Evolution in Indian Music:Salil Chaudhury

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Posted: 18 years ago
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This article has been written by Salilda himself and he has given his own point of view on this subject. the original article is in Bengali and was Published in 1959 in a magazine "Sangeetika".

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Evolution in Modern Indian Music

Salil Chowdhury

Against modern Indian music there has been an accusation by a certain select group - that modern Indian music is not Indian at all. Additionally some would be reluctant to concede that it is even music. About this second opinion I withhold any discussion. But as to the comment that modern Indian music is not Indian - that is an intriguing point of view which in my opinion deserves to be discussed. The reason being that this charge has been made by a select and quite influential group of music aficionados. This group is of the firm opinion that: a) modern Indian music does not follow any of the raag note patterns of Indian music, b) this music has none of the characteristics of being typically Indian – in other words Indian folk-music, and c) for accompaniment with this music, it is all too easy to use foreign 'orchestral' music.
We need to keep in mind especially that the above accusation has been made primarily around Indian Film music. It is through Film music that Modern Indian music finds its most popular expression. Among the above mentioned group of critics is a section which has cultivated the strong viewpoint that the melding of Indian music and western music and the joint use of these different styles of music is not possible. A similar view is held even by Aakaashbaani (All India Radio), in whose light classical music department (not denoted as modern music) the harmonium is considered to be an 'untouchable' instrument.
Here I would like to say a few words about that unfortunate instrument, the harmonium.
Developed through a fusion and modification of the 'accordion' and the 'organ', it is by far the most popular musical instrument in India. The use of this instrument is universal; it finds favour from leading exponents of classical Indian music, the lowliest of music students and even the street singer. Thus it has become our national musical instrument. Talented classical musicians (prominent among these being Ustaad Abdul Kareem Khan, Fayyaaz Khan and Akhtari Bai) have given us such disparate styles of music as Thumri, Bhajan, Qawwaali and Gazal; these as well as artists of 'adhunik' (modern) music have and continue to use the harmonium to accompany their music.
I believe that it was Kobiguru Rabindranath (Tagore) who first opined against the use of the harmonium. He understood that a student of music just beginning would become a slave to the fixed chromatic scale of the harmonium and would thus suffer a loss of spontaneity in the expression of melody and voice. The logic of his pronouncement is of course undeniable. However, why it is that the harmonium is condemned for consideration even for the purpose of accompaniment, is beyond my understanding.
It is of course the sole prerogative of the composer to choose the musical instrument that will accompany musical works of his own creation. The 'organ' has been used as such an accompaniment in almost all of the popular gramophone recordings of Rabindrasangeet.
It is my belief that if soft chords (using two or more notes) were to be used in the 'organ' as part of the background music, it would greatly enhance the expressive beauty of RabindraGeeti and make it simpler and more beautiful. But even if today's composer believes that the accompaniment of the 'organ' or the 'harmonium' will enhance the expression of his music, he will be unable to use them. Why ? Because it is a foreign instrument. The destroyer of all that is characteristic of Indian music. In order to accept this premise to be true, we would need to eliminate hundreds of recordings made by artists that we consider to be 'ustaads' in our musical tradition. If these classical artists could conclude that the harmonium helped rather than hindered their musical expression, then why should modern composers not accept the harmonium as accompaniment.
On the other hand Indian instrumental artists (as with the violin) have with the harmonium been quite successful in creating a new kind of sound which is heard nowhere else in the world. I know many such instrumentalists who have achieved such dexterity with the instrument that they can, while maintaining the expressiveness and particular characteristics of Indian music, assert their equality with the world's leading 'accordionists'. It is solely an attitude of 'status quo' and orthodoxy that is responsible for the ban on the 'harmonium' at AakaashBaani. Music composers and artists surely would not ignorantly use this instrument if it did not facilitate their expression of musical beauty.
Although there is no such ban in Film music, here too perhaps only one song in a hundred will use the harmonium, and even then only if the song is by a Baijee (courtesan style) or in Qawwaali style. Oh well, as a result of AakashBaani's animosity towards the harmonium, it is not the harmonium which is losing appeal; rather, it is AakashBaani whose popularity is consistently being eroded. Now let us return to our topic. Before embarking on an extended discussion of the theoretical possibilities resulting from the melding of Indian and western music, it is necessary to assess the practical impact that such a melding has had. Since the last century, just as India has assimilated western culture via its language, arts, dress, etc., so has it absorbed and assimilated the western music in exactly the same way.
A progressive culture is never afraid of foreign influence. Even when an excessiveness of imitation does manifest itself, our culture will ultimately reject it and progress towards an all encompassing unity. The long history of India is full of accounts of our defeats at the hands of foreigners and tales of their reigns. However none were successful in uprooting our civilization and culture and sowing the seeds of foreign influence in our soil; rather, India has always managed to enhance its own greatness by absorbing what's good in them.
Then followed the age of British rule. The Indian mind was especially attracted to the western way of thinking. European culture and its influence on Indian literature and art found an appropriate expression in the age of the Renaissance of Bengal.
In the field of literature, in Kobiguru Rabindranath, we found the joint expression of both cultures and in painting it was Abanindranath. In music, though the analogy is not that straightforward, the influence of western music is none the less present in a similar way. We will discuss this later. But as to the question of whether it is possible to meld Indian music with western music, we have already found the answer in recent times and in the tremendous popularity of ninety-nine percent of 'adhunik' (popular) songs of the last half a century. Proof of this is in the fact that our population has accepted the 'adhunik' songs composed using a successful synthesis of eastern and western melody.
In the creation of art it is not only the personality of the creator (artist) which finds expression; also reflected and evident in it is the contemporary age and the influence of the prevailing environment. Our classical vocal and instrumental artists are themselves the creators of melody. At the moment of delivery, they improvise 'extempore' melody, and based upon the individuality of the artist the same raag/raagini finds unique expression. Despite restrictions on the notes of a raag or raagini, they elicit different expressions of mood according to the moment or time of day. The technique of development of a raag used fifty years ago is not at all the same as the method used today. If you listen to the voice of Ustaad Salaamat Ali elaborating on the raags in 'Darbaari Kanada' or 'Baagesri' you will understand what I want to say. The spontaneous manner in which he uses 'chordal' and 'chromatic' variations in voice while singing the Thumri, I would characterize as a completely modern style, but the purity of raag-based music is present in full measure in it.
In every age, music not only expresses the style of the times, but is also engaged in the creation of new styles. Thus Khayal was created from Dhrupad, and Thumri was created from Khayal, followed by other forms of light music. But the source of all of these musical forms is still the traditional Indian folk music.
The freedom of the individual and freedom of expression that manifested itself towards the end of the nineteenth century has culminated in today's 'adhunik' (modern) music. The inspiration behind this lay in Indian popular music. It is this freedom of expression which has been successful in breaking the narrow bonds of musical grammar, and to enable the use of new instruments such as the violin, clarinet, harmonium and piano.
We acknowledge of course the fact that the attitude to life, viewpoints, aims and ideals of our music composers of today are completely different from their predecessors. The composer of today is trying to express these new values and ideals through the medium of his own musical creations.
Even after a thorough research of the old classical Indian musical forms today's music composer may conclude that these ancient practices, scale patterns, etc. are inadequate for his own expressive needs. The (Indian) Five Year Plans, giant dams under construction, and the succession of new events - all of these might be the subjects of his music, and will naturally require news methods in their expression. He may conclude that in the area of melodic development, only the presence of 'contrapuntal' or 'polyphonic' characteristics will give full flight to his imagination; and in this matter the composer must be given complete freedom and encouragement. No creator (artist) can tell what final form his creation will assume, in other words whether the music will retain a grammatical purity or not. Every art form according to its own needs is changing its form; and the job of the artist is then one of following the art and transforming it into a set of grammatical constraints. As an example we may cite the popular music composed in the second half of the last century and the first part of this century. An analysis of the prevailing times and its historical background shows that these songs echoed the growing desire for freedom from foreign rule, and an increasing development of national consciousness. This national awakening found flaming expression in the form of these songs sung in processions and public gatherings and even behind the barred doors of prison cells.
Among the composers of these songs, Jyotirindranath, D. L. Roy, and later, Rabindranath and Kazi Nazrul Islam created a new style of music. The freedom movement of Bengal also provided inspiration for a new and revolutionary style of music. The population was awakening to national consciousness and yearning to break the chains of foreign rule, so the composers obliged them by composing 'break the chains' songs. These songs which were sung during processional 'marches' were indeed composed in imitation of the western 'marching song' style. Songs such as "Ak Sutre Baandha Aachhi", "Utho Go Bharato Lakkhi", "Bolo Bolo Bolo Sabe", "DhanaDhanye Pushpe Bhara", "Desh Desh Nandito Kori", "Byartho Praaner Abarjana" and others, including our national anthem "Jana Gana Mana Adhinayak" and more than a hundred other songs have been influenced by western music.
Some critics believe that the tunes of the above mentioned songs fall within the ambit of Indian raagas. Their opinion is partially true. Because the ancient creators of our musical system used all possible combinations of the addition and elimination of the twelve basic notes, and denoted these various combinations by different names, it is possible to classify any melody from almost any part of the world as belonging to one of our raag/raagini or 'mixed' raags. It is not enough to consider simply the use of a certain set of notes; the individuality of the melody thus created, as well as its expression and mood must also be judged.
The style of orchestration used in Indian music is also borrowed from the western tradition. The tonal quality and instrumental precision of foreign musical instruments have won the hearts of our people, and these instruments have also made it possible to orchestrate Indian music. Orchestral compositions also include Indian musical instruments. Our instrumental artists have always been careful in improving their style and the quality of their playing. While playing in an orchestra it is vitally important to follow systematically the "registered notation" method. For this reason these artists feel greatly the need for utmost precision in the recording of musical notation, even though we have not yet achieved our desired goal in this matter, and our system of notation is not universally used.
Unfortunately, the western method of "staff notation" has not been found to be so easily usable to our instrumental artists. In the composition of Indian dance music (Ballet Music) I must of course mention the use of orchestral instrumental music by the pioneers Timir Baran and Pandit Bishnudas Shirali, and in this connection also eminently notable is Raichand Boral, who has been extremely successful in composing background music for movies and in creating melodies combining western and Indian instruments to accompany songs. Even without amplifying on the topic of the continuous improvement of Indian 'Orchestral Instrumental Music' it may be said that it has developed in response to new needs. And at the root of this innovation and transformation have always been our music composers. All of the efforts to maintain the integrity of Indian music and to effect its improvement are a source of continual inspiration to me. The efforts of the Indian government to hold classical and popular musical conventions and the institution of systems for conferring certificates and titles upon talented and knowledgeable artists are all steps full of hope in the advancement of Indian music. I feel greatly encouraged when I see that arrangements are being established to preserve our architecture, ancient sculptures, famous art, and handcrafted fine arts creations. But my joy is truly unbounded when I see that new cities are being built and we are progressing rapidly in the fields of arts and science. I believe that present India is carrying forward the legacy of the ancient India. So it is in the area of music. All the compositions of our modern composers contain expressions of the same progress in the music of ancient India.
Our modern composers expect encouragement in this matter from the state and from the people at large. But even if this encouragement is not offered their music will, through a process of trial and error and experimentation, achieve accomplishment and fullness.
There is no need for us to be directed by the traditions of western music. On the other hand in going forward it would also be wrong to tolerate any kind of orthodoxy. I personally believe that Indian music has a great deal to offer to the music of the world because it has a rare depth, dignity, and above all a beauty of mood and expression. Behind all of sophisticated techniques of world music today lies a reflection of the individual. Into this, Indian music will infuse life - by bringing to it a reflection of the soul. Indian music will send a message of peace and tolerance. And this noble responsibility will have to be borne by the modern Indian music composer.
The sources of Indian music are endless and its potentials are without limit. In the past Indian music obtained its inspiration and its ingredients from generations of inherited popular and classical music, as well as from western music. Today, as nations have achieved a much greater degree of closeness and cultural exchange has become so much easier, the opportunity for Indian music to disseminate widely and to expand its vision presents itself.

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Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#2
Barnali Di, Thanks for starting Salil Chowdhury thread.
Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#3
"He Said He Was Mozart Reborn"


What is surprising is that Salil Chowdhury gained popularity without even being really understood.

Papa's girl sings to his tune

He was a naughty man – my father! My brothers are married, so it was mum, my sister and me with dad - three women against one man, he would say and we never let him be. He loved Pan Parag and we would get after him to leave it so he would eat it on the sly.


Aaja ri aa nindiya tu aa…, Jhilmil sitaron se utar aankhon mein aa,

sapne sajaa… - If dewdrops could be rendered in human voice, Lata Mangeshkar did it with this lori she sang in Do Bigha Zameen. And who else but Salil Chowdhury could harvest these dewdrops, weave them into his music strings to form a piece of eternity – yet delicate, so ephemeral that the melody tapped your soul provocatively and vanished before you could even touch it?


The maestro was born in 1925 and would have been all of 75 this year. But he bid his goodbyes on September 5, 1995, and left his musical legacy to wonder at, or analysed and dissected.


Salil Chowdhury, unfortunately, was far ahead than his times permitted. Little wonder, his music bears analysis today and will continue to do so till his listeners can assimilate the subtle synchronisation of western classicism with the most ethnic of Indian melodies and the wonder their merger could produce.


What is surprising is that he gained popularity without even being really understood. Even Lata Mangeshkar has gone on record to exclaim, "I required Mannada (Manna Dey) to help me with Salilda's tunes!"


Today his daughter Antara makes her debut as a solo singer with an album titled Madhur Smriti in which she has most appropriately chosen to sing her father's tunes. Here she walks down memory lane to speak of her illustrious father and his influence over her life.


"Daddy used to say jocularly that he was Mozart reborn, he loved his music so much! It was from him that I got my love for Beethoven and Chopin. For me, he was naturally more a father than a composer. He was a naughty man – my father! My brothers are married, so it was mum, my sister and me with dad - three women against one man, he would say and we never let him be. He loved Pan Parag and we would get after him to leave it so he would eat it on the sly.


He loved to cook and quite impulsive as well. Suddenly he'd say one day, 'Today I'm going to cook!' and we'd say 'Oh God! Now the kitchen will be a mess!' He drooled over non-vegetarian and generally loved to eat. He made deadly biryani and mutton curry. That's what I remember the most about him.


He would go berserk when one of us fell ill - he would keep bringing in one doctor after the other till we became well. But food… that was his single most important obsession! Fried stuff was banned for him. But he wouldn't listen and dug into his favourite fried potatoes with absolute abandon. We have this thing in Calcutta called muri which is dipped in chane ka aata (gram flour) and eaten. He loved it and he'd have this flour and mirchi all over his face – just like a child but he didn't care. He would gorge into till as long as he wanted to.


He was so ordinary in his behaviour that it wouldn't occur to us that there was anything special about him. He loved to hang around in his shorts and he had a little paunch and he looked so sweet. One day he was in his shorts outside the house washing the car. A producer came and asked for him. He got a little cheeky and said: 'Oh yes, he must be inside!' So the man came in and we told him dad was outside. You can imagine his embarrassment seeing dad only in his shorts washing the car but dad just laughed!


Today when he is no more I wish so much that I had spent more time understanding his music - his thoughts and what made him compose the way he did. I knew he was a genius but it didn't mean so much when he was around. Now, I wish I could have learnt more from him. I now realise people will take another century to really understand his work.


Dad loved Rabindra Sangeet too and he was so upset when the poet passed away that he didn't eat for a whole month and walked without chappals. He enjoyed the music of Vanraj Bhatia, Iliyaraja and Madan Mohan. I believe a huge portrait of my father hangs in Iliyaraja's house. Such was his openness that he enjoyed listening to all kinds of music – some years ago the number Ek do teen char… from Tezaab, became very popular and we kids were criticising it when he said 'Listen to it… Why has it become so popular? There's a fabulous rhythm and scanning there… hear it and see how attractive it is!'


He taught us to recognise and understand what made something so popular.


For him Lata Mangeshkar was like Ma Saraswati – he didn't have to worry about scales and pitches when he was composing for her because he knew she could sing anything. I personally think the song she sang for dad in Annadaata is just fabulous - Raaton ke saaye has beautiful arrangement – and has been rendered equally well. I think the way dad has used Lataji's voice was simply wonderful. Like in the Half Ticket, he used her to do the interlude which just has her crooning hahahaha.... He adapted this bit from a Russian dance and she sang it to perfection.


Yesudas sang a lot for dad and he made sure he gave him a range that suited him. Once Kishore Kumar was got a little upset when dad asked him for his pitch. But dad just said a song could sound marvellous if one sang within one's pitch and gave him the Guzar jaaye din din din….


Dad belonged to IPTA (Indian People's Theatre Association) and composed a lot of music for their movement, their freedom struggle etc - so there are sections to his music he enjoyed composing for choir music and you'd see him a lot on Doordarshan conducting the CPC choirs. He often said that if he wasn't married he'd have been able to do so much more and I'd say but then you wouldn't have had us! And he would agree saying 'you're my ribs!'


He wanted me to sing and taught me to aim high. He loved sports and often mouthed Mohammad Ali's famous line –'I'm the greatest!' He believed that you could achieve anything if you believed in yourself. He also taught me to compose in case I got the opportunity. So, I composed with him for a couple of TV serials like Daraar and Kurukshetra etc. I played the keyboards and learnt a lot from him. I learnt only then how much creativity and imagination it takes to compose to a given scene so as to uplift and highlight it. It is a lot more difficult than singing. It was a lesson for me to see him put his heart into composing even for a small budget serial.


He even sang well and was a great admirer of Ustad Faiyyaz Khan - I remember him getting up early in the morning and singing. I shared a wonderful relationship with him - I could confide in him and tell him anything. But he could be strict too - he'd make sure I got up early and did my riyaz and went for a walk. He called me Manna and even today I feel he's with me.


Unlike composers of today, dad did his own musical arrangements. In Western music, he'd moved beyond the major and minor chords. Just before he passed away, he was experimenting with chord 11 and 13 etc. He loved the complexity of it all. But in personal life, dad was utterly simple - you'd never know he was such a genius."

Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#4

Salil Chowdhury



Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
Bhaskar.T thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#5
Thanks Barnalidi. Now 1959!!!! 😆 😆

Next will be which year 😆

Thanks Bobda. Hope to get to know more about the great man through this thread.



Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#6

Salil Chowdhury

For long, I did not listen to Salil da's music very attentively. But when I did, it was a whole new musical rediscovery of myself. Just about an year after Pancham's loss he also left. And music world lost two of its brightest talents of this century within a year's span.
If there is one single thing for which he can be credited, it was his extraordinary vision which kept him miles ahead of his contemporaries.
He was deeply into western classical music and listened to a lot of Beethoven, Mozart & Bach. Also a bit of Chopin. Still but for his two songs - Itna na mujhse tu pyaar baDha (Chhaya) which was a straight adaptation of Mozart's 41st symphony and RaatoN ke saaye ghane (Annadata) which was Chopin's work - he never let any heavy influences shown in his work. For me, he was the master of melody. The breezy flow of his tunes and melodic interludes are mesmerizing. I can listen to his Ye mere andhere ujaale na hote (Prem Patra), Aa aa re mitwaa (Anand Mahal), Kai baar yuN bhi dekhaa hai, Rajnigandha phool tumhare (both from Rajnigandha), Aaj koi nahiN apna (Agni Pareeksha) or, Chhota sa ghar hoga (Naukari) and numerous other songs repeatedly any day. But to top all these hauntingly melodius songs comes one of my all-time favourite Half Ticket. It drives me mad, indeed. Woh ik nigaah kya mili tabiyateN machal gayeeN.
If anyone wants to know whether music really has any life in it or if it can move a person, he must listen to Salil Chowdhury's music. It will live forever.

Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#7
Kahin door jab din dhal jaaye...
It's been 10 years since we lost Salil Choudhury (d. Sept. 5). But his magic also seems to be lost in the remix din. Can we afford to let that happen? By Anirudha Bhattacharjee

Music appreciation in our country, for that matter anywhere, normally turns out to be subjective. In very stray cases has the discussion drifted in the domain of objectivity and the definitive. A fine example of the latter would be the acknowledgement of composing skills of Salil Choudhury by singers ranging from Yesudas to Lata Mangeshkar, from arrangers Sebastian to Alokenath Dey. All of them have cited Salil as the greatest guru among composers among Indian film music directors. Even .P. Nayyar, a composer who rarely claims to be an admirer of any peer, has said that he is a fan of Salil Choudhury.

What has been the special Salil effect that has made him earn laurels from the best of his peers in the industry? To quote an oft-used analogy, if composers of his time created tunes, Salil crafted symphonies of four and a half minutes. A Salil number was one-third prelude, one-third interlude, and the rest the basic tune. One example would be the number which made C. Ramachandra sit back and listen, Aaja re pardesi (Madhumati). Both the mukhda and antara of the number start from the unconventional note, Pancham, and end on the note Komal Nishad. This particular note is symbolic, as it creates an imagery of incompleteness, which hits you right in the belly. And like a deft arranger with his music wand, Salil uses the seventh chord as the basic melody, accentuating the feel of yearning. Wonder if a better blend of the Eastern melody and Western Classical arrangement had been conceived before in Hindi film music!

There is a visual aspect in Salil's music. One can virtually see the song. A number like Aha, rimjhim ke yeh pyaare-pyaare geet liye (Usne Kaha Tha) paints the visage of pouring rain. The use of mandolin in the prelude, of the violin ensemble in the first and third antaras, and of the swaying voices of Lata and Talat in the second antara and the grand finale after the third antara, all create a feel of the physicality of rain as absorbed by our senses. If Aha, rimjhim illustrates torrential rain, sajna, barkha bahaar aayi (Parakh) is like a soft platter. The use of instruments, limited to a few, with Jairam Acharya's sitar filling in between strains of Lata's delicate rendition, elevates the number to a feel of restrained delight.

Salil was somebody who could spin poetry and music in one complete tapestry. For Bengali basic numbers, more often than not, he would first write his own lyrics and then set it to tune. He had come to Mumbai from Calcutta as a new wave poet and dramatist, apt at writing lyrics, playing various instruments like the flute, sarod and guitar, writing remarkable tunes and arranging the same in a way which had not been tried out before in traditional Bengali music. His erudition level mandated that he needed to imbibe the poetic content of a lyric to write a tune apt enough to match the sentiment. And it is here that he shared a unique tuning with poet Shailendra and to some extent with Rajendra Krishan and Yogesh.

Shailendra's contribution to Salil's works in Mumbai was manifold, primarily because Salil knew precious little Hindi. It was he who had cajoled Salil to compose Aja, re pardesi for Madhumati, based on a piece of music he had used in the climax of Jagte Raho/Ekdin Raatre, against the wishes of Bimal Roy. For a person who belonged primarily to the Raj Kapoor camp, Shailendra had the nerve to shepherd Raj Kapoor to request his pet composers Shankar-Jaikishen to pay a visit to the recording of Jagte Raho, to comprehend the recording style of the phenomenon who answered to the name Salil Choudhury.

Shailendra's journey with Salil had begun from Salil's very first Hindi film, Do Bigha Zamin. During the recording session of Dharti kahe pukaar ke, many musicians including Roshan had congregated to watch the young poet adroitly, using choral voices to create harmony and counterpoints, a composing style which was ushered in with Salil's entry in Bollywood. It was almost a Ceasaresque Vini, Vidi, Vici.

In an era when dancing means acrobatics and grace has come down to catwalks; when melody is sulking in the dark and music weighed in decibels, it needs more than a passing effort to feel the pulse of an artiste like Salil Choudhury. Fed on a sumptuous diet of the remix and item numbers, barring a few die-hard devotees, the Salilophile is a dying breed.

Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
vinnie-thepooh thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#8
Barnali di.

Thanx for the great thread and dada thanx for sharing the articles 😊
AznDesi thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#9
Thank you so much Barnali Di. Another wonderful article! YAY now i have lots of goodies to read at work thanx to you , Bob da and Vinnie! Keep em comming! 👏 👏 👏
Barnali thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#10

Originally posted by: AznDesi

Thank you so much Barnali Di. Another wonderful article! YAY now i have lots of goodies to read at work thanx to you , Bob da and Vinnie! Keep em comming! 👏 👏 👏

Ron here are few more. did not get the time to post them in the morning. this is also translated from bengali. it was published in a magazine Alokpat in 1997.

Remembering Salil Chowdhury

Lata Mangeshkar

"At one time composer and musician Salil Chowdhury was a commanding presence in the movie world in the city of Bombay. Previously, when he had been associated with the Indian Peoples' Theatre Association (IPTA), his fame had spread well beyond Bengal. Eventually the IPTA disbanded. Salil Chowdhury then found his new arena of work in the city of Bombay. That is when I first made his acquaintance. I respected him a great deal. He has made me sing for Bengali movies. I have also issued Puja recordings of my Bengali songs composed by Salil Chowdhury. These song were all extraordinary in both melody and lyrics. … Over the course of my life I have worked with over a hundred music directors. Of these, perhaps only ten understood both music and the cinema. And of these ten, Salil was the foremost. Salil Chowdhury's melodies were different from those of the others. He had both a highly developed sense and a great understanding of Bengali folk music. On his way from Calcutta to Bombay, he had disappeared for several months. He spent this time in some faraway, long forgotten village, in order to get acquainted with village music, to familiarize himself with its tunes and tempos. Of course he was also very well acquainted with the folk music of other parts of the country. This folk music he has melded wonderfully with Indian classical music. Sometimes he would spend days on end without food or sleep in critical examination of one of his compositions, before deciding for himself how the tune should be developed. I have sung songs by him for over two generations. I have never before seen the equal of composer Salil Chowdhury. "

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