Advertisement
X

Song Of Amnesia

The film song is mass hypnotism, an aid to help us forget. But the past never leaves.

A

This scene was never shot, but does that matter? It matches a diagram in your head바카라”in our collective head. We recognise all the elements in this romantic impasto. We바카라™ve seen that paper moon a gazillion times, attained a state of bionic senility. Point a cursor and click on the diagram, and a medley of sounds too picks up from some corner of the brain. They strangely match our phantom set-piece바카라”so flavoursome despite its bare economy. We could even swear we know the lyrics바카라”give me a minute, it바카라™s at the tip of my tongue.Even a false cue automatically opens up a folder바카라”the Fifties, C:\MyMusic\ Bollywood\50s. Vast mountains of para-real, audio-visual stock are stored up in each of us, permanently burned onto our memory cells. Whether the point of reference for your kind of film music is C.H. Atma or Trickbaby바카라”or anything else from the half-a-century of pauseless music-making that intervened바카라”you바카라™ll have your Top 10 and Top 100, neatly catalogued. The rest is mnemonic debris, sheer inorganic waste floating in mindspace. It lies dormant till that accursed song floats up from the transistor on the migrant labourer바카라™s shoulder, the family playing antakshari in the park...Hai Hukku Hai Hukku Hai Hai!

Call it passion or pathology, the film song is so basic to our landscape바카라”like neem, or pepper, or cows on the roads바카라”that we바카라™re liable to not notice that it바카라™s a special kind of artefact. Uniquely Indian, found in all its climatic zones, warm-blooded but immune to the snow. A supremely adaptive beast, it has segued well across time too: we have online antaksharis, Pallo Latke ringtones available for download, and a certain search engine called Yahoo! The film song is part of our suspended particulate matter. It바카라™s in the air. At the water park. At the barbershop, on the ghettoblasters, all over TV. It바카라™s the chewing gum that never leaves us.

We know all its visual cliches. The party dude at the grand piano, city girls cycling to a picnic, the Shakin바카라™ Stevens in his open-top convertible, urchins, fakirs, sundry nobodies. We also parse it by its logical type. Like the declarative song that sets up a character바카라”바카라˜I am...바카라™, and fill up the blanks (Awara, Jhumroo, Dus Numbri, Don, Aflatoon, Chameli, or whoever) All this trivia serves no tangible aesthetic function. It바카라™s a shared database of no use except that it is shared바카라”a zone of overlap in the experience of millions who will never know each other. It makes us all participants in a common pop history, with or without our consent. The old puritanical avoidance of films for its 바카라˜low culture바카라™, or the cultivated dislike of the convent-bred, they바카라™re no immunity against the ocean washing up on your front porch. There are no draft dodgers here.

Advertisement

So much power. By what decree did it colonise the whole landscape of sound? That too in a country of a million songs of the earth, such richness of rhythm and tone? At its root, for a people who had lost patience for all that is archaic, it came as a technology that produces newness. This function is constant in each of its time-zones; only the aspect changes. It occupies a new habitat, a temperate flatland that shuns anything too 바카라˜arty바카라™, anything that bears the vestiges of 바카라˜vulgar바카라™ folk culture. Not abstaining, but coopting바카라”it extends its body to ingest anything it fancies. It freely ransacks from the classical and folk libraries, and then burns down the building. The formula has incredible normative power. Its values seep into all genres. It creates a taste, a vast middle continent of sensibility. Anything as pervasive as this changes the whole ecology. India is seduced into believing this is the natural way to be.

Advertisement

Far from being an autonomous form of music, the film song is a complex genre that tapped into vital psycho-social needs of a newly independent people. The primary desire was this: to be modern. The second was a troubled negotiation with sexuality. These were articulated and satisfied at both the aural and visual levels. There was a good reason why the alcohol-soaked voice of Saigal바카라”a throwback to dissolute feudal times바카라”and the thumri-style voice of the likes of Zohrabai Ambalewali disappeared and a 바카라˜clean바카라™ voice took over. A new breed of singers emerged to provide the soundtrack to a nation in infancy. In voice and diction, they were urban, pasteurised, decidedly free of the residues of caste and province, and offered the vision of a new moral centre. Novel, yet reassuringly noble. Thus was instituted a tyranny of the 바카라˜good바카라™: a stable, fluxless median; a studio where Ustad Faiyaz Khan would have surely failed the audition test.

Advertisement

One reason why it exercised such a hold on the collective imagination is the warm, sexual aura that emanated from the screen. It바카라™s not now that songs have begun to look like music videos. Image was part of the complex from the beginning바카라”for years, we were glued to a weekly dose of songs: Chitrahaar, literally, a string of images. The film song is the song video non pareil바카라”an imaginal realisation of modernity, a magnified visual field on which sexual desire is projected and sublimated in tightly ordered metaphors. Remember all those open declarations of affection in public parks. The hero in white drainpipes, the lady in increasing aspects of coquetry, gambolling around fountains and neat rows of flowers. The park is a critical locale: as nature, it beckons our sexuality, but it is an organised, controlled piece of nature. Only so much amour can be tolerated, only intimations of the erotic. The romantic duet of film is pure surrogate sex. Those tulip fields offer fragrant violations of the moral code. No more. (Songs in the forest, on the other hand, are a descent into the carnal: pre-marital coitus, 바카라˜tribal바카라™ dancers in hula skirts, pure body.)

Advertisement

At the level of voice, the tensions were played out in a dual prototype neatly encapsulated by the Mangeshkar sisters: Lata바카라”pristine, virginal, chaste바카라”and Asha, all salted peanuts, the mistress of spices. On screen, this progressive barter with sexuality was catalysed by the advent of colour. The silvery, silhouetted waifs of the b&w era were filled out to become fleshly apparitions. Dheela dheela kurta, pajama tang tang. You were invited to consume the very pinkness of their health바카라”a potent, ravishing vision of what everyone wanted to look like. For a fast modernising gentry, this was the avant garde. All this worked even in regional cinema. The singing romantic pair as marionettes in our inner puppet play, mannequins on which attire changed mid-song, like on the ramp. As ideals of the masculine and feminine, with a neutral accent, effacing all the pettiness of our horizons바카라”a sociological newborn, a tabula rasa on which you painted the fall collection in lurid colours. 바카라˜Golden voices바카라™ were the aural complement바카라”with a superficial euphony, they created cultured, yet modern entities. An endlessly renovating creation myth.

The music itself is the pivot. The way the film song 바카라˜cleared바카라™ the forest for its own cultivation, how it set itself up as a dandified version of its country cousins, is not without precedent. One only needs to go back to Tagore. At one respectful remove from a variety of musical forms in that continuum between folk and classical바카라”tappa, Brahmo devotionals, Baul and the like바카라”and a nodding acquaintance with Scottish border ballads, he spun a new, light signature imprint. As a freely borrowing organism who created a speci-fic kind of modern space out of traditional raw material and western inputs, Tagore is the godfather, all modern film composers his spiritual heirs.

But the film song had a more complex mandate. There is wide consensus on seeing the two-decade period around the 바카라™50s as the golden age, a period of efflorescence when composers defined the genre and gave us its enduring classics. But they also set the limits from which it never liberated itself. The insistence on a 바카라˜light바카라™ music; the structured brevity of the film song; its very conception as a discrete packet of sung lyric for which the film soon became a mere excuse바카라”with due apologies to the masters, they overdefined the cinematic function of music and sowed the seeds of its decline.

M
ore crucial is how they positioned the genre, cannibalising from folk and classical and yet keeping a disdainful equidis-tance from both. The classical musician as a butt of ridicule, as someone inherently comical, is a favourite trope. Naushad facilitated one of the few pure classical moments in film by drafting in Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan to do the Tansen voice in Mughal-e-Azam. The result바카라”Prem Jogan Ban Ke바카라”sometimes doesn바카라™t even get listed among the film바카라™s songs. Perhaps rightly, for the khayal바카라™s dark, erotic undertow becomes pure atmosphere. The Salim-Anarkali rendezvous by night on low flame. But Naushad could also splice his Madhuban Mein Radhika바카라”Rafi on Dilip Kumar바카라”with a comic interlude of superfast taans filmed on that vaudeville clown, Mukri. Rafi couldn바카라™t have done that in a hundred takes; the uncredited singer is one S.D. Batish.

In film after film, occasional flashes of traditional voice cultures are allowed, only to put the 바카라˜clean바카라™, modern voice in favourable relief. Even classical music-based films in the South routinely see authentic performers lose out to the likes of K.J. Yesudas. Not even Ray was above this. In Goopy Gyne, the untrained Anoop Ghoshal trumps over a durbar full of ustads. Goopy is a country bumpkin, his voice is decidedly cosmopolitan. The tacit, subliminal effect is the same: a belittling of the old, a coronation of the new. Classical musicians, in their chequered film careers, have struggled in vain. The Amir Khan-Paluskar duet in Baiju Bawra, a stray Kishori Amonkar바카라”they바카라™re too bound up in the filmi genre to offer an alternative. The Shiv-Hari duo in the 바카라™80s are indistinguishable from middle-of-the-road tunesmiths. The genre does not rise up to meet them, they have to stoop to be accommodated.

Why did a fuller exploration of the filmic potential of music not happen? One, a weak conception of background scores, even sound in general. You recall the welding machines and the prison guard바카라™s hair-raising sab theek hai in Bandini; the ominous, creaking swing as motif in Sholay, maybe a few more. For the rest, the same stock music of screeching violins sufficed for a half-century. We never got to the stage of imagining a pure ambient, aural element melding into the texture of film: it perhaps needed a less denotative cinema. Our films바카라”legatees of a variety of oral genres, from epics to theatre, replete with song if not entirely in sung verse바카라”came to prioritise the logic of narrative over pure image. Regardless of its growing tenuous relation to plot, the song retained its subservience to this scheme: the words are important. Classical바카라”abstract, non-representational, music for its own sake바카라”tends to reduce its lyrics to mere syllabic matter, its melodic, percussive elements. It is the antithesis of narrative. This is the unlit intersection at which film and music lost each other.

There바카라™s another rupture. The film song is the first Indian musical product to start its life not 바카라˜live바카라™ but in the studio, under controlled norms of production. This has definite implications on how people consume and reproduce it. In traditional forms, no performance is the same as the previous edition바카라”they are born of spontaneity, of the moment. This imaginative reconstruction marks their very life and evolution. In contrast, film songs are a dead canon. You are sworn to reproduce exact replicas ad infinitum. It does not stimulate you, you simulate it. Give most people a set of favourite 바카라˜numbers바카라™, and they will uncomplainingly go through life바카라”playing, rewinding, replaying.

The 바카라˜art바카라™ film offered a counterpoint to the pageantry, mostly by reacting in excess to the excess. It preferred a pared-down soundscape, large black pauses populated only by the screeching of crickets. However, it didn바카라™t begin with such austerity. You had Ray, making his own cinematically motivated music바카라”simple, tight sonic lines to go with his precise, controlled frames. He knew the uses of music, but was an authoritarian master, unwilling to let it be a law unto itself or give it a chance to run away with the plot. You had Ghatak, brimming over with disembodied song in sheer joie de vivre and pathos. Titas Ekti Nadir Naam is yet to be matched as an alternate vision of a musical opus. A stray Aravindan uses Chaurasia. A Mani Kaul바카라”who knows a thing or two about music바카라”writes some eerie caterwauling for Idiot, but given that his real skill lay in ensuring that nobody saw his films, it goes unheard. Then it largely peters out into a brahminical disdain of song.

So we바카라™re stuck with this curious beast, the mainstream film song. The serenade, the tease, the mating dance. But is that all that bad? We often associate with music for reasons outside music바카라”a cultural aura that appeals to us, whether it바카라™s Tyagaraja, Deep South blues, Sufiana, punk, or Benarasi thumri. Why not this mass idiom바카라”after all, it had its moments: the ghostliness of Mahal; S.D.-Sahir-Guru Dutt and their poetry of the gutters; the madcap revelry of the Ganguly trio in Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi; the extended kotha sessions of Kala Paani; C. Ramachandra and Bhagwan Dada, the original Cha Cha Chaudhari. Panjak Mullick for grandpa, Panchamda for the babyboomer, Bure Bure for the bobbysoxer. In one sense, the film song is not a genre but a basket of genres. No one expects a billion people to walk around in a state of permanent exaltation바카라”Bhairav at dawn, raatri bela Bartok! Life is full of fallen moments바카라”the shameful, the salacious, the cheap바카라”and they will find expression outside classical notions of beauty. We have the sublime precisely because our emotional repertoire contains its binary opposite. The sheer lunacy of the film song satisfies this need for the ridiculous.

This potted history excluded prehistory바카라”the silent-era live musicians playing to the flickering images on screen바카라”and also the contemporary. Let바카라™s recap: A formative, exploratory stage, 바카라™30s-40s. A 바카라˜golden age바카라™ when the genre comes into its own. A static period: it degenerates into a stock of cliche but still delivers the goods. The decline: the muse all but deserts the scene. And a post-TV period. Ironically, just as the limits on filmic imagination were set in the best period, our liberation from them may have happened in the stalest of them. In retrospect, the 바카라™80s may have done some good. Film music got so bad that non-film forms finally got the space to breathe. A brief ghazal age seeped in from Pakistan바카라”and then qawwali, in the eye-catching shape of Nusrat. In Tamil, Ilayaraja cracked the harmonic basis of western music바카라”Hindi had till then only copied melody; violin, sitar and the final flourish on the flute always followed each other between mukhda and antara. A.R. Rahman brought this new strain up north, all booming bass and folk airs. MTV was not just a channel, every channel was MTV. And classical actually saw an industry renascence of sorts, catering to a new audience바카라”less literate, but eager to consume.

And something is afoot in the new song video-style numbers. Their disengagement from plot is complete바카라”they often come when the titles roll up. And the voices. What was begun in the street-smart 바카라™70s바카라”Kishore, the commonplace, inner-city voice gaining over the crystalware바카라”has come to fruition in a full-blown explosion of street patois. All the old idioms and registers we kept out of the frame, the voice cultures of folk minstrelsy, are filtering back in. Almost as if we see now that a vacuum had infiltrated that first folio of the modern: we want a reinfusion of raw lifeblood. Our new singers are all real or simulated versions of the qawwal, the dervish, the mirasi, the bhangramuffin, the bhaiyya바카라”a tentative nod at a fuller range of Indian tonality. They바카라™re all bounding about in a bawdy, energetic, hybrid electro-folk thrum. They even want to be the ones to get the girl. Heard the latest? Mika ko ishq brandy chad gayi...

Show comments
KR