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The
case of the "Sitamgar" soundtrack is a strange
one. All the songs on this album were gems. Even the
unreleased seldom-heard Shailendra Singh song “
kisii Gariib ke dil se”
(having had the privilege of hearing it a couple of
times, I am willing to accept this as his best song
ever) was testimony to Pancham's ability to elevate even
mundane common place lyrics with his melodies and musical
embellishments. Yet, the soundtrack languishes in the
doldrums. It's very rare, and neither the CD nor tape is
as easily available as some of his other soundtracks.
You'll be in luck only if you snag a few of those rare
compilations with strange names and manage to find a
stray inclusion. All this means that the soundtrack
remains relatively "under-sung". Although the
ISB transcriptions are almost all there, they can only
present the lyrical content with hardly any hint of what
Pancham had to offer to the song. It thus seems fitting
to choose a song from the album (also the first song
that I remember having heard from the list).
As a lyricist Majrooh has swung between the sublime and
the pedestrian. He seems to have stuck to the latter
here, except, as Vinay noted in his transcription,
dropping in a tasty bit
like “
wo to kahataa rahaa,
zi.ndagii ke liye / ek muhabaat ke sivaa kuchh na
mujhako chaahiye”.
Given these relatively ordinary yet effective lyrics,
the onus is on Pancham to (if I may use a cliché):
add some yeast. This he does with great aplomb. I have a
dim recollection of the film itself, and the only song I
remember on-screen is “Pyar
Jab Na Diya Zindagi Ne Kabhi...”.
I am told that this, being
the title song (the title features prominently enough to
justify this claim), features during the opening
credits, as Dharmendra rides a horse. There's the
element of the western, and thus related notions of the
loner, the lone gunman on a mission that we will soon
find out more about. Perhaps that explains the use of
the guitar and the harmonica, two of the definitive
ornaments on the background scores of countless westerns
(especially the spaghetti ones).
The prelude begins with an electric guitar and an
acoustic guitar working through a common chord
progression. The acoustic guitar provides arpeggios; the
electric guitar plays about with small variations and
leading fragments connecting the chord changes. When the
drum kit kicks (no pun intended) in for the second run
through the progression, the only accompanying pattern
is played out on the hi-hat. Once two iterations are
done, we are treated to the next fragment: this
comprises the ubiquitous bass guitar finally making its
appearance, the guitar playing chords with a rhythm
pattern that employs slides, and the harmonica providing
the melodic component. At the end of this fragment, the
strings join in for a plush run, and a synthesizer relay
run provides the glue to take us the end of the prelude
and Kishore begins right on cue.
The rhythm for the song is a characteristic Pancham
pattern. In fact, it's almost always one of the giveway
hints when you're trying to figure out if a song is a
Pancham creation or not. While the familiar elements
(the bass guitar, the hi-hat, the strings providing
filler runs) run in the back as Kishore articulates
Majrooh's words, Pancham manages to add something subtle
(well, not really, since you can hear it rather clearly)
and interesting. He tosses in
a single tabalaa beat to
accompany the hi-hat and create a fairly simple
composite rhythm that doesn't steal the thunder from the
song, and yet, offers a small reward if you're paying
close attention.
The first interlude is short and high on synthesizer and
strings, with the bass guitar providing the runs.
The first a.ntaraa features fills from what is most
likely the synthesizer with a tone that seems like an
electronically embellished sa.ntuur. The other appealing
aspect is represented by the fainter violin fills
accompanying the tail end of the verse.
The harmonica returns to form the melodic core of the
second interlude. This time Pancham gets the electric
guitar to provide strums on the lower strings to
complement the bass runs (thus adding what might seem
like a disjoint delayed echo to the key bass notes). The
violins connect the end of the section to the second
a.ntaraa, which functions just like the first for the
most part.
Is that brass opening the third interlude or a
convincing facsimile on the synthesizer? The strings
return for the middle, before a synthesizer riff
connects us to the third and a.ntaraa.
As Kishore ends the muKa.Daa near the end, the bass
guitar provides familiar connecting phrases and the song
draws to a close sans fanfare.
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