, July-September 1948), a kitchen fitter and Manchester United fan, and wife (m. London Borough of Hackney, 1969) Sandra Georgina West (b. 1949) [11], a hairdresser. He regularly played football in Ridgeway Park, Chingford as a child. He attended Chase Lane Primary School and Chingford Foundation School as a child. His mother’s family is Jewish,[12] and Beckham has referred to himself as “half Jewish”[13] and spoken of the influence the religion has had on him, although he is not known to practice Judaism or any other faith. In his book Both Feet on the Ground, he stated that growing up he always attended church with his parents and sisters.

His parents were fanatical Manchester United supporters who would frequently travel to Old Trafford from London to attend Manchester United’s home matches. David inherited his parents’ love of Manchester United and his main sporting passion was football. He attended one of Bobby Charlton’s football schools in Manchester and won the chance to take part in a training session at FC Barcelona, as part of a talent competition. As a child he played for a local youth team called the Ridgeway Rovers - coached by his father, Stuart Underwood and Steve Kirby.

He was a Manchester United mascot for a match against West Ham United in 1986. Young Beckham had trials with his local club Leyton Orient, Norwich City and attended Tottenham Hotspur’s, which was the first club he played for, school of excellence. During a two-year period in which he played for Brimsdown Rovers’ youth team, he was named Under-15 Player of the Year in 1990.[14] He also attended Bradenton Preparatory Academy, but signed schoolboy forms at Manchester United on his fourteenth birthday, and subsequently signed a Youth Training Scheme contract on 8 July 1991.
Manchester United (1993-2003)
He was part of a group of young players at the club who guided the club to win the FA Youth Cup in May 1992, with Beckham scoring in the second leg[15] of the final against Crystal Palace. He made his first appearance for United’s first-team that year, as a substitute in a League Cup match against Brighton & Hove Albion, and signed his first professional contract shortly afterwards. United reached the final of the Youth Cup again the following year, with Beckham playing in their defeat by Leeds United, and he won another medal in 1994 when the club’s reserve team won their league.

He went to Preston North End on loan in the 1994–95 season to get some first team experience, then made his first Premier League appearance for Manchester United on 2 April 1995, in a goalless draw against Leeds United.

United manager Alex Ferguson had a great deal of confidence in the club’s young players. When three of his first-team players left the club at the end of the 1994–95 season, his decision to let youth team players replace them instead of buying players from other clubs, drew a great deal of criticism. The criticism increased when United started the season with a 3–1 defeat at Aston Villa,[16] with Beckham scoring United’s only goal of the game; however, United won their next five matches and the young players performed well. Beckham became a regular player on the team and helped them to win the Premiership and FA Cup double that season, scoring the winner in the semi-final against Chelsea and also taking the corner that Éric Cantona scored from in the FA Cup Final. Despite playing regularly for Manchester United, Beckham did not break into the England squad before Euro 96.[17]

At the beginning of the 96/97 season David Beckham was given the number 10 shirt that was last worn by Mark Hughes. In August 1996, Beckham became something of a household name when he scored a spectacular goal in a match against Wimbledon. With United leading 2–0, Beckham noticed that Wimbledon’s goalkeeper Neil Sullivan was standing a long way out of his goal, and hit a shot from the halfway line that floated over the goalkeeper and into the net.[18]

With Eric Cantona retiring at the end of the 96/97 season, this left the coveted number 7 shirt free, and with Teddy Sheringham arriving from Tottenham Hotspur, Beckham left his number 10 shirt for Sheringham and picked up the number 7 jersey. Some fans had felt the number 7 shirt should be retired after Cantona had himself retired. United started the 1997–98 season well, but their performance deteriorated and the club finished the season in second place, behind Arsenal.[19]

In the 1998–99 season, he was part of the United team that won the treble — Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League, a unique feat in English football. There had been speculation that the criticism that he had received after being sent off in the World Cup would lead to him leaving England, but he decided to stay at Manchester United.

To ensure they would win the league championship, United needed to win their final league match of the season, at home to Tottenham Hotspur, but Tottenham took an early lead in the match. Beckham scored the equaliser and United went on to win the match and the league.

Beckham played centre-midfield in United’s FA Cup final win over Newcastle United and for the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final against Bayern Munich, since United’s first string centre-midfielders were suspended for the match. United were losing the match 1-0 at the end of normal time, but won the trophy by scoring two goals in injury time. Both of the goals came from corners taken by Beckham. Those kicks, coupled with great performances over the rest of the season, led to him finishing runner up to Rivaldo for 1999’s European Footballer of the Year and FIFA World Player of the Year awards.
Beckham in a match against Bristol Rovers F.C.Despite Beckham’s achievements in the 1998–99 season, he was still unpopular among some opposition fans and journalists, and he was criticised after being sent off for a deliberate foul in Manchester United’s World Club Championship match against Necaxa. It was suggested in the press that his wife was a bad influence on him, and that it might be in United’s interests to sell him,[20] but his manager publicly backed him and he stayed at the club.

The relationship between Ferguson and Beckham began to deteriorate, possibly as a result of Beckham’s fame and commitments away from football. In 2000, Beckham was given permission to miss training to look after his son Brooklyn, who had gastroenteritis, but Ferguson was furious when Victoria Beckham was photographed at a London Fashion Week event on the same night, claiming that Beckham would have been able to train if Victoria had looked after Brooklyn that day. He responded by fining Beckham the maximum amount that was permitted (two weeks’ wages – then £50,000) and dropping him for a crucial match against United’s rivals Leeds United. He later criticised Beckham for this in his autobiography, claiming he hadn’t been “fair to his team mates”.[21] Beckham had a good season for his club, though, and helped United to win the Premier League by a record margin.

Following an injury early in the 2002–03 season, Beckham was unable to regain his place on the Manchester United team, with Ole Gunnar Solskjær having replaced him on the right side of midfield. His relationship with his manager deteriorated further on 15 February 2003 when, in the changing room following a defeat to Arsenal, Sir Alex Ferguson kicked a football boot that struck Beckham over the eye, causing a cut that required stitches. The incident led to a great deal of transfer speculation involving Beckham, with bookmakers offering odds on whether he or Ferguson would be first to leave the club.[22] Although the team had started the season badly, their results improved greatly from December onwards and they won the league. He was still a first-choice player for England, however, and he was awarded an OBE for services to football on 13 June.[23]

On 10 April 2002, Beckham was injured during a Champions League match against Deportivo La Coruña, breaking the second metatarsal bone in his left foot. There was speculation in the British media that the injury might have been caused deliberately, as the player who had injured Beckham was Argentinean Aldo Duscher, and England and Argentina were due to meet in that year’s World Cup.[24] The injury prevented Beckham from playing for United for the rest of the season, but he signed a three-year contract in May, following months of negotiations with the club, mostly concerning extra payments for his image rights. The income from his new contract, and his many endorsement deals, made him the highest-paid player in the world at the time.[25]

During his 11-year stint at United, Beckham made 266 appearances for them and scored 61 goals. He won 6 Premiership titles, 2 FA Cup’s, 1 UEFA Champions League, 1 Intercontinental Cup and 1 FA Youth Cup with his time at United.
Real Madrid (2003-2007)
 
Beckham (right) and Zinedine Zidane at Real MadridManchester United had been keen to sell Beckham to Barcelona[26] but instead he signed a four-year contract with Real Madrid, worth a potential €35 million.[27] The transfer was completed on 1 July 2003 and made him the third Englishman to play for the club after Laurie Cunningham and Steve McManaman. Although Beckham had worn the number seven shirt for Manchester United and England, he was unable to wear it at Madrid as Raúl had the right to wear it written into his contract. He decided to wear number 23 instead, citing his admiration of basketball player Michael Jordan, who also wore the number 23 shirt, as the reason behind his decision.[28]

Real Madrid finished the season in fourth place, and were knocked out of the UEFA Champions League at the quarter-final stage. But, Beckham immediately became a favourite with the Real Madrid supporters, scoring five times in his first 16 matches (including scoring less than 3 minutes into his La Liga debut), but the team, whose club president expected them to win either the Spanish league or the Champions League each season, was not performing well.

In July 2004, while Beckham was in pre-season training in Spain, an intruder scaled a wall at the Beckhams’ home while carrying a can of petrol. Victoria and their children were in the house at the time, but security guards apprehended the man before he reached the house.[29] Beckham made more headlines on 9 October 2004 when he admitted intentionally fouling Ben Thatcher in an England match against Wales in order to get himself booked. Beckham was due to receive a one-match suspension for his next caution, and had picked up an injury, which he knew would keep him out of England’s next match, so he deliberately fouled Thatcher in order to serve his suspension in a match that he would have had to miss anyway. The Football Association asked Beckham for an explanation of his actions and he admitted that he had “made a mistake” and apologised.[30]

Real Madrid finished second to Barcelona (with a 12 point gap) in the La Liga and only reaching the last sixteen in the Champions League after losing to Arsenal by one goal. Although there is the notable fact that Beckham led La Liga in assists for the season.
Warming up.He was sent off shortly afterwards, this time in a league match for Real Madrid against Valencia CF. Having received a yellow card, he appeared to sarcastically applaud the referee and was given a second yellow card, causing an automatic dismissal, although the suspension was cancelled on appeal two days later. He was sent off for the third time that season on 3 December 2005 in a league match against Getafe.

During the season, Beckham established football academies in Los Angeles and east London and he was named a judge for the 2006 British Book Awards.[31]

Real Madrid won their first Spanish La Liga title in 3 years because of their superior head-to-head record against Barcelona, giving Beckham his first title since he joined Real Madrid. Initially out of favour with manager Fabio Capello, Beckham started only a few games at the beginning of the season, as Jose Antonio Reyes was normally preferred on the right wing. In the first nine matches Beckham started, Real lost seven.
On 10 January 2007, after prolonged contract negotiations, Real Madrid’s sporting director Predrag Mijatović announced that Beckham would not remain at Real Madrid after the end of the season. However, he later claimed that he was mistranslated and that he actually said that Beckham’s contract had not been renewed yet.[32]

On 11 January 2007 Beckham announced that he had signed a five-year deal to play for the Los Angeles Galaxy beginning 1 July 2007. On 13 January 2007 Fabio Capello said that Beckham had played his last game for Real Madrid, although he would continue to train with the team.[33] Capello backtracked on that statement and Beckham rejoined the team for their match against Real Sociedad on 10 February 2007 – he scored and Real Madrid won.[34] In his final UEFA Champions League appearance, Real Madrid were knocked out of the competition (by the away goals rule) on 7 March 2007. Beckham had made a total of 103 appearances in the Champions League, the third highest number of any player at the time.

On 17 June 2007, the last day of the La Liga season, Beckham started in his final match for the club, a 3-1 win over Mallorca, which saw them clinch the title from Barcelona. Although he limped off the field and was replaced, his sub made two goals and the team won the season’s La Liga title, their first since Beckham had signed with them. Although both finished level on points, Madrid took the title because of their superior head-to-head record, capping a remarkable six-month turnaround for Beckham.

A month after the conclusion of Beckham’s Real career, Forbes magazine reported that he had been the party primarily responsible for the team’s huge increase in merchandise sales, a total reported to top $600 million US during Beckham’s four years at the club.[35]
LA Galaxy (2007-present)

Joining LA Galaxy
It was confirmed on 11 January 2007 that David Beckham would be leaving Real Madrid to join MLS team Los Angeles Galaxy. Beckham said, “After considering several options to stay in Madrid or join other major British and European teams, I have decided to join LA Galaxy.”[8]

On 12 January, Beckham’s official press conference was held in conjunction with the 2007 MLS SuperDraft.[36] Beckham told reporters “I’m coming there not to be a superstar. I’m coming there to be part of the team, to work hard and to hopefully win things. With me, it’s about football. I’m coming there to make a difference. I’m coming there to play football… I’m not saying me [sic] coming over to the States is going to make soccer the biggest sport in America. That would be difficult to achieve. Baseball, basketball, American football, they’ve been around. But I wouldn’t be doing this if I didn’t think I could make a difference.”[37]
First season at LA Galaxy
 
Here, Beckham signs autographs in WellingtonBeckham’s contract with Los Angeles Galaxy took effect on 1 July, and on 13 July, was officially unveiled as a Galaxy player at the Home Depot Center. 5000 invited season-ticket holders and international media attended. Beckham chose to wear number 23, explaining it was because NBA legend Michael Jordan also wore 23. It was announced that Galaxy jersey sales had already reached a record figure of over 250,000 prior to this formal introduction.[38]

On 21 July, Beckham made his Galaxy début at the Home Depot Center, coming on in the 78th minute in a 1-0 loss to Chelsea in a match during the World Series of Football tournament.[39] Two weeks later, Beckham made his league début with the Galaxy on 9 August versus D.C. United. He came on as a substitute in the second half in the 1-0 loss.[40]
Beckham (centre) scores his first goal for LA GalaxyBeckham returned to the pitch the following week, again facing D.C. United, in the SuperLiga semi-final match on 15 August. During this game he had many firsts with the Galaxy; including his first start, first yellow card and first game as team captain.[41] He scored his first goal for the team, from a free kick, and also made his first assist, for Landon Donovan in the second half. These two Galaxy goals gave the team a 2-0 victory, and a place in the North American SuperLiga final versus CF Pachuca on 29 August.

His first start in a league game came on 18 August, against the New York Red Bulls in front of 66,237 spectators at a packed Giants Stadium.[42] Within the first nine minutes of the game, the Galaxy scored two goals from set pieces, with Beckham assisting Carlos Pavón for both.[43] Beckham made the two assists in a 5-4 loss, a match that saw the stadium’s highest attendance ever for a regular season MLS game.[10]

During the SuperLiga final against Pachuca on 29 August, Beckham injured his right knee in the 30th minute. An MRI scan revealed that Beckham had sprained his medial collateral ligament and would be out for six weeks. The news came as a massive blow to the struggling Galaxy, England, and Beckham, who missed several key matches for his club and country. On 3 October, Beckham returned to training, and on 18 October returned to play in the final home match of the season. He came on in the second half against Red Bull New York, and ended in a 1-1 draw[44](which was enough to give Galaxy a chance for the playoffs).[45] Galaxy were eliminated from the playoffs on 21 October, in the final MLS match of the season, a 1-0 loss to the Chicago Fire. Beckham played as a substitute in that match, bringing his season-totals with the Galaxy to; eight matches played (5 league games), one goal scored (Superliga semifinal), and three total assists.
NFL (2007-present)
On 26 June, his first major U.S. ad campaign since finishing with Real Madrid made its debut via the web. “Futbol Meets Football” pairs him with the NFL’s Reggie Bush in a 13-part video series [46], with additional television, radio, and online promotion by Adidas.[47] [48] [49]

On November 18 The Observer newspaper and the BBC News reported that “Negotiations are well underway between David Beckham’s management and the San Francisco 49ers of the NFL, for Beckham to join the 49ers after Euro 2008 as a reserve kicker.” [50] [51] [52]
International career (1996-present)
Beckham made his first appearance for the England national football team on 1 September 1996, in a World Cup qualifying match against Moldova.[53] He became an automatic first-choice player at United during the 1996–97 season, helping them to retain the Premier League championship, and was voted PFA Young Player of the Year by his peers.[54]

Beckham had played in all of England’s qualifying matches for the 1998 FIFA World Cup and was part of the England squad at the World Cup finals in France,[55] but the team’s manager Glenn Hoddle publicly accused him of not concentrating on the tournament,[56] and he did not start in either of England’s first two matches. He was picked for their third match against Colombia and scored from a long-range free kick in a 2–0 victory, which was his first goal for England.

In the second round (last 16) of that competition, he received a red card in England’s match against Argentina.[57] Beckham, after having been fouled by Diego Simeone, kicked Simeone, striking him on the calf. Simeone later admitted to trying to get Beckham sent off by over-reacting to the kick and then, along with other members of his team, urging the referee to send Beckham off.[58] The match finished in a draw and England were eliminated in a penalty shootout. Many supporters and journalists blamed him for England’s elimination and he became the target of criticism and abuse, including the hanging of an effigy outside a London pub, and the Daily Mirror printing a dartboard with a picture of him centred on the bullseye. Beckham also received death threats after the World Cup. [59]

The abuse that Beckham was receiving from English supporters peaked during England’s 3–2 defeat by Portugal in Euro 2000, a match where Beckham set up two goals, when a group of England supporters taunted him throughout the match.[60] Beckham responded with a one-fingered gesture and, while the gesture attracted some criticism, many of the newspapers that had previously encouraged his vilification asked their readers to stop abusing him.[61]

On 15 November 2000, following Kevin Keegan’s resignation as England manager in October, Beckham was promoted to team captain by the caretaker manager Peter Taylor, and then kept the role under new manager Sven-Göran Eriksson. He helped England to qualify for the 2002 FIFA World Cup Finals, with their performances including an impressive 5–1 victory over Germany in Munich. The final step in Beckham’s conversion from villain to hero happened in England’s 2–2 draw against Greece on 6 October 2001. England needed to win or draw the match in order to qualify outright for the World Cup, but were losing 2–1 with little time remaining. The rest of the England team were playing relatively poorly, and it was Beckham’s inspirational performance that lifted his team mates. When Teddy Sheringham was fouled some eight yards outside the Greek penalty area, England were awarded a free-kick and Beckham ensured England’s qualification with a curling strike of the kind that had become his trademark. Shortly afterwards, he was voted the BBC Sports Personality of the Year for 2001. He once again finished runner-up, to Luís Figo of Portugal, for the FIFA World Player of the Year award.

He was partially fit by the time of the 2002 FIFA World Cup and played in the first match against Sweden. Beckham scored the winning goal of the match against Argentina with a penalty, causing Argentina to fail to qualify for the knockout stage. England were knocked out of the tournament in the quarter-finals by eventual winners Brazil. The following month, at the opening ceremony of the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, Beckham escorted Kirsty Howard as she presented the Jubilee Baton to the Queen.

Beckham played in all of England’s matches at Euro 2004, but the tournament was a disappointment for him. He had a penalty saved in England’s 2-1 defeat to France and missed another in a penalty shootout in the quarter final against Portugal. England lost the shootout and went out of the competition.

Beckham became a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador in January 2005 and was involved in promoting London’s successful bid for the 2012 Olympic Games.[62] In October 2005, Beckham’s sending off against Austria made him the first ever England captain to be sent off and the first (and only) player to be sent off twice while playing for England. He captained England for the 50th time in a friendly international against Argentina the following month.

In England’s opening game against Paraguay on 10 June 2006 Beckham’s free kick led to an own-goal by Carlos Gamarra, and England won 1-0. In England’s next match, played against Trinidad and Tobago on 15 June 2006, Beckham’s cross in the 83rd minute led to Peter Crouch’s goal, which put England into the lead 1-0. Beckham gave another assist to Steven Gerrard. In the end they won 2-0. He was named Man-of-the-Match by tournament sponsor Budweiser for this game.

During England’s second round match against Ecuador, Beckham scored from a free kick in the 59th minute, becoming the first ever English player to score in three World Cups,[63] and giving England a 1-0 victory and a place in the quarter-finals. He was sick before the game and vomited several times as a result of dehydration and illness after he scored the winning goal.

In the quarter-final against Portugal, Beckham was substituted following an injury shortly after half time and the England team went on to lose the match on penalties (3-1), the score having been 0-0 after extra time. After his substitution, Beckham was visibly shaken and emotional for not being able to play, being in tears at one point.

A day after England were knocked out of the World Cup, an emotional Beckham made a statement in a news conference saying that he had stepped down as England captain,[64] saying, “It has been an honour and privilege to captain my country but, having been captain for 58 of my 95 [65] games, I feel the time is right to pass on the armband as we enter a new era under Steve McClaren”. (Beckham had actually won 94 caps up to that point.) He was succeeded by Chelsea captain John Terry.[66]

Having stepped down as captain after the World Cup, Beckham was dropped completely from the England national team selected by new coach Steve McClaren on 11 August 2006. McClaren claimed that he was “looking to go in a different direction” with the team, and that Beckham “wasn’t included within that”. McClaren said Beckham could be recalled in future. Shaun Wright-Phillips, Kieran Richardson and the World Cup alternative to Beckham, Aaron Lennon, were all included, although McClaren eventually opted to employ Steven Gerrard in that role.
Beckham takes the free kick against Brazil that John Terry scored from.On 26 May 2007, Steve McClaren announced that Beckham would be recalled to the England squad for the first time since stepping down as their captain. Beckham started against Brazil in England’s first match at the new Wembley Stadium and put in a positive performance. In the second half he set up England’s goal converted by captain John Terry. It looked as though England would claim victory over Brazil, but newcomer Diego equalised in the dying seconds. In England’s next match, a Euro 2008 qualifier against Estonia, Beckham sent two trademark assists for Michael Owen and Peter Crouch, helping England to prevail 3-0.

Beckham had assisted in three of England’s four total goals in those two games,[67] and he stated his desire to continue to play for England after his move to the MLS.

On 22 August 2007, Beckham played in a friendly for England against Germany, becoming the first ever to play for England while with a non-European club team.[68] On 21 November 2007, Beckham earned his 99th cap against Croatia, setting up a goal for Peter Crouch to tie the game at 2-2. Following the 2-3 loss, England failed to qualify for the Euro 2008 Finals. Despite this, Beckham said that he has no plans to retire from international football and wants to continue playing for the national team.[69]
Discipline
Former manager Sir Alex Ferguson said that he “practiced with a discipline to achieve an accuracy that other players wouldn’t care about.”[70] He maintained his training routine at Real Madrid and even when his relationship with management was strained in early 2007, Ramon Calderon and Fabio Capello praised Beckham for maintaining his professionalism and commitment to the club.[71][72]

Beckham was the first England player ever to collect two red cards and the first England captain to be sent off.[73] Beckham’s most notorious red card was during the 1998 FIFA World Cup: after Argentina’s Diego Simeone had fouled him, Beckham lashed out with his leg and the Argentine fell. England went on to lose the game on penalties.

For Real Madrid he amassed 41 yellow cards and 4 red cards.[74]

Beckham has also been described as a “gentleman” when referring to his demeanour on the pitch. During his time as England captain, Beckham helped to keep Wayne Rooney’s temper in check on several occasions.[75]
Sporting titles and awards

Individual
PFA Young Player of the Year: 1997
Named in 1998 FIFA World Cup All-star team
FIFA World Player Of The Year Award finalist: 1999, 2001 (runner-up both years)
UEFA Club Player of the Year Winner: 1999
UEFA Club Player of the Year Finalist: 2001
BBC Sports Personality of the Year: 2001
Named in Pelé’s FIFA 100 list of the greatest living players.[76]

Club

Manchester United (1993–2003)
Premier League - Champion (6): 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2002–03
Premier League - Runner Up: 1994–95, 1997–98
FA Cup Winner (2): 1996, 1999
FA Cup Runner Up: 1995
UEFA Champions League Winner: 1998–99
Intercontinental Cup: 1999
UEFA Super Cup Runner Up: 1999
Community Shield Winner (4): 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997
Community Shield Runner Up: 1998, 2000, 2001
FA Youth Cup Winner: 1992

Real Madrid (2003–2007)
Primera División Champion (1): 2006–2007
Supercopa de España (1): 2003

LA Galaxy (2007–present)
SuperLiga Finalist: 2007

Special recognition beyond sport
Named Officer in the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II in 2003
Named United Nation’s Children’s Fund (UNICEF) “Goodwill Ambassador” (2005–present)
Voted “Britain’s Greatest Ambassador” at the Greatest Britons 2007 awards[77]
Named as one of Time magazine’s “Time 100 Heroes & Icons”[78]
Listed by Forbes as number 15 on their 2007 list of most influential celebrities, “The Celebrity 100″[79]
Listed by Arena as number 1 on their 2007 list of the 40 most influential men under the age of 40 in the UK[80]

Personal life
In 1997, Beckham started dating Victoria Adams, after she attended a Manchester United match. She was famously known as “Posh Spice” of the pop music group Spice Girls, one of the world’s top pop groups at the time, and his team was also enjoying a great run of success. Therefore, their relationship instantly attracted a great deal of media attention. The couple were dubbed “Posh and Becks” by the media. He proposed to Victoria on 24 January 1998 in a restaurant in Cheshunt, England.

He married Adams at Luttrellstown Castle, Ireland on 4 July 1999, and her name changed to Victoria Beckham. The wedding attracted tremendous media coverage. Beckham’s teammate Gary Neville was the best man, and the couple’s son Brooklyn, then four months old, was the ring bearer. The media were kept away from the ceremony, as the Beckhams had an exclusive deal with OK! Magazine, but newspapers were still able to obtain photographs showing them sitting on golden thrones.[81] 437 staff were employed for the wedding reception, which was estimated to have cost £500,000.[82]

In 1999, the Beckhams purchased their most famous home, unofficially dubbed Beckingham Palace, near London. It is estimated to be worth $15 million dollars. David and Victoria have three sons: Brooklyn Joseph Beckham (born March 4, 1999 in London, England), Romeo James Beckham (born September 1, 2002 in London, England), and Cruz David Beckham (born February 20, 2005 in Madrid, Spain - contrary to popular opinion, Cruz is not named for family friend Tom Cruise, but is Spanish for “cross”). Both Brooklyn and Romeo’s godfather is Elton John and godmother is Elizabeth Hurley.[83] They have stated that they would like to have more children, especially a daughter.[84]

In April 2007, the family purchased their new Italian villa in Beverly Hills, California, to coincide with Beckham’s transfer to the LA Galaxy in July. The mansion, priced at $22 million, is near the homes of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, and talk-show host Jay Leno, in an exclusive gated community in the hills overlooking the city.
Affair claims
In April 2004, the British tabloid News of the World carried claims by his former personal assistant Rebecca Loos that he and Loos had had an extramarital affair. A week later, the Malaysian-born Australian model Sarah Marbeck claimed that she had slept with Beckham on two occasions. Beckham dismissed both accusations as “ludicrous”.[85]
Fame beyond football
Beckham’s fame extends beyond the pitch; in much of the world his name is “as instantly recognizable as that of multinational companies like Coca-Cola and IBM.”[86] Beckham’s relationship and marriage to Victoria, who has been famous in her own right as part of the musical group Spice Girls, contributed to David’s celebrity beyond football.

Beckham became known as a fashion plate, and together with Victoria, the couple became lucrative spokespeople sought after by clothing designers, health and fitness specialists, fashion magazines, perfume and cosmetics manufacturers, hair stylists, exercise promoters, and spa and recreation companies. One recent example is a new line of aftershave and fragrances called David Beckham Instinct.[87]

In 2002 Beckham was hailed as the ultimate ‘metrosexual’ by the man who invented the term [2][3] and has been described as such by scores of other articles since.

In 2007, the Beckhams were reportedly paid $13.7 million to launch this fragrance line in the US. In the world of fashion, David has already appeared on the covers of countless magazines. In 2007, U.S. covers have included the men’s magazine Details, and with his wife for the August 2007 issue of W.[88]

According to Google, “David Beckham” was searched for more than any other sports topic on their site in 2003 and 2004.[89]

Upon their arrival in Los Angeles on 12 July 2007, the night before Beckham’s formal introduction, Los Angeles International Airport was packed with paparazzi and news reporters.[90] On the next night, Victoria appeared on NBC’s The Tonight Show with Jay Leno to talk about the their move to L.A., and presented Leno with a number 23 Galaxy jersey with his own name on the back. Victoria also talked about her NBC TV show “Victoria Beckham: Coming To America”[91]

On 22 July, a huge private welcoming party was held for the couple at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. A-List celebrities attending included Steven Spielberg, Jim Carrey, George Clooney, Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Oprah Winfrey.[92]
Charitable work
Beckham has supported UNICEF since his days at Manchester United and in January 2005 the England Football Captain became a Goodwill Ambassador with a special focus on UNICEF’s Sports for Development program.
On 17 January 2007, Rebecca Johnstone, a 19-year-old cancer patient in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada received a surprise phone call from Beckham. After the conversation, he sent her a Real Madrid Jersey with his signature on it. Rebecca passed away on 29 January 2007.[93]
Beckham is currently a spokesman for Malaria No More, a New York-based non-profit launched in 2006. Malaria No More’s mission is to end deaths caused by malaria in Africa. Beckham appears in a 2007 Public Service Announcement advertising the need for inexpensive bed nets. The TV spot currently airs in the U.S. on FOX Networks including Fox Soccer Channel, and can also be seen on YouTube.[94]
Since he has joined MLS, he has been a very public advocate in the U.S. for related charities such as MLS W.O.R.K.S. On 17 August 2007, he conducted a youth clinic in New York City’s Harlem, along with other current and former MLS players. This was in advance of his first New York City area match the following day against the Red Bulls. That team’s Jozy Altidore and Juan Pablo Ángel also were with Beckham, teaching skills to disadvantaged youth to benefit FC Harlem Lions.[95]

Appearances in films
Bend It Like Beckham

Beckham never personally appeared in the 2002 film Bend It Like Beckham except in archive footage. He and his wife wanted to make cameo appearances but scheduling proved difficult, so the director used lookalikes instead.[96]

The Goal! Trilogy

“Beckham” makes a cameo appearance with Zidane and Raùl, in the 2005 film Goal!: The Dream Begins. Lookalike Andy Harmer, who played Beckham in Bend It…, also appears here in one party scene as Becks.[97] Beckham himself appears in the sequel Goal! 2: Living the Dream…[98] in a larger role, when the film’s lead character gets transferred to Real Madrid. This time the story centers around the Real Madrid team, and besides Beckham, other real life Real Madrid players also appear on and off the pitch, alongside the fictional characters. Beckham also will appear in Goal! 3, scheduled for release in 2008.[99]

Asterix at the Olympic Games (Astérix aux jeux olympiques)

In his first feature film role playing someone other than himself, Beckham has a small part (again alongside former Real teammate Zidane) in this live-action French-language take on the comic, with a release scheduled to coincide with the 2008 Bejing Summer Olympic Games.[100]

Despite moving to Los Angeles, Beckham has expressed no personal interest in pursuit of acting roles, saying he is too “stiff”.[101]
Records
Beckham captained England 58 times during his tenure as England captain,[102] one of the most in England’s history. With his free kick goal against Ecuador in the second round of the 2006 World Cup, Beckham gained membership into two of football’s most exclusive clubs: he became the only English player — and the 21st player regardless of nationality — to score in three world cups. Real Madrid team-mate Raùl also achieved this feat a few days earlier.[103] It also made him only the fifth player in World Cup history to score twice from direct free kicks; the other four were Pelé, Rivelino, Teófilo Cubillas and Bernard Genghini (Beckham had previously scored this way against Colombia in the first round of the 1998 World Cup). All three goals were against South American teams (Colombia, Argentina and Ecuador) and from set pieces (the two aforementioned free kicks and a penalty against Argentina).

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Tom Cruise:Biography | Link Me (New)

Posted by admin | Celebrity Corner, Hollywood, Interviews | Friday 21 December 2007 12:49 pm

Producer, Actor

Born:July 3, 1962 in Syracuse, NYBiography

 An actor whose name has become synonymous with all-American testosterone-driven entertainment, Tom Cruise spent the 1980s as one of Hollywood’s brightest-shining golden boys. With black hair, blue eyes, and unabashed cockiness, Cruise rode high on such hits as Top Gun and Rain Man. Although his popularity dimmed slightly in the early ’90s, he was able to bounce back with a string of hits that re-established him as both an action hero and, in the case of Jerry Maguire and Magnolia, a talented actor.
Born Thomas Cruise Mapother IV on July 3, 1962, in Syracuse, NY, Cruise led a peripatetic existence as a child, moving from town to town with his rootless family. A high-school wrestler, Cruise went into acting after being sidelined by a knee injury. This new activity served a dual purpose: performing satiated Cruise’s need for attention, while the memorization aspect of acting helped him come to grips with his dyslexia.

Moving to New York in 1980, Cruise held down odd jobs until getting his first movie break in Endless Love (1981). His first big hit was Risky Business (1982), in which he entered movie-trivia infamy with the scene wherein he celebrates his parents’ absence by dancing around the living room in his underwear. The Hollywood press corps began touting Cruise as one of the “Brat Pack,” a group of twentysomething actors who seemed on the verge of taking over the movie industry in the early ’80s. But Cruise chose not to play the sort of teen-angst roles that the other Brat Packers specialized in — a wise decision, in that he has sustained his stardom while many of his contemporaries have fallen by the wayside or retreated into direct-to-video cheapies.

Top Gun (1985) established Cruise as an action star, but again he refused to be pigeonholed, and followed up Top Gun with a solid characterization of a fledgling pool shark in The Color of Money (1986), the film that earned co-star Paul Newman an Academy Award. In 1988, Cruise took on one of his most challenging assignments, as the brother of an autistic savant played by Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. “Old” Hollywood chose to give all the credit for that film’s success to Hoffman, but a closer look at Rain Man reveals that Cruise is the true central character in the film, the one who “grows” in humanity and maturity while Hoffman’s character, though brilliantly portrayed, remains the same.

In 1989, Cruise was finally given an opportunity to carry a major dramatic film without an older established star in tow. As paraplegic Vietnam vet Ron Kovic in Born on the Fourth of July (1989), Cruise delivered perhaps his most outstanding performance. Cruise’s bankability faltered a bit with the expensive disappointment Far and Away in 1990 (though it did give him a chance to co-star with his-then wife Nicole Kidman), but with A Few Good Men (1992), Cruise was back in form. In 1994, Cruise appeared as the vampire Lestat in the long-delayed film adaptation of the Anne Rice novel Interview with the Vampire. Although she was vehemently opposed to Cruise’s casting, Rice reversed her decision upon seeing the actor’s performance.

In 1996, Cruise scored financial success with the big-budget actioner Mission: Impossible, but it was with his multilayered, Oscar-nominated performance in Jerry Maguire (also 1996) that Cruise proved once again why he is considered a major Hollywood player. 1999 saw Cruise reunited onscreen with Kidman in a project of a very different sort, Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut. The film, which was the director’s last, had been the subject of controversy, rumor, and speculation since it began filming. It opened to curious critics and audiences alike across the nation, and was met with a violently mixed response. However, it allowed Cruise to once again take part in film history, further solidifying his position as one of Hollywood’s most well-placed movers and shakers.

Cruise’s enviable position was again solidified later in 1999, when he earned a Best Supporting Actor nomination for his role as a loathsome “sexual prowess” guru in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia. In 2000, he scored again when he reprised his role as international agent Ethan Hunt in John Woo’s Mission: Impossible II, which proved to be one of the summer’s first big moneymakers. His status as a full-blown star of impressive dramatic range now cemented in the eyes of both longtime fans and detractors, the popular actor next set his sights on reteaming with Jerry Maguire director Cameron Crowe for a remake of Spanish director Alejandro Amenábar’s (The Others) Abre los Ojos titled Vanilla Sky. Though Vanilla Sky’s sometimes surreal trappings found the film recieving a mixed reception at the box office, the same could not be said for the following year’s massively successful sci-fi chase film Minority Report. Based on a short story by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick and directed by none other than Steven Spielberg, Minority Report scored a direct hit at the box office, and Cruise could next be seen gearing up for his role in Edward Zwick’s The Last Samurai alongside Ken Watanabe, who was nominated for an Oscar for his performance.

For his next film, Cruise picked a role unlike any he’d ever played; starring as a sociopathic hitman in the Michael Mann psychological thriller Collateral. He received major praise for his departure from the good-guy characters he’d built his career on, and for doing so convincingly. By 2005, he teamed up with Steven Spielberg again for the second time in three years with an epic adaptation of the H.G. Wells alien invasion story War of the Worlds.

The summer blockbuster was regarded as a good popcorn film, but was in some ways overshadowed by the negative publicity that Cruise had been gathering. It began in 2005, when Cruise became suddenly vocal about his beliefs in the principles of Scientology, the religion created by science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard. Cruise publicly denounced actress Brooke Shields for taking medication in order to combat her postpartum depression, citing antidepressants and the psychological sciences as immoral and unnecessary, going so far as to call it a “Nazi science” in an Entertainment Weekly interview. On June 24, 2005, he was interviewed by Matt Lauer for The Today Show during which time he appeared to be distractingly excitable and argumentative in his insistence that psychiatry is a “pseudoscience,” and in a Der Spiegel interview, he was quoted as saying that Scientology has the only successful drug rehabilitation program in the world.

This behavior caused a stirring of public opinion about Cruise, as did his relationship with 27-year-old actress Katie Holmes. The two announced their engagement in the spring of 2005, and Cruise’s enthusiasm for his new romantic interest created more curiosity about his mental stability. He appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show on May 23, where he jumped up and down on the couch during his interview, professing his love for Holmes. He also ecstatically shook Winfrey’s hands and at one point fell dramatically to one knee. The actor’s newly outspoken attitude about Scientology linked intimately to the buzz surrounding his new relationship, as Holmes converted to the faith despite a lifelong adherence to Catholicism. The media was flooded with a rumor that the young actress had a “lost” period around this time, when for two weeks she was unreachable to her parents, friends, and extended family. Many suspected that Cruise’s strange public behavior was nothing more than a failed publicity stunt to raise interest in War of the Worlds, a general attitude that continued through October 2005, when he and Holmes announced that she was pregnant.

Some audiences found Cruise’s ultra-enthusiastic behavior refreshing, but for the most part, the actor’s new public image hurt his fan base, as he alienated many of his viewers. As he geared up for the spring 2006 release of Mission: Impossible III, his ability to sell a film based almost purely on his own likability was in question for the first time in 20 years. Despite a cast that boasted such names as Philip Seymour Hoffman and Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, curiosity about the film’s success seemed to hinge solely on Cruise’s controversial personal life. The movie ended up performing essentially as expected, despite lining up almost conspicuously with the birth of he and Holmes’ daughter Suri in spring of 2006.

The media frenzy that followed the pregnancy and birth were no less involved. There were whispers of dangerous or inadvisable methods of childcare and feeding, rumors that the Scientology endorsed method for birthing demands complete silence from everyone — including the mother — and questions about what kind of access to medical care and pain medicine Holmes would have in accordance with the practices of Scientology. Holmes said little publicly of her new relationship, religion, or role as a mother, but Cruise insisted in interviews that the process of the “silent birth” demands others in the room be quiet, but not the mother.

Even after the child was born, controversy surrounded the name that the couple chose for her, as Cruise’s public statement claimed the name Suri was chosen because it means “princess” in Hebrew and “red rose” in Persian, while experts on both languages insisted that this was not accurate. Scholars and speakers of the languages in question said that in Persian (conventionally known as Farsi) the word denotes the color red but has no connection whatsoever to roses, while in Hebrew, the closest connection it bears to its claimed origin is that the Jews of Eastern Europe use it as a nickname for the name Sarah, and that in ancient Hebrew Sarah is the feminine form of the word Lord. After the birth, the couple finally set their wedding date, planning to hold the event in early July.

Cruise next made headlines on a business front, when — in November 2006 — he and corporate partner Paula Wagner (the twin forces behind the lucrative Cruise-Wagner Productions, est. 1993) officially “took over” the defunct United Artists studio. Originally founded by such giants as Douglas Fairbanks and Charles Chaplin in 1921, UA was run into extinction after the Heaven’s Gate fiasco in the early ’80s and its purchase by Transamerica’s Kirk Kerkorian. The press announced that Cruise and Wagner would “revive” the studio, with Wagner serving as Chief Executive Officer and Cruise starring in and producing projects. MGM (UA’s parent company) handed the team the rights to almost single-handedly develop United’s production slate, and gave them an allotment of four films per year, a number expected to dramatically increase. Harry Sloan, the chairman of MGM, remarked in a press release, “Partnering with Tom Cruise and Paula Wagner, we have the ideal creative foundation from which to reintroduce the United Artists brand. United Artists is once again the haven for independent filmmakers and a vital resource in developing quality filmed entertainment consistent with MGM’s modern studio model.” ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
 

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Faisal Rafi | Link Me (New)

Posted by admin | Interviews, Spotlight | Sunday 7 October 2007 4:03 am

faisal-rafi1.jpgStarting off as a sound engineer, Faisal Rafi has come far. The co-producer of hit Rahat Fateh Ali Khan songs, ‘Jiya Dhadak Dhadak Jaaye’ and ‘Mann ki Lagan’, Faisal has worked with some of the most prolific musicians in the country including Junoon, Rohail Hyatt, Shahi Hasan, Gumby, Aamir Zaki… as well as the legendary Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan among various others. speaks with Faisal Rafi about classical music versus pop, piracy, record labels, the India-Pakistan difference and why he decided to produce the debut album of the young musical group that is Kaavish…Define good music?
I don’t function on chords; whatever sounds right is good music. If there are four people in a room and they agree that what they just recorded sounds good, it’s good. I feel mathematics has taken away from the art of music.

You also managed to rope in Channel V for a major concert in the late nineties. How did that happen?
Back in 95-96, I was doing sound for shows for music acts like Junoon, Vital Signs and the others. I had a company Stone Sound. During those days I met this guy Richard through Nizar Lalani; he was the Channel V representative in Dubai. Through Richard I met the General Manager of Channel V. We became friends and we thought of doing something in Pakistan. It was the Nawaz Sharif era… bura scene tha…

No long hair, no jeans…?
Exactly. That event was a success and a failure. It was a success because amidst that entire ban, finally something did happened. It was a failure because it was a financial loss. The loss didn’t matter and our sponsors were willing to bear it. It was the first time such a big event was done in Pakistan.

This was the concert with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and…?
It was weird. It was Nusrat, Awaz, Najam and Aamir Zaki.

That’s an interesting mix?
You think? It featured Aamir Zaki because I wanted to push him. He needed to get off his butt and do something. I guess it was an impulse action.

So you started off with a sound company and then you did this one-off event?
Yes. I had been doing sound and lighting anyway so I thought why not just organize a concert? I used all possible contacts to put this show together. We got permission from everywhere. I begged the then DC of Police who was a religious guy.

What happened to the sound company?
I was very tired of the company. Kabhi Karachi, kabhi Lahore – I was sick of it. I wanted to do something different. At that time, a friend of mine, Sajjad Panjwani – who is no longer alive – was running a company called Visible Changes. Everyone from Junoon to VS to Hadiqa – was signed up with him. When I decided to shut down my company, he asked me to work with him. I joined and incidentally the first album I worked on with Sajjad’s company was a compilation of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan’s live music.

I had collected recordings of Nusrat’s last few shows in Pakistan. We got permission from Nusrat’s family and that was the first time that I worked with Shahi Hasan. Vital Signs had just disbanded and Shahi was setting up a studio. We decided to work with Rahat Fateh Ali Khan; he was young back then, 22 perhaps and he had a squeaky voice. Visible Changes financed the project and Shahi and I flew out to Lahore. We recorded some stuff at Shahi’s studio and some at Mekaal’s…

faisal-rafi2.jpgMekaal Hasan?
Yes. It was one of the earliest recordings at his studio, ‘Mann Ki Lagan’ as well as other numbers. Meanwhile, Sajjad was going through some financial difficulty so he decided to shutdown his company and moved to the US. Then Shahi wanted to work on some solo stuff. I needed security in my life. Rohail Hyatt was opening up Pyramid Productions. Rohail also needed security in the sense that he wanted a friend to come and work as head of his production department. I told him that I’ll work 2-3 years for you and he thought that was fine. So I worked there for two years…

How was it working at Pyramid Productions?
It was a good experience. Rohail (Hyatt) is a good person to collaborate with. He’s got ideas. He follows them up. He keeps quiet and does the work as opposed to just talking. He’s a good friend also…

After Pyramid, what happened?
After two full years, I quit. I went back into music because that is the only thing I know. Shahi and I decided to work together again. We reopened some of Rahat’s work and developed some new instrumentals and stuff. Rahat also got on my case and he wanted to do a full album.

So began Rahat Fateh Ali’s Charkha…?
Ahan! We had a list of about twenty songs that we had recorded earlier. We short-listed ten of them. Shahi had just gotten married; he was busy with some work. I had to get the Rahat album done so then came Rohail. It worked out fine. You guys will hopefully hear Charkha soon.

Why did you guys go for an Indian record label for a release? Charkha was supposed to release six months ago but till now, it is not out.
We went with Sa Re Ga Ma (it was HMV back then) because they financed the whole thing. Yahan tau sab kuch karney key baad deal hoti hain. But now the album is releasing in Pakistan through Fire Records. The label is part of the biggest media group in Pakistan; it’s not a shady operation being carried out of a shop in Rainbow Centre. I guess both labels are waiting for the right time. Sa Re Ga Ma is going through some changes so I guess that maybe a reason. It will be out soon though.

You don’t have any complaints with your local record label. In the industry, many are always complaining that record labels steal musical rights, they don’t pay.
The music industry should stop moaning and groaning. It is a developing industry so work and let it develop. Whatever we asked for, we were paid. So why should I complain? People need to look at the bigger picture.

But what about young talent. Record labels don’t invest in them…?
Yes, I agree. And if those young musicians end up using pirated software I would still say okay, they had no choice. But you can’t point fingers, key ji hamarey music key rights nahin hai. The software that is being used by our musical acts here is pirated. 90 per cent of software used for music production in Pakistan is illegal. Indian movies as well as films from around the world are pirated. Apne rights ho magar piracy karni hai. It is hypocritical. You can scan every single piece of equipment here and see for yourself. I bought all this equipment legally. Those who know the cost are stunned. I’ll buy one movie instead of 20 but I’ll buy it legally. So the point is, yes there are problems. But we are still developing as an industry. Let it develop then scream and shout. And hey, if that young talent walks through my door, I will produce their music too.

Under what circumstances would you allow yourself to work with a young musical act?
I am working with Kaavish. I will work with others as well. It’s not just a question of singing in the right note. I would like to work with people who come in my studio and nail it. Those will be people who will think beyond being on the telly. Music is not part time. Let’s take the West as an example. People like Jimmy Page, Robert Plant – they have dedicated their entire lives to music. It’s not a hobby.

Where do you stand on Association of Music Professionals of Pakistan (AMPP)?
AMPP is the need of the hour. Musicians as a whole need this form of representation. But it doesn’t just mean five of our senior pop musicians. It should also include musicians from our folk and classical side. They sell far more than our pop/rock acts. Everyone found out about AMPP. It was in the papers and it made a lot of noise. But here’s the thing. There are musicians who have been doing music long before any of our commercial pop/rock artists were even born and everyone has ripped them off over and over again. These classical greats are our seniors. Just because they are classical, it doesn’t mean they aren’t musicians. So, they should be a part of this too. If they have Ustad Fateh Ali from Patiala and Ustad Fateh Ali from Gwalior, it will benefit not just these Ustads but AMPP too. If Ustad Fateh Ali of Gawalior comes out and speaks about how necessary AMPP is, it will get noticed. People will be like, ‘achaa, yaar music ki association bangayi hai’. I don’t know why those people aren’t being involved or haven’t been approached! Innho ney approach kis ko kiya hai? Six people will gather and that’s it. It has to involve EVERYONE.

Look at the world. Anywhere in the world, America or Europe – they may hate each other but if the music industry is going through a problem, musicians will unite. I’m working on both sides – pop as well as classical. I’m at a unique position and I get to listen to both sides of the story. On the pop side, people do make money. In comparison to the classical musicians, they are better off. They have billboards and record deals and they do get money for their album. Have you seen any Ustad on a billboard? Those guys have far bigger problems than our pop musicians. Main kya boloon? Classical musicians are our treasure.

You’ve been to India. How does it work there?