No he's not rude or aggressive, simply inaccessible. Singer-anchorman Sonu Nigam is either shooting abroad or doing shows for the better part of the year. He stays in Mumbai about two days in a month.
"You can contact me on my mobile through my brother-in-law like my parents do, " he says. For someone who began as a starry-eyed wannabe at the age of three, the flight to Bollywood superstardom is showing. Sonu's first break was in Gulshan Kumar's '91 home production Aja Meri Jaan, where he sang O Asman Wale but it was Achcha Sila Diya (Bewafa Sanam), which was a chart-topper for months. Then came Ye Dil Deewana in Pardes, Deewana - a solo album and Zee TV's Sa Re Ga Man. He's in
Mumbai for a day enroute to the US to shoot a video for his album Mausam.
Not for him the lowly business of promoting his albums: "If it's good it will sell, irrespective of whether or not I speak about it to the media. Deewana is such a success a