Thursday, October 23, 2008

"Shankar Jaikishan gave me some amazing songs to sing. I was closer to Shankar and he truly appreciated my voice"- Manna Dey (Courtesy :Little India )



Ai Mere Pyare Watan



At 84, Manna Dey is fit as a fiddle।



He is perhaps the last of the living legends among male singers, gifted with a unique voice no one has managed to ape till now। While you come across clones of other legendary singers in the present day world of vocal music, Manna Dey remains as original and incomparable through the years. At 84, he is fit as a fiddle, and recently sang for four hours to raise funds for the Robin Raina Foundation in Atlanta, a charity to aid under privileged children worldwide, because he deeply believes in the cause. In an exclusive interview with Little India, the elegantly clad Dey talks about a life filled with music, his journey as a singer and composer and why in spite of the consensus he never received his due as a singer, he takes it all in his stride with humor and humility.


What are the early memories of growing up and music?




In my formative years I was surrounded by music because of my uncle, the famous singer K.C. Dey, but until he became blind at the age of 13 and turned to music to support himself no one in the family was musically inclined. A benefactor took him under his wing because he thought my uncle was a musical genius, which he was, and made him learn at the feet of great ustads. Uncle in turn imparted that knowledge to my late brother and me, but he made it very clear that to deserve that kind of musical education, we had to desire and work for it.
Other than that I don’t really come from a family of musicians, though several legendary musicians like Allauddin Khan Sahib, Inayat Khan, the late Vilayat Khan’s father and many other maestros visited our house, since they were my uncle’s contemporaries.


We lived in a joint family and still do, in the same house where my father, uncle and I were born। Still it was made very clear to me by my father and my eldest uncle, who was an engineer and the self appointed decision maker for every one in the family, that I had to finish my education first and preferably do law. When I finished my undergrad studies, there were two choices before me, to study law or music. I chose the latter. My father wasn’t too pleased with my choice, but I got tremendous support from my uncle and started learning from him. K.C Dey never married, so I became the son he never had, and he was instrumental in helping me realize my dreams as long as I was willing to make the necessary sacrifices. Until then I had no formal musical education.Having said that I must add that like most Bengali house holds music was a part of our upbringing, so I would sleep and wake up to the sounds of music and subconsciously and consciously began to imbibe all that I had heard around me, and later when I did get into it, uncle did not have to teach me from scratch.


So did you ever go through the tough regimen of learning music where the gurus punished their students-one hears stories of incessant hours of torturous practice, scoldings, Ali Akbar Khan was even tied to a tree!


I’m afraid that is an approach I don’t think much of. My uncle was a hard task master, but never unkind or cruel. He was strict and the day I decided to become a singer he gave me a tanpura and expected rigorous practice from me. I was very fond of outdoor sports like boxing, wrestling, I used to love flying kites and had a very cavalier attitude and so when I should have been practicing music I would be out playing sports and in turn he would scold me but never in the horrible way some people treated their students. His concern was out of love and he wanted me to focus and apply my mind.He was the pioneer in introducing sugam sangeet or light music to the masses.
Yes and actually a lot of people didn’t know that my uncle was a classically trained singer and used to sing dhrupad, dhamar, khayal, thumri, tappe and ghazal. He was very versatile, and in those days when every one was singing only classical, my uncle became a pioneer of sugam sangeet or light music. It was a master stroke. I can’t fathom how it even dawned on him that somehow the appreciation for classical music is very limited and that simplifying music would garner a much wider audience for him and it did. He modeled his music in a way that the common man could listen and identify with it. As a result he was worshiped in Bengal. When he started singing and working in Hindi movies and theatre, his songs became a rage all over India. I remember going to Karachi with him and when my uncle began singing songs like Baba Man ki Ankhen Khol and Teri Gathri Mein Laga Chor Musafir, the entire audience started singing with him. That was an unforgettable experience in itself.
You yourself seem to be fonder of sugam sangeet even though you have amazing classical range and mastery.
Learning classical music is essential for a strong foundation, but frankly I was not cut out for classical singing. I just don’t appreciate the fact that you sit there singing the same raga for 2-3 hours. It is too repetitive and really tries the patience of the listener. K.C. Dey was the greatest influence in my life and my style of singing has been aligned with his right from the beginning. I also seem to have this ability to grasp things quickly, and I could reproduce what my uncle played on tabla and sang with great accuracy. My uncle was also very particular about the company he kept and wanted me to keep. He didn’t want me around unsavory people. Good influences and wholesome friendships were very crucial and I follow that to this day।You left Calcutta and went to Bombay to try your hand at singing there। How was the journey?



The music in Calcutta was getting on my nerves। It was nothing but Rabindra sangeet and so I decided to go to Bombay not realizing it would be pretty tough. Firstly I was Bengali and thus an outsider and I would hear comments like, “Arey Bengali Babu go back to Bengal and eat your rasgullas, and stay there.” I went with my uncle so that made it a bit easier. I worked as his assistant for 5 years and was paid the princely sum of Rs 500 in those days. I got my first break at the age of 22-23, when I sang Upar Gagan Vishal for the film Ram Rajya and was immediately branded as a singer of religious songs. I was constantly approached to sing for old bearded characters in movies and I was barely in my early twenties. It was a very trying time for me. I sang the song Chali Radhey Rani Akhiyon Main Pani for well known film maker Bimal Roy. It became a big hit and Bimal Roy said Manna have you seen the song on screen? I said no, he said you must go and see for yourself how deeply it continues to move the audience. I went and what do I see: another old man with a beard singing the song and I got so mad. I was in two minds whether to return to Calcutta or to stay on and not give up.


Was it true that there used to be a clique and music directors stuck with certain singers and didn’t give other a chance।


I don’t know about cliques and there is nothing wrong in struggling. I think we all had a quota, and it wasn’t as if I sang everything music directors composed or others did. Yes there were favorites but that is part of the game.
You have sung for so many legendary music directors। Can you share memories of those times. Yes I did sing for all of them. S.D Burman was in a league of his own. I knew him from the time I was a child as he would come and study music under my uncle. I was always attracted to Burman da because he looked like a chinaman and I used to sit next to him and watch him sing. I loved his nasal tone and style of singing and used to imitate him in college days and sing like him. The way he sang was very typical of East Bengal and his accent remained the same even when he sang in Hindi. His voice was very distinct and he became a trendsetter. There is no one who can sing Wahan Kaun Hai Tera Musafir like Burman da did. He loved me a lot and we often played tennis together. He was kind enough to say that if someone composes lyrics from his heart, the only singers who can put soul into those lyrics are Lata Mangeshkar and Manna Dey. It was always at the back of my mind to live up to his expectations. He mentioned some songs that I had sung with such emotion Poocho Na Kaise Maine Rain Bitaye and the song that moved him was the famous Ai Mere Pyare Watan from the film Kabuli Wallah.We were rehearsing the song and a close friend of mine Mr. Sharma was listening and came out and said Manna your voice is sounding very listless. There is no pizzaz. What are you singing? SD Burman retorted that on the contrary that was exactly the way the song was to be sung. It was being picturized on a man who was a poor kabuliwallah from Afghanistan who worked all day and would return to this crowded home he shared with others and while others would sleep, he would take out his rabab and sing yearningly of the land he left behind. I couldn’t have sung it in a robust manner. When music director Salil Chaudhry heard it he wept.Salil was a personal friend and not just a musical genius, he was also a writer par excellence and his lyrics were in great demand and are to this day even though he passed away long ago. He was an intellectual in the true sense of the word. Any time you sat down with Salil you returned enriched on so many other subjects.
Shankar Jaikishan gave me some amazing songs to sing. I was closer to Shankar and he truly appreciated my voice and for 20 years the duo gave me songs that will remain evergreen for years to come. Their diversity and creativity was unbelievable I remember when Bharat Bhushan had become a big star, Mohd Rafi used to sing all his songs, Shankar created a beautiful song in his film Baiju Bawra which was being produced by Bharat Bhushan’s brother Shashi Bhushan. Shashi on finding out that I was singing the song came over and protested. He wanted Rafi to sing it. Shankar persisted and told him it was either me or he could find another music director. That s how I came to sing Sur Na Saje Kya Gaoon Mein which became a huge hit. After Shashi Bhushan heard that song he came and hugged me and acknowledged that no one could have sung it as well as I had.


Shankar also gave you the opportunity to sing the duet Ketaki Ghulab Juhi with classical singing legend Bhimsen Joshi. How tough was that?


My God that was a story in itself. Shankar told me Manna tighten your belt you are going to have the time of your life with the next composition. You are going to sing a classical duet with someone. They didn’t tell me who. I said sure and started practicing. After a few days I was told please come over, the tune is ready and the singer with whom I was to sing the duet was none other than Bhimsen Joshi. The duet was between the hero and his rival and I was supposed to sing for the hero and win. I got the shivers and said I can’t sing against Bhimsen Joshi and win, its impossible.


So I went home and told my wife, lets abscond somewhere for a few days and come back when Shankar Jaikishan have found some one else and completed the recording.

My wife looked at me and said shame on you, how dare you even suggest something like that? Besides you are singing for the hero, you have to make him win. It was a very difficult song, but I gave it my all and afterwards Bhinsen Joshi was kind enough to say Manna Sahib, you sing quite well. Why don’t you sing classical music and take it up seriously? I said maybe it came out well because I was singing before someone like you and was inspired to give my best, but that is where it stays!
Anil Biswas also came up some brilliant compositions for me, but it was Roshan who really challenged me। You will understand what I mean if you listen to Na To Caravan Ki Talash Hai. Roshan warned me, Look Manna, Rafi is singing for the hero, but you are singing for the Ustad(maestro). The difference should show. When I rendered the alaap for that even Roshan was stunned. He said indeed you have proved yourself.Most music directors let me improvise, but Naushad Sahib was immovable. It was either his way or no way! C Ramchandra was very exacting too, but then I learnt a lot from him. He taught me how important clear diction and pronunciation were, and would not allow any word to be mispronounced. As it is, I’m very particular about pronunciation and you will see it in all my songs even the regional ones, but C Ramchandra was even more meticulous.


Anil Biswas also said that you were the only singer who took notation for every song and had it done in one take, and that you could sing everything Rafi or Kishore or Mukesh or Talat Mehmood could sing, but they could not sing everything you sang।That is very generous of him। He was very fond of me, but I don’t think there is anyone to touch Mohd Rafi. It is true I took notations and got every song right in one rehearsal. I even tried to teach Lata and Asha how to take notations, but these girls after the initial enthusiasm of wanting to know would not follow through!Tell me about Rafi. Not too many people know that you pulled Rafi out of a chorus line and gave him his break.Rafi was junior to me and did sing very often in the chorus when I sang the lead, but then I found out what a rare talent he had and knew he would be incomparable in any field, but especially in the field of film singing. There were some songs of mine that were in a league of their own, but in Raft’s case anything he sang was incredible. In fact there were times my uncle K.C Dey would be composing a tune and I would assist him. Once he was composing a song for a film called Justice and I was assisting him. When the tune was ready he said “Let Rafi know.” I said, “Know what,” and he said, “That the tune is ready and he has to sing this song.” I felt very hurt and said. “why? Can’t I sing it?” My uncle said, “No you cannot, only he can sing this.” I swallowed my pride and fetched him and then after he finished recording, I realized that indeed I could not have sung it as well as he did.

Who did you enjoy singing with more, Lata or Asha?I have sung more duets with Lata than I have with any one else. I first met Lata at a rehearsal with Anil Biswas. I saw this dark, ill clad girl sitting nearby and after finishing my rehearsal , Anil said, “Manna this is the daughter of Dina Nath Mangeshkar. Have you heard her sing?” Her father had passed away and they had come upon hard times. I sat down to listen to her and the moment she started singing I realized this was a prodigy sitting before me.
Both sisters are incomparable, but Asha is very versatile and singing with her meant impromptu improvisations, and we would go back and forth, testing and challenging ach other. It was a lot of fun. People say the two sisters wouldn’t let any one else come into the industry. I say even if that was true, there was still no one who could come close to them in terms of talent and hard work.



Which is the song you look back at and say, what an amazing composition and I have done full justice to it?The one I sang for Manoj Kumar’s film Upkar, Kasme Vaade Pyar Wafa Sab. It was filmed on Pran who always acted as a villain in films. This was a sympathetic role for him and it changed the course of his acting career. He called me and said, Mannaji I’m getting an opportunity to have a song filmed on me for the first time. Manoj will explain my role to you, please don’t make it so tough that I can’t do justice to your rendition on screen. Manoj and I started rehearsing that song in the morning. in between he escorted me to a function where I had to sing and then we returned and finished the song. Manoj was so dedicated and the way he would immerse himself when I sang was very gratifying.
What about Raj Kapoor? Even though he used Mukesh for most of his songs, he had you sing some wonderful numbers for him.I was very fortunate to sing and work with film makers of his stature. Every song recording under Raj Kapoor was an unforgettable event in itself. He left no stone unturned to make it the best possible presentation. Often he would sit with a dholak (Indian percussion instrument) and would say let’s have fun. During the recording of Pyar Hua Ikrar Hua from the film Chori Chori, we were recording with a full orchestra and kept waiting for Rajji to show up. He was very late and arrived just as we were going to pack up. He was so humble he would touch people’s feet and beg forgiveness, then ask for a round of tea, and then we got to it. As we sang Raj asked for extra space and took an umbrella and envisioned the scene as we sang. We started in the morning and were rehearsing till 10 p.m., because he was so engrossed in it. I also remember when I sang the song E Bhai from Mera Naam Joker which netted me the Filmfare award. I was away at a program and returned around 1 p.m. As we started rehearsing Rajji who had such a keen ear for music, felt we needed to add a violinist. Five violinists were rounded up auditioned, trained and then we started recording. That was the kind of dedication and meticulous work that went into film making in those days.
Mehmood passed away recently. You have sung some amazing numbers for him, Ek Chatur Naar with Kishore, Phul Gendwa Na Maro. Mehmood had become the kind of actor, where films were written around him. How was the experience singing for him?Absolutely wonderful. Mehmood would sit down with me and take notes, asking me how I sang, watching me render the lines so he could bring all the movements in my voice, the emotions into his acting on screen. He was a very kind man and full of fun.
People cannot stop raving about your Bengali compositions.I have sung about 2,500 songs in Bengali and composed the music for about 95 percent of them. You won’t believe this, but every single household in West Bengal and East Bengal which is now Bangladesh has those songs. Wherever I perform they know each and every song of mine. If I forget the lyrics the audience hums it for me. It overwhelms me with gratitude. For me it is wonderful to see the large number of people that still love my songs. I sang before 5,000 people recently in New York. It was some sort of festival and I said to the organizers, “You want me to sing here where people are busy shopping and eating?” They said you don’t realize the power of your singing, just start. I did and people stopped everything and listened with such attention and in silence.Does it surprise you that we have not had a Manna Dey clone till this day while many people have cloned their voices on Rafi and Kishore?Well it’s no fault of mine! The voice is God given, but I have worked hard to improve it. I do have to say though that I recently heard a Maharastrian, a young man sing my songs, and some very difficult songs at that with such incredible beauty that I was totally surprised. He sang Laga Chunari Mein Daag so well that even I sat there amazed. I guess my voice and unusual style of renditions did help me carve a place for myself and maybe in general it is difficult to mimic.
What do you think of today’s music? And why have you eased yourself away from singing in films?Can you single out one composer today who is the caliber of the musicians of my times or knows what he is doing? Whatever is happening in the field of music is very unhealthy. Thanks to music videos anyone and ever one can become a singer, so one good thing has happened, even if they don’t know how to, every one sings! When there are songs like Main to seeti baja raha tha, bhelpuri kha raha tha, tujhe mirchi lagi to main kya karoon,(I was eating bhelpuri and whistling and if you thought the chilies were too spicy what can I do?) what do you expect? Even regional music is cloning itself on Bollywood music. I think with the exception of Amir Khan and Yash Chopra I don’t see anyone else creating the kind of films that require good music. I like Sonu Nigam, Alka Yagnik and Sunidhi Chauhan as singers, but even they are not getting the kind of music that can exploit their real talent.I still sing and do select shows. I’m in good health, both my daughters are wonderful singers and chose not to get into the industry. They saw the cutthroat competition between Lata and Asha and that put them off. Both of them are professionals. In fact my older daughter works for Sun Microsystems in California. I have a wonderful wife whom I love dearly and I live a disciplined life. More than anything else I am grateful that there are so many people who deeply appreciate the kind of music I believe in and show up to hear my songs. And that is good enough for me.

referral

Friday, October 17, 2008

Raj Kapoor’s ‘ Barsaat’ remains a watershed movie in the Hindi cinema.

Raj Kapoor’s ‘ Barsaat’ remains a watershed movie in the Hindi cinema.


The title literally means ‘rain’ but Raj Kapoor’s interpretation was different. The film’s theme was the flow of human desire that resembled the constant fall of rain, drenching the earth that symbolized the man and woman.

Raj played the Pran, who loves Reshma (Nargis), and his love is reciprocated. Reshma, a poor girl, defiles her father who opposes their romance. On the way to meet her lover, she drowns on the way-or so it is thought. Pran’s friend Gopal (Premnath) has a more casual approach to love and he jilts the village girl Neela (Nimmi) who kills herself. Gopal is repentant. A short while later, Pran and Gopal are driving through the countryside when they stumble upon Reshma, who is married off to a fisherman (K N Singh). Pran deliberately crashes his car, and love triumphs at the eleventh hour.

The thundering success of this love story put the R K Films on the road to glory as Bollywood’s premium production company of all time. After the lukewarm reception to the maiden venture ‘ Aag’, Raj Kapoor became a commercial-cum-artistic force to reckon with as a filmmaker with this film. his leitmotif- the depiction of love as mere passion with just the right mix of physicality and the sublime spirituality – was first seen in this film, to evolve as the stamp of a titanic film maker all the way to his 1985 swan song, ‘ Ram Teri Ganga Maili.’

Barsaat signaled the coming together of the greatest team ever in Hindi films- Raj Kapoor, Mukesh, Shanker, Jaikishen, Hashrat Jaipuri and Shailendra. After ‘ Aag’, Raj Kapoor had already signed music director Ram Ganguly again but due to some problems with Kapoor, Ganguly’s two assistants, with whom he had already formed a distinct tuning, the tabla player Shanker and harmonium man Jaikishen were signed as composers. Raj’s father Prithviraj Kapoor had introduced him to a bus conductor whose simple shaayari at a mushaira had impressed him- Hasrat Jaipuri. A little later, an Indian Railway employee who wrote poetry and needed the money- Shailendra –came in.

The result was some of the most fantastic music that Hindi film sangeet buff have ever heard-including nuggets like Lata’s ‘ jiya beqaraar his’, ‘ Hawa mein udtaa jaye’, ‘ O mujhe kisse pyar ho gaya’, ‘ Ab mera kaun sahara’, ‘ Barsaat mein humse milen tum sajan’, ‘ and the Lata- Mukesh duet, ‘ Chhod gaye balam’ and ‘ Tirchi nazar hai’, besides the plaintive Rafi gem ‘ Main zindagi mein hardam rota hi raha hoon.’ 1949 was the breakthrough year for Lata Mangeshkar and ‘ Barsaat’ led her parade of hits that year to make her emerge forever as Hindi cinema’s supreme female singer.

Above all, with ‘ Barsaat’, debutantes Shanker Jaikishen ushered in a revolution in film music. The fresh, vibrant score was devoid of those monotonous thekas and droning cadences that characterized Hindi film music till then. It heralded the onslaught of cerebral orchestration or arrangements, as they are known today in Hindi film music. As a debut score, it was also compositionally fabulous- and the records sold phenomenally.

It was this music that opened up a new avenue of commerce for Hindi cinema- of a musical score that made big money independently of the film. Though ‘ Barsaat’ the film, was a rage on its own, its music got it both the initial value and its repeat audience. Legend has it that when Naushad was fishing for compliments from his producer- the late Mehboob Khan- for the success of songs of their collaboration ‘Andaaz’ (released in the same year), Khan looked at the rain outside and quipped, ‘ Lekin aapke gaano ko to ‘Barsaat’ ne dho dala’! (Your songs have been washed away by ‘Barsaat!’)

With ‘ Aag’ and ‘ Andaaz’ as predecessors, Raj and Nargis had already established an on-screen chemistry that made the distributors ecstatic. But ‘ Barsaat’ clinched the team that was to do 15 more films and emerge as the icons of screen romance in Hindi cinema. The film also marked the debut of cinematographer Jal Mistry and the entry of actress Nimmi and writer Ramanand Sagar into the R K fold.

The film has one more significance for R K Films- the famous RK emblem of a man holding a woman by her waist in a near ballet pose was derived from a still of Raj and Nargis from this film. Launched on the day of Dassera in 1948 within weeks of release of ‘ Aag’, ‘ Barsaat’ was completed in nine months-with shoots in places like Kashmir and Mahabaleshwar-and premiered on 30th September 1949.

(Courtesy: Stardust Classics)



-- k k rai

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

शंकर जी की ८६ वीं जन्मतिथि (१५ अक्टूबर ०८) पर श्रीगोपाल श्रोति एवं श्री चंदर मेहता की भाव-भीनी श्रद्धांजलियां

शंकर जी की जन्मतिथि ( 15 October) पर उनके प्रशंसकों की ओर से हार्दिक श्रद्धांजलि
ये शाम की तन्हाईयाँ ऐसे में तेरा ग़म .................................
YE SHAM KI TANHAIYAN AISE MEIN TERA GHUM………
Chandra Gopal Shroti's Tribute to SJ (14th एपिसोड)

(For full story please visit Shri Gopal Shroti's blog http://gopalshroti.wordpress.com/

HERE i am describing about the song, which came from the pen of great POET/LYRICIST, SHAILENDRA. …..the song has most softer sentiments and the smell of roses and the purity of heart. the composers are SHANKAR JAIKISHAN, WHO MADE IT IMMORTAL , with the minimum of orchestration. ….this is their excellence in forming the emotions into a song by keeping minimum of the instruments and they conceived that LET THE NIGHT SING THE SONG…they understood that the song is an emotional expression of the sufferer…..they have the words to formulate and convert them into a soulful domain…….this is where, they are at their best and went into the memory of each listener……to make live the dreamy evening with lovely clouds and coming night’s resonance, they brought life into theit tune, so the silence shivered in every corner. they gave this silence the beauty of a still lake with reflections of full moon…..and the heart goes to the unusual sentiments poured into each word by Shailendra. here goes the wording of the immortal composition from film AAH:
"ye sham ki tanhaiyan, aise mein tera ghum, patte kahin phadke hawa aai to chounke hum….ye sham ki……
jis rah se tum aane ko the, uske nishan bhi mitne lage; aaye na tum sau sau dafa aaye gaye mousam……ye sham ki
seene se laga teri yaad ko, roti rahi mein raat ko, halat pe meri chand taare ro gaye shabnam……ye sham ki tanhaiyan, aise mein tera ghum."
LATAJI by her golden voice gave it a permanent existence, which mixes the nector, in all pervading emotions. by her voice, she enhanced the solitude of the lady and her painful echo as the night is setting in.
THIS WAS THE MAGIC OF S-J, WHOSE COMPOSITION WITH THE VOICE OF LATAJI AND THE WORDINGS OF SHAILENDRA TOOK THEM ABOVE THE MORTALS AND THEIR CREATION WILL ALWAYS REMAIN ALIVE………(TO BE CONTINUED)……….(
gshroti@in.com)……..

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Friends,



It is hard to believe that Shankarji would have been 86 today and his first musical start in Barsaat was 60 years ago! Time flashes by so fast and leaves us with memories of SJ music and events associated with them।Shankarji, up in heavens in the company of Shiv (or Shankar Bhagwaan) is probably composing music for tandav nrutya and dazzling the god of his musical creations.



I must tell you all that when I first met Shankarji he was little guarded and very careful about his answers. On my second visit, after winning his trust as a true diehard SJ fan, he opened up totally. What he loved was how much interest I had shown in his music and he was just dumb-founded by the analysis of his music by his fan. HE REALLY ENJOYED THAT. I can still remember that look on his face of being humbled by his fan's love for his music.Today on his birthday, he is looking at all of us in the SJ forum and loving every moment of it! Keep up the musical discussion and share this and all with new young fans.

Happy birthday Shankarji!


चंदर मेहता द्वारा
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/shankarjaikishan/ में व्यक्त की गयी भावनाओं से साभार

Monday, October 13, 2008

RK's Music and Shanker-Jaikishen [Courtesy : RKFilms.com) (Courtesy : www.archive.org]



I take this opportunity to re-produce from an article on rkfilms.com


Shanker of Shanker-Jaikishen who was neglected, avoided by rkfilms even after Bobby gave our beloved Raj Kapoor all what he had lost for Joker. He at least should have been given a second chance for Ram Teri Ganga Maili which might have proved that Shanker was not finished. But only the departed souls (rk and shanker) might have known the reasons. But we would be feeling sad, sorry and a feeling of a desired unfulfilled till our last breathe for not second coming of Shanker ji into RKs. IF YASH CHOPRA CAN REVIVE MADAN MOHAN's music in Veer Zara, RK Brothers why not should exploit the un-used tunes of Shankar Jaikishan. It is an appeal to Randhir, Rishi, Rajeev as well as to Young, Energetic and a Lovable and Honest Ranbir. Are they listening? --- Sudarshan Pandey

"Raj Kapoor music legacy started with the shower of melody that was Barsaat under the baton of Shankar Jaikishan. But even SJ, innovative as they were, were ultimately mere executors of Raj Kapoor's musical will. The great Showman was the Great Conductor who audio-visualised his music as an integral part of the film's script. No wonder Lata Mangeshkar said that all music in RK films was, in the end, given by Raj Kapoor himself-which, here, is the take of point for the RK music story.At HMV's Taj Function to celebrate the motion picture event that Ram Teri Ganga Maili had proved to be as RK's greatest money spinner of all times. Lata Mangeshkar certainly drops a brick when, in addressing the august audience, she says,"At RK early on, all music may ahve been credited to Shanker Jaikishen, later Laxmikant Pyarelal may have taken over and it is now Ravindra Jain. But one thing I, as the one who has sung for RK from Barsaat down, have seen is that the music in any RK film is, in the ultimate analysis, given by Raj Saab himself."Consternation! Ravindra Jain, sitting stumpy, there in a spotless white coat, is aghast, wondering whether this is his reward for reverting from Hemlata to Lata. Hasrat Jaipuri, grateful to be there at all for the solitary song that he has written for Ram Teri Ganga Maili, is at a loss to decide how exactly to react, since he knows, better than anyone else, how dominant, right through, has been Raj Kapoor's role in 'envisioning' and encapsuling Shanker-Jaikishen's music.So much so, that Hasrat knows that "Sun Saiba Sun" in Ram Teri Ganga Maili, as written by him, is not Ravindra Jain's tune at all. As far as Hasrat remembers, Sun Saiba Sun is how he, long ago, wrote a certain Lata number, tuned by Jaikishen, for RK's never made Ajanta.
This was Raj Kapoor's point even when Laxmikant Pyarelal so sensationally supplanted SJ at RK. All the music that Raj Kapoor wanted he had already got shaped on tape by SJ, on his own audio-visual terms, for his films to come. If at all Raj needed any music director now in 1973, it was to put the SJ tunes, already there on tape, into the final form in which they were to go into Bobby or Satyam Shivam Sundaram or Prem Rog or any other RK movie.In fact, more than once, Raj Kapoor wanted Laxmikant-Pyarelal to utilise, in a RK movie, the Jaikishen tune that was ready at hand in the format of Sun Sahiba Sun. But each time LP shied away, since by that time, this duo came to RK with Bobby in 1973, it had already its own distinct identity as a composer team. The break with LP therefore, when it did come finally, after Prem Rog, came late. It was inevitable that, at some point, LP should have moved away from the idea of merely impersonating SJ at RK.Why then did Raj move away from Shanker after Kal Aaj Aur Kal, if it was merely the SJ way he wanted the RK music to be shaped? The reason was personal. At a time when Raj Kapoor was reeling under the plus half-crore loss he had incurred on Mera Naam Joker, Shanker had mindlessly pushed the cause of Sharda for a song in Kal Aaj Aur Kal. And the song, Kisi Ke Dil Ko Sanam, was certainly there when we saw it at the press show, but was later scrapped from certain prints to teach Shanker a lesson. Intelligence was never Shanker's strong point. Otherwise in the wake of Barsaat, he would have considered going solo. Hasrat, then teaming with him, insists that Shanker full of composing beans, toyed with the thoughts of going solo sans Jaikishan, but had to give up the idea when he saw that the film trade would only buy the name - Shanker-Jaikishen.Sharda even today maintains that one of Lata's conditions to sing again for RK(the melody queen's voice was not to be heard in Mera Naam Joker and Kal Aaj Aur Kal) was that Laxmikant-Pyarelal should replace Shanker for the music of Bobby. Raj Kapoor was not the one to submit to such conditions, of course, but the fact remains that he was under severe pressure at the time, after Kal Aaj Aur Kal had merely compounded the staggering losses sustained on Mera Naam Joker.Shailendra was gone by then(1970) and this meant that Raj Kapoor now tuned that much less with Shanker. When Jaikishen too went the Shailendra way in late 1971, even the one RK composer who vibed with Randhir Kapoor, Raj's RK heir, was gone. Plus with Bobby, Raj had decided to banish, not only himself as a hero, but also his "soul", Mukesh. He was out to recreate the Nargis-Raj aura through a younger Nargis, in the nymphet shape of Dimple, and a younger Raj Kapoor, in the fledgling form of Rishi Kapoor.
From the earliest days, I have been interested in music. In fact, my first ambition was to be a music director. I even sang in my earlier films like "Chitchor", "Chitor Vijay", "Jail Yatra" and "Gopinath".In our country, our whole existence, our lifestyles, our cultural fabric is wedded to music. Our life, our birth is wedded to music. Our death is wedded to a lament, which is also a music. Our rituals, our gods, our goddesses, everything is music, is music, is music....Where words fail, it is music that conveys much more than all words put together
Such a setting, as Raj viewed , it also needed a younger pair of music-maker whom he could guide to keep heartbeat with the young lovers. Thus did Laxmikant-Pyarelal come to realise their life's ambition of erasing the name of SJ from RK. Ironically, it was Mukesh, out of the Bobby singing picture, who brought LP in, pleading that if the duo now failed to show the gumption to take over from Shanker, the honour would go t a rival composer, since Raj had already made up his mind on a change.For all that, when LP themselves lost favour with Raj after Prem Rog, the moment was ripe, music buffs felt, for Raj Kapoor to do the thing that would hurt his duo the most - resurrect Shanker. Any bitterness between Raj and Shanker was by then past. In fact, Shanker's first reaction, when early in 1973 he had heard that LP were to do Bobby, was to assert that let them come into the music sanctum of RK, for now the world would know who was the better composer: SJ or LP! Shanker was as naive as that. He had finally to be told that, not only was he out of RK's Bobby, he was not wanted for RK's Dharam Karam either, since the film's young director, Randhir Kapoor, tuned out with the Teesri Kasam bullock-cart era, but with the jet age representated by R.D. Burman.So Shanker never turned to RK and Raj Kapoor was seen to feel intensely for the man on his death, as he made a personal appearance in Bombay TV's Chhaya Geet to pay his salad-day's composer a touching tribute. Actually, Ram Teri Ganga Maili had been a musical subject right up Shanker's alley. But the film came to be done by Ravindra Jain and, in assessing the music, you could not argue against the show-world maxim of nothing succeeds like success.But Ravindra Jain and Laxmikant-Pyarelal, they came only later, the men to give RK music shape and substance were Shanker-Jaikishan. Raj Kapoor wanted this duo for his very first film, Aag, but had to submit to the will of his father, Prithviraj, and make do with stage composer Ram Ganguly. Now Aag may have been the first film to fix the vocals of Mukesh on RAj Kapoor through a sonorous unforgettable like Zinda hoon s tarah ki gam-e-zindagi nahin, but the rest of the film score, while popular enough, moved very much with the ambit of tradition. Na aankhon mein aansoo, Kahee koyal shor machaye re, Dil toot gaya jee chhot gaya, Raat ko ji chamken taare, Kahin ka deepak kahin ki baati(as vocalised by Shamshad Begum, Mukesh and Shailesh) could have been songs belonging to any film of the time, there was nothing distinctly Raj Kapoorian about them.SJ maintained that they put in a lot of work on Aag, but I cannot buy this, since Shamshad Begum has told me that, for every single song of hers in the film, she was personally rehearsed by Ram Ganguly. Just as I could not go along with Shanker when he said that Jagte Raho was originally offered to SJ, but they refused, seeing that the theme had scant scope for music. Since Jagte Raho was to be made in Bengali and Hindi from the outsets by stage stalwarts Shombu Mitra and Amit Moitra, it stood to reason that the choice of composer, even by Raj Kapoor, would be someone in the creative mould of Salil Chowdhury.Of Raj, it has been said that he wove the Melody of Life into his films. Interwoven into the fabric of this Melody of Life was a rare visual rhythm that Raj could strike only with Barsaat. It is this visual rhythm, running like a golden thread through his films from Barsaat to Ram Teri Ganga Maili, that came vividly to mind, as Lata revealed at the HMV function how, after recording the first song of Barsaat, Jiya Beqarar hai, all of them - herself, Raj Kapoor and the entire RK unit - came out of the Famous Recording Studio at Tardeo and sat down by the streetside wondering what was going to happen to the song, to Barsaat, to RK. As Lata said this, Raj nodded mistily.
As one critic observed, Raj Kapoor poured every ounce of his inspiration and creative energy into the shaping of the music of his film. He knew exactly what he wanted from his composers, lyricists and singers. He would coax and cajole, badger and pummel his team and call it a day only when hehad got the songs perfect, the tune right, the words correct, the orchestra right and the recording flawless.Then he would lie back and start thinking of a hundred different ways of bringing that song to life on the screen.
If, Jiya beqarar hai, as written by Hasrat to Shanker's tune, betrays, in its interlude music, traces of Husnlal-Bhagatram as Shanker's mentor, these were the only familiar notes that your ears picked up in the music score of Barsaat. Right from the Barsaat mein (the second song recorded for the film as tuned by Jaikishen and written by Shailendra) down to other Lata evergreens (like Hava mein udata jaaye, Meri aankhon mein bas gaya koi re, Bichhde huye pardesi, O O O O mujhe kisi se pyar ho gaya and Ab mera kaun sahara), it was something totally new in film music that you heard in Barsaat, while Bhairavi as its strong undercurrent. This lends credence to Raj's stated view that it was he who had shaped SJ in the Bhairavi strain, starting from Barsaat.Raj Kapoor,by the same token, was entitled to his view(a view endorsed by Lata) that any music SJ made for him, even for films not starring him, was RK music! After all, RK was SJ's base camp. It is from this base camp that the duo climbed dizzy heights to become the first music directors, in the history of the film industry, to charge Rs. 5 Lakhs for a film. My gut point is, while was Rk was SJ's alma mater, it never became a mental crutch in the duo's style of functioning. Like true freelancers, SJ stepped out of RK and dazzlingly proved themselves. Even while doing so, every time they returned to their base camp, RK, they came up with an excitingly fresh stock of tunes. this is where the perspective listeners saw the ever creative conducting hand of Raj Kapoor in operation.It was Raj Kapoor's vision that conceptualised the dream sequence in Awara, of course. When asked who, Shanker or Jaikishen, score dthe famous dream sequence number, Raj replied that both had a hand in it. The truth came to me in a strange way. Suraiya told me that she had a record of the famous egyptian singer, Om Kulsum, which Nargis wanted to hear. So Suraiya sent it to Nargis through their common hairdresser, Mary. As Mary entered RK, who should espy the record Shanker, sitting there! Shanker took the record from MAry, played it and instantly ang his Raj Saab, to convey the glad tidings that he had found the tune for the famous dream sequence for Awaara!That is how, one supposes, Shanker came to fashion the arrestingly orchestrated Tere Bin aag yeh chaandni part of the Awaara dream sequence, with Jaikishen conjuring up the ghar aaya mera pardesi section. That is how Shanker and Jaikishen came to be two glittering sides of the same box-office coin. But the man who shaped their style and technique was Raj Kapoor. SJ would have remained mere tunesmith if Raj Kapoor, as a versatile musician himself, had not demonstrated to them that any music they composed had to be visual music, music that could be imaginatively filmed. That is why Shanker's claim that it was he who showed Goody Seervai how SJ wanted the accordion played in Awaara hoon is neither here nor there. It is known that the original Awara hoon tune was Jaikishen's brainwave. But at some point, Shanker too invevitably came into it-like Jaikishen habitually came into any Shanker tune. And then, at the most vital point, Raj Kapoor himself stepped in. And it was only after Raj so stepped in that the oral music of Awara could take form and meaning as Aa jaao tadapte hain armaan, Hum tujh se mohabbat kar ke sanaam, Dum bhar jo udhar munh phere, Jab se balaam ghar aaye, and Ek bewafa se pyar kiya. Nor were these the only tunes SJ composed for Awara or any other RK film. There were ever so many other tunes that passed into RK's taped stock, being visually not quite right at that point.
It is on this RK treasure-trove that Raj Kapoor kept drawing to the end. That is how you find, as early as in 1953, in Aah the original tune of Jaane Kahaan gaye woh din in the film's background score! At other times, it worked in reverse. In Shree 420, for instance, after Nargis and Raj have enacted Pyar hua ikraar hua, you hear, in the background scoring the tune of Chhoti si yeh zindagani re!
What a shame we could not get to view this Chhoti se yeh tune fully(as sung and enacted by Mukesh himself on the screen) when we sat down to watch Aah(with its absurd reshot ending) on TV recently. At some point after Aah, SJ decided, in view of the grooming quantum of work, that Shanker would do all the dance compositions and Jaikishan would do all the background scoring in the duo's films. In Aah itself, contrast the flamboyance of Shanker's orchestration in Jhanana jhanana jhanana jhanana ghungarva baaje with Jaikishan's soft-as-a-whisper tuning of Yeh shaam ki tanhaiyaan. Here are two Aah tunes that we are in a osition to pinpoint as either Shanker's or Jaikishen's. Okay, again in Aah, Raaja ki aayegi baraat was by Shanker and Sunte the naam hum by Jaikishan. But this identification exercise is pointless, since the Unseen Hand behind each Aah tune from Jaane na nazar to Jo main jaanti unke liye, Raat andheri door savera to Aa jaa re, was Raj Kapoor's. Not a note could be recorded until his Unseen Hand had first played it out in his mind.The notes, enrapturing as they were could not prevent Aah from coming a nasty cropper at the turnstiles. This was a great setback for Raj, since he had planned his next, Boot Polish, as a songless film in the noe-realistic de Sica style. The failure of Aah certainly shook Raj Kapoor, since reshooting the film's ending had only made matters worse. So now, as Raj sat down to view Boot Polish(as directed by his assistant, Prakash Arora), the aspect that the film presented was a documentary.Now this fact is little known - that all the musical situations in Boot Polish were created after the full film had been shot! For the first time at RK, the thing went in reverse- the songs were not written into the films script.It is this amazing context that you have to view Boot Polish again to see how, within a month, Raj extracted, out a SJ, a music which he , by skilful surgery, fitted into the film. Raat gayi phir din aata hai, Thehar zara O jaane waale, Nanhe munne bachche teri mutthi mein kya hai, Chali kaun se des gujariya(picturised tellingly on the man who wrote it Shailendra), Tumhare hai tum se dua maangte hai, Lapak jhapak, tu aa re badarva, Main baharon ki natkhat rani-were integrated into the texture of Boot Polish after the film was shot and ready.
Only the genius of Raj Kapoor could have worked it thus to turn Boot Polish into a hit that neutralised the losses suffered from Aah. If someone were to tell you today that the way Baby Naaz sings in Boot Polish to David(John chacha tum kitne achche) was an afterthought of Raj Kapoor's, would you believe it?That is why, where the man "envisioning" it all is Raj Kapoor, I attach no value to my belated knowledge that, in Shree 420, almost all the songs, ranging from Mera joota hai japani, Dil ka haal sune dilwaala, Pyar hua ikraar hua, ichak daana beechak daana and Ramaiyya vastvaiyya, were the handiwork of Shanker. to me, it is just an accident that Raj happened to pick up more tunes from Shanker-Jaikishan in this film.To me, Jaikishan's one Shree 420 creation, O jaane wale mud ke zara dekhte jaana, is symbolic of the very best of SJ at RK. To me, if Shankar admitted no superiority, Jaikishan brooked no equality. Shaping a Shree420 number like Mud mud ke na dekh was a childs play for Jaikishan, since it was a tune in glamorous accord with the Gaylord lifestyle.RAj Kapoor himself initially wanted to be a music director. As to Lata, so to me, therefore, Raj Kapoor himself will remain the Grand Music Director of all his RK Films, with Sj his two conducting hands. Yes, the Great Showman was the Great Conductor too. Raj was the dreamer. Sj were merely the executors of his musical will. But Raj sadly also became a prisoner of his own musical image. Thus the moment listeners heard Zindagi khwab hai on Radio Ceylon, they logically expected the number to go on Raj in Jagte Raho. When therefore Zindagi khwab hai materialised on Motilal, Jagte Raho a super film. stood rejected at the outset itself. The high Bhairavi note on which the film ended, with Nargis putting over Jagoo Mohan Pyare like Dilip Kumar's Jogan, was not how the public had seen Nargis and Raj Kapoor in the 14 films in which the two had co-starred in a row before Jagte Raho.The ideal in Jagte Raho, of Nargis alone being able to quench Raj Kapoor's thirst in the end, was therefore given, by the public, a crude interpretation that made Salil Chowdhary almost an interloper at RK. Lost, on such a crassly commercial audience, was the authenticity of his bhangda. Aeven duniya deve duhaii, and his artistry of composition in Thandi Thandi pawan ki puhar and Lo shay wai-wai. How could the public ever accept the idea of a film in which Raj Kapoor, the Eternal Tramp with a song in his heart, did not sing at all! Such a film, if revealing Raj Kapoor as a peerless actor, could only be an award-winner, not a crowd puller.After the trauma of Jagte Raho, Ab Dilli Dur Nahin was an RK show in which Raj Kapoor lost all interest the moment he came to know that the initial offer made to him, to project Chacha Nehru as the star of the children's show, stood withdrawn by New Delhi. SJ's assistant Dattaram, took a flying start with Ab Dilli Dur Nahin, coming up with such catchy kiddy numbers as Chun Chun karti aaye chidiya, O maata and Yeh chaman hamara apna hai, but Raj Kapoor's heart was not in the film as directed by his assistant, Amar Kumar. Probablt the fact that Ab Dilli Dur Nahin's making coincided with his break with Nargis had something to do with Raj's apathy. The end result was that Ab Dilli....made no waves.This was a crisis point in Raj Kapoor's life. He had now to convince his distributors that he could be as effective a romantic opposite the far-from-mini Padmini as opposite Nargis. How Raj Kapoor went to renew his faith in his own brand of cinema with first Padmini in Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hain and then with Vyjayanthimala in Sangam is by now part of our filmlore. Such a folk-hero was Raj Kapoor a long as he stuck to the simpleton mantle, that even his weird idea of dacoits reform went musically across in Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hai. This was also the film in which Jaikishan proved that he was capable of matching his Chori-Chori classic. Rasik Balama, with something so profound as O basanti pawan paagal.
I do not say that I compose music, but i conduct it. I get my music done the way I visualise it - at what particular moment the woodwinds should flow, at what intensity and volume the percussion....now THAT is the art of conducting.
So it definitely has a very distinct quality about it, no matter who the composer is or who the writer.
Shanker for his part. as is now well known, did not want to do his dacoit film at all. What is not so well known is how Raj brought him around. At RK, the tune had always come first, the words after, since that was Raj's style of audio-vision. But now, to get a stubborn Shanker going, Raj had Shailendra pen down the opening stanza of Honton pe sachchai rehti hai first. And then asked Shanker whether such poetic words, evoking the flow of Ganga, did not really offer him any musical scope. The composer in Shanker was stirred and this musician's musician tuned the theme song of Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hai on the spot. The other near theme-song in the film, Mera Naam Raju, was equally evocatively tuned by Jaikishan and the musical pace for the dacoits, with Padmini as their peach of a prize, had been set. The wild Ho maine pyar kiya abandon that Padmini brought to her dancing, the equal lack of physical inhibition surrounding her enaction of Kya hua yeh mujhe kya hua, gave the film's music a romantic impetus by which key situational numbers in it, like Hai aag hamaare seene mein and Aa Ab Laut Chalen, came to be readily accepted in Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hai.After that, the rest of the RK's music, from Sangam to Ram Teri Ganga Maili, is still so fresh in th public eye and ear that it needs no detailed recap. Only, by the time Sangam came and went, Sharda had arrived to knock the hyphen out of Shankar-Jaikishan. It had been for long Shankar's plaint that Ameen Sayani, after acting fair in the Mera Joota hai Japani days, had began playing a Binaca Geetmala Game of his own by which Jaikishan always upstaged Shanker, come Wednesday! Ameen's plea was that he, like the public, could not tell a Shankar tune from a Jaikishan's tune - as far as he was concerned, it was all "Shanker Jaikishan's Sangeet"!Now matters really came to a head, as Ameen Sayani gave preference, in Binaca Geetmala, to Jaikishan's Yeh mera prem patra padhkar, over Shanker's Dost dost na raha in Sangam. The fact that Jaikishan had unwittingly, in a signed Filmfare article, identified Yeh mera prem patra as composed by him, had infuriated Shanker further since, according to him, it broke a lifetime pact by which neither composer would publicly identify a tune as either Shanker's or Jaikishan's. Shanker maintained that Yeh mera prem patra was not a patch on Dost dost na raha as a composition and that Ameen Sayani was clearly playing favourites. So Shanker approached the sponsors of Binaca Geetmala and got all important pehla paidaan-doosra paidan distinction in it abolished. That killed Binaca Geetmala effectively as 'a Wednesday must' for us listeners.As for the film itself, the Vyjayanthimala-Raj Kapoor emotional involvement gave a rare edge to Sangam and its songs, especially to Bol Radha Bol as composed by Jaikishan. Now even this was another change of pace at RK - till then, Shanker had composed all the title tunes, while in Sangam it was Jaikishan's Mere man ki ganga that Raj had okayed as the film's theme song. Maybe this piqued Shanker no end, for I recall Mukesh telling me that practically all his theme songs for SJ were done by Shanker. But now it could be Jaikishan here, too, in a Raj Kapoor film - as exemplified by Main Aashiq hoon Bahaaron ka(in Aashiq).After that came joker and disaster. There was no romance left in Raj Kapoor's life any longer - both Padmini and Vyjayanthimala ahd gone out of it. And Raj Kapoor, it had been crystal clear, could breathe romantic life into his music only so long as he had a affair going. It therefore came as no surprise when Raj Kapoor, already balanced precariously on the circus swings(seeing that he had lived for five years in the RK studios with his narcissistic image of Mera Naam Joker), just came down in a heap.Yet there was nothing wrong with SJ's music in his magnum opus for all the intrusions of Sharda as the rift in the lute. If Shankar created Jaane Kahaan gaye woh din, JAikishan matched it with Jeena Yahaan Marna Yahaan. Even Neeraj assumed the Shailendra garb effectively enough in Shanker's Kehta Hai joker and Ae bhai jara dekh ke chalo. If Jaikishan's Daag na lag jayee had a rare cadence, so did Shanker's Kaate na kate raina. Only, it was Asha singing in place of Lata! And for all the virtousityof Asha, Lata's absence was somehow seen as making all the difference in the end. Especially in the light of the way RK's fortunes were revieved the moment Lata returned with her vocals for Bobby!SJ's last beat at RK had now been sounded in Kal Aaj Aur Kal by Jaikishan as Tik tik tik tik tik tik. Thus in came LP with Bobby. But for me, Rk music ceases to be RK music sans SJ. Call it my bias, if you like, but it is a bias. I know that is shared by thousands of listeners all over India. How can you possibly try to sit down and analyse LP's own admission, they were merely required to be musical reincarnation of SJ at RK?When Raj Kapoor himself maintained that by 1972, he already had on tape all the music that he needed for RK movies, that he merely wanted the aid of a music conductor to help him put it together again, let us leave the RK record at that. If the shower of melody that began with Barsaat retained its mellifluent flow right down to Ram Teri Ganga Maili, the baton of that flow was wielded by Raj Kapoor himself. And that is one baton that cannot be handed on - RK's musical mainsprings dried up the moment Raj Kapoor breathed his tuneful last."

TRIBUTE TO SHANKAR JAIKISHAN–(Episode:14•)-Shankar Jaikishan were such piller, whoever came went inside them thru their songs

Chandra Gopal Shroti's Tribute to SJ (13th Episode)
(Courtesy : Shri Gopal Shroti's blog
http://gopalshroti.wordpress.com
TRIBUTE TO SHANKAR JAIKISHAN–14•THE film world is a very strange one, where to establish an image, the hero or heroin has to take the support of some piller……Shankar Jaikishan were such piller, whoever came went inside them thru their songs to find out/establish his/her image. ….and THIs SINGLE CREDIT GOES ONLY TO S-J who made several actors/actresses as STARS, AND THEY WENT ON TO BE CALLED SILVER JUBILEE/GOLDEN JUBILEE STARS……..LET US SEE SOME EXAMPLES:-
NUTAN in NAGINA(tu ne hay mere zakhme jigar ko chhoo liya, door hun main teri dunia se, kyun chhua daman mera…..tu ne…), madhubala in BADAL (do din ke liye mehman yahan, maloom nahin manzil hai kahan), beena roy in KALI GHATA (halle bele aare….),david in BOOT POLISH(LAPAK JHAPAK TU AA RE BADARWA, SIR KI KHETI SOOKH RAHI HAI………PANGHAT SE BHAR LA SAKHI RI….LA….P..AK J…HHA.P..A.K). DILIP KUMAR IN DAAG (ai mere dil kahin aur chal), bharat bhushan in BASANT BAHAR..(SUR NA SAJE KYA GAUN MAIN, SUR KE BINA JEEVAN SOONA…..) AGAIN dilip kumar in YAHUDI (YE MERA DEEWANAPAN HAI, YA MUHABBAT KA SUROOR), balraj sahni in SEEMA (tu pyar ka sagar hay, teri ek boond ke pyase ham…..lauta jo diya tu ne, chale jayenge jahan se ham….tu..) , rajendra kumar in SASURAL (TERI PYARI PYARI SOORAT KO KISHI KI NAZAR NA LAGE…..CHASHME..BADDOOR….), SHAMMI KAPOOR IN JUNGLEE (YAAAAAHOOOOOOO-CHAHE KOI MUJHE JUNGLEE KAHE….) AND BEFORE THIS THE CHARLI CHAPLIN IMAGE OF RAJ IN ”AAWARA”(AAWARA HOON…).
It is not possible to complete their contribution in one or two essays. WITH A CURSORY LOOK IF WE GO THRU THE……..BARASAAT,AAWARA, BADAL, KALIGHATA, POONAM, MAYUR PANKH, DAAG, PATITA,SHIKAST, BADSHAH, BOOT POLISH,SEEMA SHRI 420, CHORI CHORI, NAI DILLI, PATRANI, BASANT BAHAR, RAJHATH,HALAKU,KATHPUTLI, BEGUNAH(BANNED), YEHOODI, SHARARAT, UJALA, KANHAIYA, CHHOTI BAHEN, MAIN NASHE MEIN HOON, DIL APNA AUR PREET PARAI, AASHIQ, ASLI NAQLI, DIL EK MANDIR, SANGAM, SAANJH AUR SAVERA, HARIYALI AUR RASTA, SANGAM, AARJU, AAMRAPALI,LOVE IN TOKYO, TEESRI KASAM, SURAJ ETC ETC, WE FEEL THAT THESE AND INNUMERABLE OTHERS WERE HITS BECAUSE OF S-J’ MUSIC……WHO WILL FORGET THE IMMORTAL SONGS OF THESE AND MANY OTHER FILMS…..e.g…….meri aakhon me bas gaya koi re (barsat), ai khushi ki hay raat, balam mere saath.., tu ne hay mere(nagina), ek bewafa se pyar kiya, aa jao tadpate hain armma, (aawara), hamse na poochho koi pyar kya hay, poochho bahar se(kali ghata), chanda ki chandni mein jhoomen jhoomen del mera (poonam), preet ye kaisi bol ri duniya(daag), ulfat ka saaj chhedo, sama(, suhana hay, jalwe bhi naach uthe, dil ka tarana hai. -AAURAT, TERA TEER O BE PEER DIL KE AAR PAAR HAY.–SHARARAT, AA JA KE INTAZAR ME, JAANE KO HAI BAHAAR BHI, TERE BAGAR ZINGI DARD BAN KE RAH GAI–HALAKU…..NAKHARE WALI, WO TO KOI AUR THI JO AAKHON SE SAMA GAI DIL MEIN–NAI DILLI, KABHI TO AA, O SAPNO MEIN AAKE CHALE JAANE WALE…..(PATRANI), YE WADA KARO CHHAND KE SAAMNE(RAJHATH), BOL RI KATHPUTLI, BAKAD BAM BAM BAM BAM BAAJY DAMROO(KATHPUTLI), MERI JAAN MERI JAAN PYAAR KISI SE HO HI GAYA HAY HAM KYA KAREN(YAHUDI)….THESE ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF THE THUNDERSTORM CAME WITH SHANKAR JAIKISHAN’S THUNDORUS ORCHESTRATION……THE SINGLE TWO MAN(DUO) HOLDING THE FILM WORLD IN THEIR FIST FOR TWO DECADES…….TO CONTINUE (
gshroti@gmail.com)
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Wednesday, October 8, 2008

A DHOLAK MASTER BECOMES MUSIC DIRECTOR…….




Chandra Gopal Shroti's Tribute to SJ (13th Episode)


(Courtesy : Shri Gopal Shroti's blog http://gopalshroti.wordpress.com



Raj Kapoor was to launch ”AB DILLI DOOR NAHIN”, in which a boy goes to Delhi to meet CHACHA NEHRU, against the injustice done to his father. when the subject of music came before the team, SHANKAR AIKISHAN suggested themselves the name of their disciple/asstt.MD, DATTARAM. Raj had no doubts about the talent of Dattaram, but still suspicious and cud not announce the name of music director of the said film at that time.
IN between came HOLI and RK STUDIO’s holi was famous and most of the film stars, directors, producers used to play holi there. and SITARA DEVI’s performance was a great event. however, at that time dancers were there but Dholak player was singular and he played that sort of the ’saaz’, that Raj had nothing but full praise of the person in the words ”oh my friend, u did wonder today and i am very happy. ask, what u want”. it was Dattaram and without losing the chance he prayed Raj to allow him to give music independently. Raj saab called him next day in his studio, where S-J were also present. Raj agreed on his request, but told him that he will do this under the supervision of S-J. what more Dattaram wanted. S-J were his Guru. ……S-J told Raj Kapoor, that Dattaram has had several tunes with him, which he composed himself. Raj asked to let him listen any of his tunes. Dattaram played the Dhun of ”ye chaman hamara apna hai” and Raj liked the tune and he became sure that DATTARAM has the capacity to give music independently.
THE songs’ situations were selected and Shailendra and Hasrat were assigned to write the songs on those tunes for ‘AB DILLI DOOR NAHIN’. then and there Hasrat wrote on one tune ”chun chun karti aai chidiya, dal ka dana lai chidiya” and everybody liked the song. and Dattaram added the voices of the animals, which were named in the song. ”haati bhi aaya, mor bhi aaya, chooha bhi aaya, bandar bhi aaya” and the song the children liked so much with elders as well, that the radio played thousands of time and still it gives the freshness of the childhood………(to continue) …..(
gshroti@in.com)….