OP Nayyar...Loss of the Veteran composer - Page 18

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Swar_Raj thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
Kamleshwar ji and OPN..what a loss 😭
vinnie-thepooh thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
Another big loss to Bollywood and music

May! his soul rest in peace
mermaid_QT thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
That makes me very sad. May he find peace in the loving care of God and may his melody never leave him. 😭
Sunitha.V thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago

Originally posted by: sareg

Actually he is right, most of the songs that stick in memory for us are due to the situations, the lyrics and the music that goes along with it, Hardly any songs that remain memorable have horrible lyrics, but good music.

But there are songs with minimal music and excellent lyrics that remain forever

example: Jinhen Naaz hai Hind pe, or the songs from Pyaasa(I am listening to them right now, and all I can remember is the lyrics, the music is pretty much ornamental)

Does there have to be a fixed formula for this? There are songs we remember for beautiful music many others that we remember for great lyrics. Fortunately, most classics from golden era have both...great lyrics and equally beautiful music..and I find myself enjoying and appreciating both. In the songs from 'Barsaat ki raat', till date I haven't been able to decide if the lyrics are better or the music 😊 . We're lucky to have had some very gifted, prolific lyricists and composers for Hindi films.

Edited by Sunitha.V - 18 years ago
qwertyesque thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
Thanks Swarji its one of the saddest day of mine - He was my favorite.... 😭
*salil* thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
They are showing Shraddhanjali to Nayyar saab on Zee USA right now.... 2:45 pm Pacific Time.
punjini thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
The man, his genius and his ego

Khalid Mohamed

Mumbai, January 28, 2007

Circa mid-1960S, he walked hand in hand with Asha Bhosle into Excelsior cinema's caf for a Scotch broth lunch. As schoolkids we were shocked, lowering our high-decibel conversation to grouse primly, "But they are not even married…to each other, that is."

He was in spotless white, with a jaunty hat propped over thinning silver hair. She was in a beige nylon sari, a mogra gajra dangling in hers. He smiled at us, said, "Enjoying the soup, kids?" He insisted on paying our bill. We were instantly won over.

We warmed up for a lifetime to the composer whose racy rhythms — a fusion of folksy and western riffs — our parents listened to on 78 rpms, besides those geetmalas on Radio Ceylon. Shanker-Jaikishen, SD Burman, Madan Mohan, C Ramachandra, the upcoming Laxmikant-Pyarelal and OP were creating the everyday anthems.

Today that sliver of Excelsior cinema memory returns. In the newsroom there is the announcement that OP Nayyar passed away at the age of 81. Ailing for over two decades, he died of cardiac arrest around 3.30 p.m. He went to the toilet, never to return. The information was provided by Rani Nakhwa, whose family he lived with in Thane.


The maestro of over 50 films stretching from 1950 — in 1949 he did compose the background music of Kaneez — was perhaps as stubbornly uncompromising as Naushad in the style and tenor of his compositions.

In his private life, he was equally inflexible, often stating, "I have a king-size ego. Nothing and no one can change that."

Bio-notes recall that Omkar Prasad Nayyar was born in Lahore, moved to Patiala, Amritsar and then Mumbai. He hit the charts with Guru Dutt's Aar Paar, a partnership that also yielded the wonderful songs of CID and Mr and Mrs 55.

He did not exactly lobby for plum projects. If he did BR Chopra's Naya Daur, he did not reduce his fee for the movie baron's next film. In fact, according to showbiz lore, he quoted such dizzying fees to V Shantaram and Sohrab Modi that they thought he had flipped it. Once the superb lyricist Sahir Ludhianvi conveyed the impression that he was doing Nayyar a favour, the composer looked for less lauded versifiers and clicked.

Arrogant? Maybe. That was the man in white who also gave opportunities to divas Geeta Dutt and Shamshad Begum. They excelled under his baton. And then there was Bhosle. Whether he accepted the fact or not, she was his alter ego, his voice.

Somewhat uncharitably, he once stated that since Dutt was facing personal trauma and the Begum's voice was ageing, he had no choice but to assign Bhosle his best songs. "Then I got involved with her," he remarked casually.

Nayyar did not ever work with Lata Mangeshkar. Uncharacteristically polite, he proclaimed her a "great artiste". That his liaison with Bhosle was the proverbial bone of contention with badi didi Lata, is obvious.

About his split with Bhosle, he went on record to say, "Astrological charts told me it was inevitable. My career was on the downslide. So I left her before she could leave me."

As for Bhosle, she has constantly acknowledged OP's invaluable contribution to her repertoire - but without dwelling on the details of their parting of ways. She married RD Burman. Nayyar's music faded out. He composed for some Southern films, did a random assignment or two in Mumbai. But it was never the same.

Throughout his career, the composer strived to assert that it was the song and not the singer that mattered. Mohammed Rafi got into his bad books for showing up late for a song recording of Humsaaya. Manna Dey and Mahendra Kapoor playbacked the composer's songs till there was a patch-up with Rafi.

Clearly, Nayyar's story is the stuff that passion-oozing biographies are made of. It was not written during his lifetime.

All we know are vignettes of his imperishable melodies, and of his diverse interests. Besides astrology, he was also deeply into homeopathy. He found solace in a family which was not related to him. His wife and son are said to have filed a case against him in court, an emotional upheaval he somehow kept away from the breath of scandal.

Anyone who loves Hindi film music will have an unalloyed regard for Nayyar's flamboyant music and personality. Around the year 2000, he had consulted astrological charts and announced that he had only two to three years more to live. But ask any of us kids from that Excelsior Scotch broth lunch. He lives.

Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
punjini ji, great article on OPN ji, thanks for sharing.
Swar_Raj thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
Thanks Punjini ji

Album 1 and 2 have wonderful collection to hear his songs 👏 👏

http://www.opnayyarsongs.com/opnayyar_albums/index.htm
Edited by Swar_Raj - 18 years ago
Swar_Raj thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
'Whatever music I composed was God's meharbani'
S Balakrishnan
[ 29 Jan, 2007 0106hrs ISTTIMES NEWS NETWORK ]
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Whatever_music_I_composed _was_Gods_meharbani/articleshow/1502568.cms



MUMBAI: On January 26, O P Nayyar was a little unwell. Nevertheless, he agreed to attend a programme titled Phir wohi dil laya hoon organised by a city NGO, Desh Seva Samiti, since it was a tribute to his work. He travelled all the way from Thane, where he lived, to the Mysore Association hall in Matunga with assistant commissioner of police Y D Tapase, his neighbour and long-time fan.

Nayyar could not sit through the evening, but he was alert as ever. From the front row, he told a singer, Bina Desai, to bring a certain "sharpness" to the song Thandi hawa kali ghata... Responding to the felicitations, he said with modesty, "I have no knowledge of sa, re, ga, ma. Whatever I composed was because of God's meharbani."

Talking to this correspondent, he said a line from the song Dil ki awaz bhi sun, mere fasane pe na ja (Humsaya) summed up the tragedy of his life. The line he referred to was, Waqt insaan pe aisa bhi kabhi aata hai, rah mein chhodke saaya bhi chala jaata hai (There are occasions in a person's life when even his shadow deserts him).

He was very emotional that evening and could not oblige all his fans who vied for his autograph. Before leaving the hall, he quietly asked if he could have a peg of whisky. Being a dry day, this correspondent, who was escorting him out of the hall, could not oblige him. All the same, the composer hugged him and said "may be some other time." That day will never come

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