Year 1956. Aparesh Lahiri and his wife Banshori Lahiri were at Calcutta바카라s iconic Eden Gardens stadium for an important performance. Their son Alokesh, all of 4 years, was supposed to debut on stage, and play the tabla for a live audience for the first time. Both Aparesh and Banshori were beaming with pride, mixed with a little trepidation, perhaps? Will their beloved Baapi - that was Alokesh바카라s daak naam, a Bengali pet name - be able to deliver the goods? As it turned out, they didn바카라t have a cause to worry. Alokesh aka Baapi was a wizard on the tabla바카라his fingers waltzed on the drums as if that was the sole reason for his existence.
Aparesh Lahiri was quite the prodigy himself. Starting his career from All India Radio, he moved on to composing, writing and singing. He is said to have turned music director for almost a hundred Bengali movies, give or take. As a playback singer, Aparesh Lahiri lent his voice to many Hindi films made in the 40s and 50s, including Faisla (1947), Bimal Roy바카라s Pahla Aadmi (1950) and Amiya Chakrabarty바카라s Badshah (1954). For Badshah, he collaborated with Shankar Jaikishan on the song Jaage mera dil soye zamana. All of this, while living in Calcutta and trying to carve a niche in Bengali music. He was a key figure in the evolution of radio in Bengal, and trained many a talent in his day, who went on to surpass him in fame and popularity.


If Aparesh was an icon, Banshori was no less. In a Khayal contest held at the famous Dover Lane Music Conference, she came first. Along with her expertise in khayal singing, she was also adept at thumris. In the year 1962, she turned music director with the film Dilli Theke Kolkata.
It was around 1956 that the Bengalis discovered a 바카라new talent바카라 by the name of Lata Mangeshkar. Upon realising that her Bengali diction was near-flawless which made it almost impossible to gauge that she was not native to the language, composers went on a tizzy. During this time, Aparesh Lahiri composed two songs for her, both of which were to go down in history. The first one was Phande poria boga kaande re from the film O Amar Desher Maati (1958). The second one has achieved its own cult. It바카라s called Ek bar biday de maa ghure ashi, from the film Subhash Chandra (1966). The song was part of folklore, believed to be composed in memory of Khudiram Bose, the 18-year-old revolutionary who went to the gallows. The song was earlier performed by Dhananjoy Bhattacharya for the film Biplabi Khudiram. Partly because of Lata바카라s lilting rendition and partly because of the legend associated with it, the 바카라66 version from Subhash Chandra became immensely popular and made Lata Mangeshkar a household name in Bengal. It was in this film that Alokesh got his first screen credit, as 바카라Baapi Lahiri바카라, assisting his father.


It was Lata Mangeshkar who suggested that this boy should be put under the mentorship of tabla exponent Pandit Samta Prasad. Baapi started learning under his tutelage, and kept getting better and better at playing the tabla. Then it was the piano that captured his imagination, so he learnt that as well. But what he was itching for was to start composing. He had seen his father and mother compose music. They lived in a south Calcutta complex called Graham바카라s Land, and young Baapi witnessed crowds outside the house to catch a glimpse of the legends Aparesh and Banshori Lahiri.


The opportunity came when he was 12 years old. Baapi Lahiri composed a song for his father that went: Shidi bhanga onker moto e jibon. This was a non-film album and Aparesh Lahiri sang it, beaming with pride. When he turned 19, Baapi got his first break as a music director for the Bengali film Daadu (1969). He shared credit with fellow composers Kalipada Sen, Subodh Roy and Anil Dutta. But Baapi had set his sights higher. He was eyeing a dhoti-clad sexagenarian Bengali who had been making waves in Bombay for more than two decades: Sachin Dev Burman. S.D. Burman was his idol, and Baapi packed his bags set sail for Bombay, with his parents. From here on out, Aparesh and Banshori Lahiri were to dedicate themselves to a life of witnessing their son reach new heights.
Ram Mukherjee, Shashadhar Mukherjee바카라s nephew and Rani Mukherjee바카라s father, was mounting his family studio Filmalaya바카라s latest outing, Nannha Shikari. It is then that Baapi came to his notice, and he took him to meet Kishore Kumar. The eccentric genius agreed to sing for this young, untested music director on one condition: that he should act in Kishore da바카라s new film Badhti Ka Naam Daadhi, and so it was settled. But there was one more thing to take care of. Following his belief in numerology, Ram Mukherjee made a slight modification to Alokesh Lahiri바카라s daak naam. He introduced an extra 바카라p바카라 in his name, whereby Baapi Lahiri came to be known as Bappi Lahiri.