 Do you like to play golf? Yeah, I do. You do? I do. I don't like, I'm not like an avid golfer. I like to play. Oh. Why? I used to play a lot, because when I was in high school I lived on a golf course. But I don't enjoy it that much. But when I do play, I will say, it takes a lot of balls to play the way. Hey, welcome back to our stupid rex of Corbin. I was waiting for the stupid punchline. You can follow us on Instagram, Twitter, for our GC content. Yeah, I'm not a golf fan. Thank you to everybody's sports on Patreon. Follow us, share the account, subscribe. Every time I play golf, which I haven't played in many years, but every time in the past that I've played it, which has been a handful of times, I finish and walk off the green and think to myself, I could have done so much more with those five hours than I just did. I also find it to be a complete waste of acreage of land on the planet and water. Oh, yeah, that's an elitist white sport. That's for definite, sure. Which is why I don't play it. because it's way too expensive of a hobby. It's unbelievable. And time-consuming, good. It is definitely a waste of resources for sure, but like I said, when I do play, I enjoy playing, but I'm also, I don't suck at golf, like some people. Today, we got another, this is actually a little quick, Ani little, it's 10 questions with Ani, and it's a film companion style, so another. Oh, okay. A film companion thing? Yeah. Maybe he did it at the same time as the interview? He might have, who knows? But it's 10 questions with Ani. Okay. And so he's doing obviously a lot of PR right now, probably. I hope they're really important things, like shoe size, where do you go shopping? Peanut size. Favorite side to sleep on? No, not that. Ah, here we go. Ani. Hey, Vishal. Just 10 questions, super quick. Okay. What is the fastest song you ever composed? Fastest song I ever composed recently is Bloody Sweep. The weirdest situation in which you got an idea for a tune? The weirdest situation should be now at Javan Audio Launch, when I was listening to other people's speeches. I got an idea and I put it on my voicemail. The weirdest situation of plays in which you heard somebody else play or listen to your song? When I went to a restaurant recently, in the outskirts of Chennai, I can't name the restaurant. But I was sitting right there and then there was a marriage function going on just outside. And like nine out of ten songs of a mine, but we didn't know that I was sitting there. Okay, if you were in the musician, practically, what's the career choice that you would have chosen? Or what your family would have come to see? I would have been an investment banker not in India. I would have been in Singapore or somewhere, bro. Killing it in that also. Not killing it. Not killing it, but that is what I would have done. Okay. Breaking Bad has been your most favourite show. Which show comes the close second? Better call song. I'm going to call song. Okay. Last for you, Hector Salamanka. Gus. Yeah, Gus. Because of just how cool the characters. Okay, a recent song, a tune that made you jealous, but in a very sweet, happy way. A recent song which I, okay. A recent song, I really loved Darbukasheva's Madhu Aarti. And I heard it, I was like, oh my God, this one is super. Okay, a Bollywood composer, you would love to sing for? A Bollywood composer. I really love Shankar's song, Loi. So, yeah. So, I would love to sing for them. But I don't think I'm capable of it. Okay, because every day you come across people who come to you and tell you, okay, my favourite song of yours was this, this, all that. But one song that somebody came to you and told you that you were not a very, not a very common choice, but you felt super happy that they told you about that song. Never give up. Never give up, yeah. Last four questions. Fair Raja song. Ah, Pum, Pumga, Trivall song. Fair Raja song. Yeah, that one. Pudu Vellayamale. Okay. Yes, that one. You won this song from Sarvam called Needane. Ah, yes. I love that song. I love that song too. Me too. Harris, O Shanti. The Ninja Kulpe. Aniruddha. Aniruddha. Aniruddha song. That's it. Thanks so much for doing this. Thank you. I wish I would have put the pictures up. Might have. I can't help. Obviously, this is probably not meant for us. Yeah. But no. Just the names, they rattle them so fast I can't visualize if we've seen it or heard it before. Like I couldn't tell you my favorite Harris song, because I don't know the names. No. I know so many. Like if you gave me the beat, I'd be like, yeah. I'd have to go back and look at my playlists for stuff I've saved to see. You have a lot of all of them. I have a lot of songs. It's just, I remember the songs. I don't necessarily remember who the artists were per se. I'll remember the films they come from, more likely than I would the artists per se. I mean, obviously unless it's a new song, like Jujubee. I know very well who that is. Yeah. Jujubee, Jujubee, Jujubee. Badass. I just added that to my playlist as well. I want to know how fast he wrote Badass. Yeah. He said he wrote it quick. He said it was the quickest song he's written recently at least. I'd also love to know the speed at which he writes songs typically. If he has a typical speed, and what's the longest it's ever taken him to complete a song. And when you talk, when somebody says write a song, is that everything or is it just writing the lyrics? I would think a composer would think about it in terms of, it's not necessarily completion in studio because that's production, but how long did it take you to write the song from, meaning whatever the structure of the song is, it's done and now you can record it. Okay. The recording is not necessarily the writing process. You'll have some ideas. You have to do with like writing the notes for the music as well? No, well it depends. Just the lyrics. It's typically what, I don't know what most composers do, but it's my understanding from the ones that I've been exposed to, my own writing style, my dad's writing style, McCartney and Lennon's writing style is, at the most what you're going to write down are just the names of the chords you're playing, like a guitar tablature is at worst, and you wouldn't necessarily write out the actual notes. Gotcha. The ones who typically do that are the ones who are the composers writing things for orchestra, and even nowadays they don't need to do that because you have software that will compose for you. You can play into the machine and it will chart your music for you. Really? You don't need the job of the person. I mean, there used to be people who got paid to write charts before computer programs where a composer didn't want to take the time to actually do the actual writing of their chart. They could read it. But say Hans Zimmer, before he had a computer to do it, he could write what he wanted to write, play it, and give it to his person who writes his music for him and say chart that for me, and they would listen to what he wrote and just chart it. Yeah, but I think most just put, for example, if a song is going to be, you know, you're just going to put a G chord, and then you're going to put an F chord, a C chord, and then you're going to put an A minor chord because you know lyrically and you write the lyrics with the chords above them. I mean, that's the way, if I write a song, I can hear what I'm thinking in my head, and it usually begins with melody and lyric, and then I'll find the chords I want that match what's going on in my head. Sometimes it was reversed. Sometimes you're just messing around on the guitar of the piano and the chords are hitting you, and you're remembering the chords you're playing, and then the melody comes in the lyrics comments. Almost always, as far as the writing down of it is concerned, it's lyric first, and then you put the chords above the lyrics where they match, and then it's really important to get it down on a voice memo of some kind because it'll be, especially melody, you can lose that real quick if you don't do that. And that's faster than trying to get out your, nobody really carries around sheet music and has a treble clef and a bass clef and writes the notes out that way. So, I didn't know. Yeah, I didn't know. Also, Gus is definitely the answer there. Yeah, Gus is the answer there. And it also, I mean, sometimes you're not near an instrument. I was walking to Taco Bell about a month ago, and a song came into my head because I was just in a giddy, funny, happy mood, and I started, I started saying, I was just walking, and I was walking and I started going, walking to Taco Bell. And the song came into my head, and so I just started writing it in the voice memo and I had the whole song written by the time I got back home and then added music to it. So it just depends what's going on, where you are. You wrote it on the toilet because you just had Taco Bell. I have never written a song on the toilet and you've just inspired me to do so, and I will put that up on my Instagram. You'll see it. Talk about first, you'll. That'll help. Yeah, you'll. You hear about that? I didn't. Yeah. I would not eat a breakfast taco from Taco Bell. They are doing breakfast tacos, so now you can be toxic in the morning as well. I would not eat them. Yeah. Because there's no way it's going to be a fresh taco. Oh, absolutely. It's going to be absolutely perfect from the farm. Flour, tortilla, the eggs are going to be absolutely free-range. The chickens roam around the back of Taco Bell. You know there'll be no factory processed stuff in there. Now, if we had a taco. Nothing but wholesome. If we had a taco cabana. Woo! Taco Cabana's soft tacos in the morning, but breakfast is so good it makes you want to put your parts in it. It's true. Anyways, let us know what you thought about it. Let us know what other Ani interviews and other Ani songs obviously we should react to down below.