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Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

RL is dedicating an entire week in honour of Govinda and his amazing song and dance numbers! So, this is a post on all the crazy wacky songs of Govinda that can be put in the so-bad-its-good category. Please enjoy and add your faves to the collection!

1. Mera ghoosa bhi sexy mera thappad bhi sexy….Epic song from the 90s!

2. This one is dedicated to Shakti Kapoor’s awesomeness !

3. It just doesn’t get any better than this one!!

4. What lyrics! Unbeatable!!

5. And finally who can forget this one? Mere bhi dil ne kholi phir chahat wali file…aankhon aakhon mein matter…LMAO!

Enjoy!!

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Madhuri Dixit is often referred to as the dancing queen of Bollywood. With grace and ease, Madhuri inspires us all to dance. During the 90s there was no doubt that Madhuri was one of Bollywood’s leading ladies as she starred in numerous hit films with the most delectable actors. Madhuri celebrates her 43rd birthday on May 15 and we want to celebrate by taking a look at her best songs. Check them out here.

A young and sexy Madhuri Dixit starred in the 1993 movie “Khalnayak” opposite Sanjay Dutt and Jackie Shroff. The movie was dark and deep and fans quite enjoyed it. The movie was packed with amazing music and featured the suggestive song “Choli K Peeche.” When the song first came out, people created a fuss about the meaning behind the lyrics, but the controversy only gained the song more popularity and is now a classic! Madhuri looks divine in her sexy choli and her moves are hot! Is “Choli Ke Peeche” your favorite Madhuri song?

Madhuri Dixit’s role in the film “Hum Aapke Hai Kaun” earned her the Filmfare Award for Best Actress in 1994. The romantic family drama was a traditional Bollywood movie with a twist. Salman Khan plays Mahduri’s love interest and the couple oozed on-screen chemistry! The hit “Didi Tera Devar Deewana” is a cheeky masala number with a story that still makes fans laugh. Is the fun loving “Didi Tera Devar Deewana” your fav Madhuri tune?

The film “Dil To Pagal Hai” effortlessly captured dance and romance. Shahrukh Khan and Karishma Kapoor starred alongside Madhuri in the 1998 flick that swept all the awards. It earned Filmfare’s Best Film, Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Choreography. The Choreographer, Shimak Davar, also went on to win the National Award and Zee Cine Award. With Madhuri’s background in Kathak dance, she was able to kick up the choreography’s level a notch. “Aare Re Aare” is an upbeat song with Shahrukh and Madhuri both showing off their best moves and a touch of romance of course. When you think of Madhuri do you go straight back to this tune?

In 2002, Madhuri left Bollywood with a bang in “Devdas.” The epic love story has been depicted a time or two before so expectations were high. With the elaborate costumes, sets, and talented cast, “Devdas” was a hit! Madhuri won Filmfare’s and Star Screen’s Best Supporting Actress awards for her portrayal of Chndramukhi. Being a courtesan gave Madhuri the opportunity to once again dance into our hearts in “Maar Dala.” Do Madhuri’s expressions make you go crazy when you watch “Maar Dala?”

After five years of playing a mommy, Madhuri made her comeback in “Aaja Nachle.” As the title suggests, the movie was all about dance and Madhuri fans wanted nothing more! The movie earned Madhuri a nomination at Filmfare for Best Actress. When the title song “Aaja Nachle” begins to play, people can’t help but to get up and dance! Vaibhavi Merchant choreographed the iconic moves for this number and it seems like every girl has tried to copy the dance. Madhuri performs with such grace and she looks hot! Is Madhuri’s “Aaja Nachle” your favorite song?

Let’s not forget to mention Madhuri’s songs “Badi Mushkil” and “Chane Ke Khet Mein.” Seems like anything Madhuri grooves to is divine! Let us know which your favorite Madhuri Dixit song is.

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In a field replete with novel voices, vocal gimmicks and calculated song ‘takes’, here’s a guy who has proved that simplicity gets superior results. KK, almost 15 years in the business, has long transcended the tag of being a mere singer and is nearing the league of the greats 
 Today, the number of your solos completely outnumber your duets and multi-singer songs.
Shall I tell you something? I am happy about this for a very funny reason – and that’s the fact that nowadays there are no duets that are recorded live. So while singing on track, the expression of emotions becomes doubly difficult as we do not even know who is singing with us, how he or she will sing and so on. 

But yes, I have sung non-solos too, and recently Pritam has recorded a nice duet with Shreya Ghoshal in Tell Me O Khuda. It was a challenging song, with some English and a lot of recall value.


Your equation with Pritam has always been special. He keeps saying that he takes you for a song only when the composition deserves you!
That’s really very sweet of him. He does give me great songs and I am proud of our association. It’s a very alag bond that mutually agrees on something extra from his side and the same from mine. Luckily we have a great track- record and most of the songs that we have done together have worked big-time from Shikdum in Dhoom to Gangster, Woh Lamhe…, Bhagam Bhag, Fight Club, Bhool Bhulaiya, Life In A…Metro, Billu, New York, Ajab Prem Ki Ghazab Kahani and many more. 

Pritam puts in a lot of emotions in his tunes and the lyrics too are rich in emotions. And as a singer, I don’t get fed up of the microphone. I never keep looking at my watch and he knows that. 

From Saaya in 2003 you began yet another memorable association that also is a brand by itself – your songs for the films of Mukesh, Mahesh Bhatt and Pooja Bhatt. Of course, most of that music too has been with Pritam.
Saaya had oustanding songs like Kabhi khushboo and Har taraf har jagah from Anu (Malik)ji, and I love that man M.M.Kreem – Awarapan from Jism and Maine dil se kahaa and Tere iss jahaan mein from Rog show his genius.


But besides Pritam, your songs for the banner under even Sajid-Wajid, Lalit Pandit and Sharib-Toshi have a certain similarity.
You really think so? But that’s not such a good thing! What do you think? 

Music lovers have no issues because most of the songs are good. But for a couple of years we seemed to be hearing very little of you, except in their films.
All of them are really fond of me. But I don’t know, yaar. I guess I have never been over-ambitious. 

You are dangerously low-profile too. Why is that so?
I guess that’s because my work is not my entire life! I have always balanced profession with my family. I can’t be insecure or be a go-getter at the cost of being with my wife and kids. 

Kites is a surprise from you – or a reinvention. What’s your take?
I am very glad that you liked my songs. The feedback, in fact, has been unanimous.There are so many, from children to adults, giving me reactions like “Dil kyun yeh mera has finally made you immortal” or that Zindagi do pal ki has taken me to another stratosphere. I was told things like I had done justice to the old kind of melody as well and that these songs were very fresh and different from me. I do think that I was the “bridge” between the classic old-style melody and today’s listeners – maybe Rajesh Roshanji thought of me because of this.


How do you look at the Rajesh Roshan experience?
It was fantastic working with him. His compositions and their nuances are different from anyone else, and he is soft-spoken and clear about what he wants. When I heard Zindagi do pal ki, I loved the way the intezaar kab tak phrase went and how Rajesh Roshan expressed those lines. “This is your song,” he told me gently. I loved the vibe that was very Kishore Kumar-like in Zindagi do pal ki and like Mohammed Rafi in Dil kyun yeh mera. And I loved the satisfied smile on his face when I rehearsed them.


You had worked together way back in Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage. Why do you think you were called after a gap? Do you think that Hrithik Roshan had a hand, as it was on him that those songs were filmed and you had later sung all of Hrithik’s songs in Main Prem Ki Deewani Hoon?
I wouldn’t know. Hrithik was there for Zindagi do pal ki but he left after a while. But what I can never forget about Rajeshji is that he gave me my first and only experience of a live recording with a complete orchestra. It was for a song that was to be dubbed by Kumar Sanu, sometime in the late ‘90s. I was told that my voice would not be kept and the recording was at Mehboob Studios. I did it for that incredible tajurba – it was akin to singing at a concert! 

As a singer, how do you feel when a song works or otherwise? And how do you see trends going?
It’s impossible to know which song will work or otherwise. Person to person, it’s not easy to predict what someone will like – or detest. There have been a couple of critical reviews of Kites too. I can’t base my life on the written word. I don’t drive myelf into a frenzy if a song is a hit, and if it does not work, that’s okay. When I record a song, I have to understand it and give it my best. Like I loved my song Jaane yeh kya hua from Karthik Calling Karthik but there were people who do not like it.

I think that trends are going well – there is a lot of freshness around because of so many new singers. 

You put in a lot of soul and emotional richness in your songs, perhaps much more than anyone else today. What is your own perspective on this?
Without intending to sound boastful, I have been told this often and I have pondered on this a lot. I think that I keep life very simple, uncluttered and free from stress. As a singer, when I listen to the new song, I react to the words. I internalise the lyrics of a song first. When I am recording, there are no deviations or digressions. I keep my focus, whether it takes an hour or three hours. I sing a song the way it reads and with the emotions it needs. I don’t build a story or an aura around the song. What story can be bigger than life?

Also, I think that my balance of professional and personal lives makes me balanced. The mirror is very clear and there are no gray areas. I don’t keep track of how many songs I am getting vis-a-vis what others are called for. 

Do you change or modulate your voice according to the actor enacting a song?
I have never done that. Shah Rukh Khan, Hrithik Roshan or anyone else is not my issue. The song is my trip. Dil se kaam karo is my ‘funda’. Singing a song well is my life, my junoon. I don’t get into what goes behind a song and how and why it came to me. I am a specific spoke in the wheel called the song, and I have to focus on that. I can’t be calculating and go into things that have nothing to do with me. While recording a song, that track is my only God. I think that a song represents a singer’s persona. If he is not complicated in the head, the song will match! 

You began with Maachis, followed by several songs for A.R.Rahman, Anu Malik etc and then broke through with Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam’s Tadap tadap. But since then you have hardly sung for Rahman.
I recorded recently for his film 1-800-Love. The reason is very simple – Rahman works after 11 p.m. and I down shutters at 10! I prefer to be honest to myself and fresh and relaxed at work, using the “Early to bed early to rise” principle. The new song was taped because Rahman recorded it in the daytime, that too in Mumbai.


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How it happened
Being from a musically driven family, I started arranging music at the age of 16. By 17, I became a composer. My father Pandit Ram Prasad Sharma, a trumpeter, taught me music and made me learn violin at the age of 12 from a Goan violinist. A famous director those days, who also gave a break to Kalyanji-Anandji was known to us. Once, I hesitatingly said to him, “You gave a chance to Kalyanji, give me one too.”
He smiled and the next thing I knew was that I was to play the violin in the famous film “Haqeeqat” for which Madan Mohan composed music.
The song was “Mein Ye Soch Uske Ghar Se Utha Tha.” He was so pleased with my performance that he came running and hugged me after the recording.
How it felt

At 17, it was thrilling and served as a great morale booster. In no time, he offered me “Parasmani”. That was in 1963. I couldn’t believe my luck. Babubhai Mistry was a name to reckon with. No one would question his integrity. I and Laxmikant started working on the film. The film didn’t do well but the music was a hit. It brought us close to known music directors like Naushad and Ravi and film producers like Tarachand Barjatya.
 How life changed

The music of “Parasmani”, especially the song “Roshan Tumhi Se Duniya”, paved the way for us. The very next year director Satyen Bose gave us “Dosti”. It was Tarachandji’s Rajshri Productions film. The film had new and young actors but its music was super hit. It got us our first FIlmfare Award in 1964. The most thrilling experience was that with “Dosti”, films like “Sangam” (music by Shankar-Jaikishan) and “Woh Kaun Thi” (Madan Mohan) were also nominated for the Filmfare Award.
The award may have brought us fame, but unfortunately, it also created jealousy among our peers. Some of them canvassed against us and we stopped getting films. But we still got films from those who believed in us. Again from 1977 to 1980, we got the Filmfare Award consecutively for four years for “Amar Akbar Anthony” (1977), “Satyam Shivam Sundaram” (1978), “Sargam” (1979) and “Karz” (1980). In Ameen Sayani’s “Binaca Geet Mala” our songs were regularly played among the top hits. Lata Mangeshkar made a great contribution to our success. She used to record 10 songs a month for other music directors, but for us she even sang 16 songs a month. Till date, I go to seek her advice in any music-related matter.
Today, I miss Laxmikant, (he passed away in 1988) but I didn’t stop making music. I have won friends like Jitendra, Dharmendra , Shashi Kapoor and Amitabh Bachchan in the film industry. Though I feel music has become quite technology-driven today, I always tell my students never to stop the use of acoustic instruments like flute, violin and sitar, for they are the basic ones. Today, there is even less poetry in songs. Dard-e-dil has become dard-e-disco. I and Laxmi did one good thing: We didn’t take all films that came our way. We picked and chose even at the cost of sitting at home, unlike Shankar-Jaikishan. I still have lots of symphonies for kids that I wrote long ago, apart from western symphonies. I have few films today but I am happy that I haven’t compromised with my kind of music.

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A R Rahman is leading a hectic life balancing work in India and Hollywood but the musician is not complaining as he wants to bridge the gap between East and West through his music.
In June, the music maestro will embark on his ‘Jai Ho’ tour across the US. Rahman says he may be doing more “Hollywood stuff” but he intends to keep up his Bollywood commitments of one or two films a year. The singer-composer, who is the only Indian to win two Oscars, a Golden Globe and two Grammys for his music in Danny Boyle’s ‘Slumdog Millionaire’, says his concert is an extension of his philosophy.

“A lot of things have changed and I got a place here to work. I have a contract with Interscope Records…all these things are time demanding to fulfill so my time is divided almost half between India and here,” Rahman told reporters. The 44-year-old musician, however, believes that since India has always embraced foreign cultures, they deserve a stage in the West.

“I wanted to do this concert for many reasons. In the beginning my intention was to extend the boundaries of what I was doing for music so we could do greater things. It probably is an extension of my philosophy,” Rahman said.

“After my success I even feel stronger to do this stuff to make a bridge for other people to come and if one person succeeds then a lot of other people come,” he added. Rahman is presently working with artistes like Usher, Nicole Scherzinger and Dido. Working abroad has made him realise that there is enough space for the two big film industries to produce work on the same platform.

“I don’t know whether it is right or wrong but what is good is people recognising the potential of movies in India and are being more adventurous,” he said. “We don’t need acknowledgment from anybody but it’s good to have it.” Rahman also dismisses the lingering criticism that it took a foreign film ‘Slumdog Millionaire’, for an Indian to win the Oscar and then a Grammy.

“As long as it got recognised I don’t bother about all this. It was such a small movie and became such a big hit, this is a blessing.” Rahman has joined hands with Hollywood’s creative director Amy Tinkham for his new concert in 14 cities across North America.

Tinkham, who has worked for pop-music icons, including Britney Spears, the Backstreet Boys and Mariah Carey, says the concert will be a mix of Indian tradition and modernism. “The concert will keep in intact the heritage and traditions of India with a new modern presentation. The show will feature changing sets, large images on LED screens and a spectacular cast of musicians and dancers from across the globe,” Tinkham said.

The high-tech, larger-than-life show may be completely opposite of his shy persona but the musician says it goes with the music. “The music is exuberant and it won’t do justice to the music to lock it into a room…If you go to a Beyonce concert it’s mostly about her but in this it’s the music that is the hero.” 

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Yes, it is a preview of a review I am about to write. But I thought I would share this clip with you so you could walk, jog, run, to the nearest shop and BUY this DVD package. It is truly memorable, an excellent inside look at the genius of a man who changed the game forever!

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The other day, I bought some new CDs featuring my favourite music composers—Shankar Jaikishen to listen to their immortal melodies, which continue to dominate most Radio programmes featuring vintage Hindi film songs. Jaikishen died on September 12, 1971 and Shankar passed away on April 26, 1987. I have been a SJ fan since my childhood and I feel that they were to hindi film music what the Beatles were to Western music. I have no hesitation in saying that SJ were the best in the era when music was the king and melody was the queen.

For 22 years from 1949 to 1971 when Jaikishen succumbed to Cirrhosis of liver, the duo dominated the music world despite stiff competition from other gifted composers who included Naushad, O.P.Nayyar, S.D.Burman, Roshan, Ravi, C.Ramachandran, Vasant Desai, Salil Chaudhury, Hemant Kumar, Sajjad, Madan Mohan, Sardar Malik, Khayyam, Laxmikant Pyarelal, Kalyanji Anandji, Hansraj Behl, SN Tripathi and N.Dutta. Even after that Shankar continued to give good music but suffered a major setback when Raj Kapoor under whose banner, the duo excelled, abandoned him for LP, RD Burman and Ravindra Jain for his subsequent films.

The legend of SJ continues to live on though in most recall programmes featuring legendary music maestros, they do not find adequate coverage. Their unparalleled status, is however, evident to any listener of good old vintage film music in Radio programmes where they continue to be ahead of everyone else. Whether it was winning Filmfare awards or the Binaca Geetmala, the two yardsticks of outstanding popular music, SJ always figured most prominently.

I am also of the view that if there had been no SJ, there may have been no Raj Kapoor. When I say this, it is because Raj Kapoor’s tramp like image was backed and enhanced by an outstanding score from the two music giants who worked for the RK films and gave their best for him. It may sound strange but the only RK film for which the duo got the best music award was Mera Naam Joker though they came out as winners under many other banners. Chori Chori was their first major Filmfare award success followed by Anari and Dil Apna Aur Preet Prayi. Subsequent awards included their score for Suraj, Brahmchari, Beimaan etc.

It is said that RK had created a music bank where some of the best SJ tunes were kept and he continued to use them even after his association with the SJ banner ended just before Bobby was to be launched. The unkindest cut for Shankar was when Mukesh who owed a lot to him decided to introduce Laxmikant Pyarelal to RK. The consolation for Shankar was that some of the songs created by him were used in the film though under LP’s banner. For instance, “Na Maangu Sona Chandi” ( from Bobby) was in the background score of Awaara released in the early fifties.

SJ had brought so much of freshness to RK’s second film, Barasaat that its music became an instant hit and Lata Mangeshkar (she was also helped and shaped by others including Naushad, Anil Biswas, C.Ramachandran in other movies) was finally able to break from the Noor Jahan mould.

SJ were the most saleable commodity in the film world and along with two gifted poets—Shalendra and Hasrat Jaipuri, the duo created magical music with unmatched orchestration and terrific rhythm. Their team included two of the most talented arrangers in Dattaram and Sebastian whose names featured as their chief assistants. When Yuri Gagrin, the first man in space came to India, he greeted Raj Kapoor with “Awara hoon”, a tribute to the immortal song which became a big hit like all SJ songs in the erstwhile Soviet Union. When I visited Tashkent in 1985, the commissar at the hotel literally sang Mera Joota hai Japani to please the Indian delegation.

SJ also contributed hugely in creating the new image for Shammi Kapoor who had been a flop star till OP Nayyar in Tumsa Nahin Dekha transformed his entire singing style. SJ’s Junglee with Yahoo, Chahe koi mujhe jangli kahe announced Shammi’s arrival in the big league. There was no stopping and old timers in Bombay say that distributors would pick up a Shammi Kapoor movie regardless of who the heroine was if SJ were providing the music and Mohammad Rafi was singing for the actor. There was a time when SJ commanded a bigger price than the leading pair of a movie. Similarly, Rajendra Kumar owed his success to a great degree to this duo who never felt shy in experimenting with new style of music. They were the first to introduce raaga rock, an album of fusion music.

When Greek musician Yaani came to India in the nineties to perform at the Taj Mahal, I noticed that there was some similarity in some of his compositions so far as orchestration was concerned. While interviewing him for HT, I told him so and he was keen to hear SJ’s music. I do not know whether that ever happened.

Shankar who was some years older to Jaikishen outlived his partner. During a meeting with him at the Cricket Club of India, he told me that he had been severely affected after Shailendra’s death in 1967. There was a very strong bond between the two and his creativity had also got affected for a while. Jaikishen to him was younger brother and though they had their differences towards the end, they were a perfect foil to each other so far as composing music was concerned. He was very disappointed with Mukesh and also with Raj Kapoor for abandoning him. He also took pride in the fact that he had tried to introduce a new voice, Sharda to the music world even though this had offended the Mangeskar sisters. But at the same time, he spoke very highly about Raj Kapoor who he said had helped him and his partner to enter the big league. According to Lata Mangeshkar’s video released by HMV many years ago, “there was no one like SJ”. Manna Dey and Mohammad Rafi rated them extremely high and as per OP Nayyar, another great composer of his time, Shankar was the most complete music maestro in the film industry.

I sometimes wonder if some big producer or one of the Kapoors uses some of the unreleased music of SJ to recreate their magic in a forthcoming hindi film. Like Madan Mohan’s music became a hit in Veer Zaara, I am sure, SJ will also catch the imagination of the present generation.

I also want to make it clear that my intention is not to belittle other great composers or their fans. But for me, SJ were the best followed by OP Nayyar. But I also enjoy listening to nice songs by other composers, past and present.

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