Gulshan Bawra
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Originally posted by: vinnie-thepooh
donno yaar,I have sent a PM to Bhaskar to check the allingnment for me.
Kar diya. PM kiya thha but no reply so took some time to get the HTML settings done.
I think now it's okay....
Originally posted by: Bhaskar.T
Kar diya. PM kiya thha but no reply so took some time to get the HTML settings done.
I think now it's okay....
😛,sorry and Thanxxx😊😳
Yeh Vaada Raha | |
Cast: Poonam Dhillon, Rakesh Roshan, Rishi Kapoor, Sarika, Tina Munim |
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Down the memory lane with Gulshan Bawra | |
By Screen Weekly, July 9, 2007 - 09:35 IST | |
He has penned only 250 songs in a career spanning 49 years, yet his is a name to reckon with. That is because Gulshan Bawra has always struck a chord with his lyrics. Whether it was the patriotic fervour of 'Mere desh ki dharti sona ugle…'/Upkar, the teen spirit of carefree romance in 'Khullam khulla pyar karenge hum dono…' /Khel Khel Mein or the song that eulogized friendship - 'Yaari hai imaan mera yaar meri zindagi…' /Zanjeer, Bawra set you humming… On a drizzly monsoon afternoon, the popular poet glides down memory lane… Gulshan Bawra lives high up in the clouds, on the tenth floor in the posh locality of Pali Hill, Bandra in Mumbai. However, he's very much a down-to-earth person, "I am contented with what life has given me," says the 68-year-old lyricist. But of late he has come out of his self-imposed hibernation to release untold stories, an album on the making of songs with R D Burman. Busy talking to television cameras about his departed friend Pancham, he says his life has been full of coincidences that he views as "divine intervention". Witnessing TRAGEDY Imagine an eight-year old witnessing the killing of his parents and then fleeing for his life from strife-torn Pakistan! Young Gulshan Mehta did just that in the small town of Sheikhpura near Lahore during the Partition riots. But his survival instinct saw him through all the trying times. "My mother was shot through her head and father was slashed with swords," he recalls vividly, "Wounded physically and mentally, my brother and I hid in the fields for some days and finally joined a caravan travelling back to India. We reached Jaipur in military trucks and sought refuge in the house of our married sister. Soon my brother found a job in Delhi and we moved there. I passed my matriculation from there," he relates. Mehta becomes 'Bawra' Gulshan and his brother were always hard up for money, so as soon as he could, Gulshan applied for a job in the railways. He topped the interview and stood first among 900 candidates and was posted to Kota. But as luck would have it there was no vacancy for him in Kota so he was appointed the goods clerk at the railway godown in Mumbai. "I started writing poetry since I was six years old. I would accompany my mother Vidyavati for community bhajan sessions and often compose my own lines there," he reminisces, "From devotional, my verses turned romantic as I reached college," he adds with a chuckle. Upon reaching Mumbai, Gulshan saw a big opportunity for his lyrics and thus began his struggle in the film industry, "I would walk down from my office in Masjid Bunder to Kalyanji-Anandji's music room in Girgaum. Somehow they appreciated my work and so did Ravindra Dave, the producer-director of Meena Kumari-Balraj Sahni starrer Satta Bazar. He insisted on using one of my songs although he already had Shailendra and Hasrat writing songs for the film. During the recording of my first song 'Chandi ke chand tukdon ke liye…' , Bombay distributor Shantibhai Dave refused to believe that a 19-year-old 'bawra' (seemingly lost) could write lyrics of such depth. Since then I became Gulshan Bawra," he narrates. Struggle for stardom Living in the far-flung suburb of Oshiwara required travelling a long distance and the last bus happened to be at 8.30 pm which they would invariably miss and then trudge it up or down to Andheri station. "Dharmendra, Manoj Kumar, Prakash Mehra, Satyen Chowdhary and I were co-strugglers. We would visit producers' offices and in the night hit out for the country liquor bar in Yari Road, miss the last bus and then walk back all the way," he recalls bemusedly. Dharmendra would wait for his money- order from home and the day he received it, "would guzzle 20 glasses of sweet-lime juice at Andheri station." Gulshan knew Manoj Kumar from Delhi and their friendship stood him in good stead later in life. "As the goods clerk, I would marvel at the sacks and sacks of golden wheat that came in from Punjab, inspired by the bounty of the land I wrote an ode to it - 'Mere desh ki dharti sona ugle ugle heere moti…' then. Years later when Manoj had become a hero and I recited these lines to him, he just leapt for joy and said he would use them in his film Upkaar," Bawra relates. Acting Stint Gradually, Bawra spent more time off his railway job, writing new lyrics and doing the rounds of production houses. "In '61, the Railways sent me a cheque of Rs 450 as my Provident Fund. I was attending office only five days in a month. After that I never went back there," he informs. But those were the days when the industry was choc-a-bloc with celebrity lyricists like Rajendra Kishen, Majrooh Sultanpuri, Indeevar and Shailendra, and in such a scenario a greenhorn like Bawra was literally feeling lost. "I had no writing work for the next three years, I made ends meet playing bit roles in films. Right from my first film as a lyricist, I was fated to face the camera. Ravindra Dave, the maker of Satta Bazar told me that he would use my songs only on the condition that I played the comedian in the film. I did so reluctantly," says Bawra. Soon he was playing several small roles. He also played the pivotal part of the villain in the first Punjabi film in colour Shashi Punnu, a film that won Punjab it's very first National Award. "Shot in the golden sand dunes of Jaisalmer, the film was a roaring hit," he says emphatically. Acting always helped him survive rough weather even after his marriage to his Sindhi neighbour Anju - his acting fees kept the home fires burning. Cheers, Pancham! But the lyricist in him was not to be undermined, and he kept rearing his poetic head time and again. In '67 old buddy Manoj Kumar used his fabled patriotic song, 'Mere desh ki dharti…', which became an instant hit and also lifted several awards much to the distress of arch- rival Anand Bakshi. Film lore has it that Bakshi placed an embargo on Bawra preventing R D Burman from working with Bawra. But as Bawra's luck would have it Randhir Kapoor had taken a great liking for Bawra's meaningful verses from his film Haath Ki Safai. "Dabboo recommended me to Pancham (R.D.) for his film Khalifa. But Pancham was reluctant to take me on. He worked in a manner that you had to write lyrics as per his tune, to the metre of his notations. Pancham gave me such a mismatched mukhda and antara metre that I should have thrown my hands up in despair, but with God's grace I was able to accomplish this impossible task set before me. Next day when Ashaji was rehearsing, she called Pancham and fired him for the disarranged mukhda-antara and then he admitted to her that he was trying hard to shake me off his back. Ashaji admonished him for compromising on good music and made him rework the antara," he remembers the not-so-great beginning of their hit pairing. Pancham summoned Bawra that night, gave him the right metre and made him rewrite the verses. "Had he called me 10 minutes later, I wouldn't have been able to write because at 8.30 sharp I pick up my whisky peg and then I don't touch my pen! Pancham said cheers to that and brought out pegs of whisky," Bawra recalls fondly. Commanding his price with pride The winning twosome scored great hits together and in the days to come they became inseparable. Bawra wrote 69 songs for Kalyanji-Anandji as compared to 150 for R D Burman. "Ramesh Behl of Rose Movies, Rakesh Roshan, Randhir Kapoor and Pancham were my friends from the film industry. Irrespective of hits and flops, we ate, drank, sang and made merry," he discloses. "What made our pair click was the fact that we had a great tuning. I knew that flowery language wouldn't work with Pancham, I had to write simple, direct, free flowing verses for him. Like 'Humne tumko dekha, tumne humko dekha…' from Khel Khel Mein, which was such a big hit," he reasons. With several hits - Rafoo Chakkar, Haath Ki Safai, Yeh Vaada Raha, Sanam Teri Kasam, Agar Tum Na Hote and Satte Pe Satta, Bawra commanded the highest billing in his day. "I never compromised on my price because God was kind to me. I had the luck and lesser responsibilities as I have no children to fend for," he concludes. Morning walk, radio and south Indian TV channels Pancham celebrated each and every birthday of his in the lyrical company of Bawra. "From '74 to '93, we had a birthday bash for him on June 27," sighs Bawra. He continued coining verses for Rajesh Roshan in Duniya Meri Jeb Mein and Nishan and then for Anu Malik, but somehow the "tuning" was never quite right. These days Bawra leads a disciplined life - he is up by 5.30 am, an hour-long morning walk and then to pooja, tuning into Worldspace Music's Farishta channel that plays songs from the '40s till '80s and no further. "Guess what I like to watch on the television? I only watch South Indian music channels in the mute mode! I don't want to listen to today's lyrics and spoil my mood," he says with a shrug. Yet, please don't think the Lord of the lyrics has taken voluntary retirement, he's just written a mujra for Alisha Chinnai's latest album and the lyrics of Uttam Singh's 'Suit Boot Mein Aaya Kanhayya...'. "The philosophy of my life has been to be happy and contented, those who are not happy making Rs 5000 will not be happy making Rs 5 crores either. I have a neat apartment in Mumbai's best location and I can afford to serve Black Label today - truly God has been kind to me," he surmises poetically Source: http://www.indiafm.com/features/2007/07/09/2839/index.html |