Mohammed Rafi Fans, You Must Know This!
The year was 1980. Mrs Indira Gandhi, after a
political exile of two years, stormed back into the corridors of power. Her son
Sanjay, infamous for the excesses of sterilisation during the tenebrous days of
the Emergency succumbed to an ill-fated plane crash. The baton of the dynasty
was passed on to the reluctant older son, Rajiv Gandhi.
It was in many ways a tumultuous year. Brawny
Soviet Union trampled all democratic norms and their tanks stormed into
Afghanistan. This incident triggered large scale boycott of the Summer Olympics
at Moscow, led by the United States of America.
Later that year came the revelations of the
flagitious case of Bhagalpur blindings, immortalised years later by Prakash
Jha’s iconic film Gangajal.
All these events however, were overshadowed in
the collective memory. On the 31July that year as it poured heavily in Delhi
and motley crowds sat sipping steaming cups of tea, glued to their radio sets,
they heard about the tragic demise of the estimable playback singer of Hindi
cinema - the one and only mellifluent Mohammed Rafi. The skies darkened and
there was a heavy downpour as the elements too seemed to shed tears in his
memory.
It was a frosty and nippy winter in Kotla Sultan
Singh, a verdant hamlet in the undivided Punjab of British India. The year was
1924 and just a day prior to Christmas, when the charismatic vocalist Mohammed
Rafi was born to Haji Ali Mohammad and Allahrakhi Bai. The prodigious child was
the fifth of the six siblings.
The child’s musical prowess was revealed from a
very tender age and his talent was recognized by his elder brother’s friend
Abdul Hameed. This friend prevailed upon Mohammed Rafi’s family to nurture the
amateur’s talent.
Mohammed Rafi first learnt the craft of
Hindustani classical music under the tutelage of Pandit Jiwan Lal Mattoo.
Panditji taught him various intricacies of raag shastra and the strains
of Punjabi folk ragas besides imparting to him the knowledge esoteric raagas
like Pahaadi, Bhairavi, Basant and Malhaar.
He later trained under Ustad Abdul Wahad Khan of
the Kirana Gharana and also received rigorous lessons from the legendary
Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan of the Patiala Gharana that further honed his
musical skills.
Rafi Saheb, as he was known among the music
fraternity was to subsequently polish his metier under the renowned
musicologist, Feroze Nizami, a producer with the All India Radio, Lahore.
Legions of Rafi Saheb’s followers are perhaps
unaware that K.L. Saigal and G.M. Durani were his idols and in the nascent stages
of his career he emulated Saigal’s style of rendition.
Mohammed Rafi performed his first stage show as
a young boy of 13 in Lahore. The singer then embarked upon his musical odyssey
by rendering for the All India Radio in Lahore in the year 1941.
Then arrived the momentous occasion when he
soulfully sang ‘Soniye Nee, Heeriye Nee,’ a duet with the fabled singer, Zeenat
Begam for the Punjabi film Gul Baloch. However, it is quite a travesty
that the film was screened three years later that is the year 1944.
Mohammed Rafi’s maiden foray in the tinsel world
of Hindi cinema was with the magical wand of Naushad. The number was ‘Hindustan
Ke Hum Hain’ along with Shyam Kumar, Alauddin and others, in A. R. Kardar's
film Pehle Aap. It so happened that around the same time, the talismanic
vocalist recorded another song for the 1945 film Gaon Ki Gori, ‘Aji Dil
Ho Kaaboo Mein.’ As it was his first solo number, the eminent singer considered
it to be his first Hindi song.
Mohammed Rafi has been considered as one of the
most versatile singers produced in the subcontinent. Quite seamlessly he could
sing romantic, patriotic, classical or melancholic numbers; bhajans, quawallis
or peppy beats, the virtuoso singer could do wonders.
Perhaps the singular quality he was known for
was his unique ability to mould his voice to the persona and style of the actor
—ranging from Dilip Kumar, Dev Anand, Rajendra Kumar to Shammi Kapoor— on the
silver screen, with astonishing ability. The lip-syncing matched the
performance of the actor.
Rafi Saheb recorded round 7,500 songs during his
career and was feted with six Filmfare Awards and one National Film Award,
among others. For his gargantuan contribution to Indian cinema the maestro was
honoured with the Padma Shri by the Government of India in the year 1967.
The sonorous rendition of ‘Bhagwan Bhagwan, Ae Duniya Ke Rakhwale, Suno
Dard Bhare Mere Nale’ is a reflection of the pluralism and secularism of this
country. The magical number which moistens the eyes of cine goers to this day
is from the celebrated film Baiju Bawra. The song was picturised on
Bharat Bhushan and the lyrics were penned by Naushad Ali and Shakeel Badayuni.
The Voice of the Millennium, Lata Mangeshkar was
to once remark, “As a singer you have to bring soul to the song.” Certainly,
Mohammed Rafi who sang with all zest, ebullience and gusto succeeded in doing
just that…..effortlessly.
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