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In
the early-to-mid 80s R. D. Burman was very busy.
He boasted a full workload and was a favourite of
the big banners. One camp of listeners lauded his
creativity while another contended that he was
overworked and headed for burnout. What could not
be denied was the persistent diversity in his
music. He continued to be a favourite for new
launches: directors and actors making their débuts
(and sometimes even their shot at a second
coming). Amjad Khan was one such example. The
talented actor chose Pancham as the music director
not just for his directorial début (Adhura
Aadmi), but also for the next two films he
would helm (Chor
Police, Ameer Aadmi Gharib Aadmi). Reportedly,
these were above-average efforts and indicated
that Amjad Khan was definitely a cut above the
rest in mainstream filmmaking, but alas, the 80s
did not prove to be a good time for either Amjad
Khan or Pancham, who, as the 90s drew near, hit
his worst streak of all time (paradoxically, so
close to his winning run of work). He became box
office poison, people withdrew from him, and he
was left to watch one great song after another go
down the drainpipe of anonymity as the films bit
the dust at the box office (or worse, never made
it to the box office). Amjad Khan had a couple of
other movies to his name too, but these died
either in pre-production or on their way to the
marquee. And then there was Abhi
To Main Jawaan Hoon.
The
Amjad Khan films aren't very easily accessible,
and I have to consider myself privileged to have
been able to catch Ameer
Aadmi Gharib Aadmi recently.
Between the film posters, the audio release
and the frames in the film that feature the title,
the third word in the title gets three different
spellings: Gharib,
Ghareeb and Gareeb..
The film weaves a tale of love, struggle and
strife set against the backdrop of the age-old
conflict between factory workers and the owners.
The opening sequence where Imtiaz is talking to
Sharat Saxena about another person to be bumped
was sufficient proof that there was something
different about Amjad Khan. The opening credits
reveal that Amjad Khan wrote and edited the film
in addition to directing and starring in it.
Enough
with the history lesson and on with the music.
Pancham contributed a fine set of songs to the
film. Each was situationally sound (and the
situations themselves were in keeping with the
trends of mainstream cinema). The wonderfully
maudlin aisaa
kyo.n hotaa hai (that first line portends kyo.n
naye lag rahe from pyaar
huA chupake se from 1942:A
Love Story; then there was dhak
dhak dha.Dake which reappeared as tum
jo mile hamako in Gardish;
there was the playful banter of sarakaarii
daamaad; the nahii.n
jaanaa mujaraa; Lata's paas
rahataa hai (the picturisation of which scored
a few points for style); and finally, the raison d'être of this page, Asha's har ek raasataa sajaa ke chal, picturised, appropriately enough,
on Parveen Babi (apparently, Babi left for the US
after finishing this song, and Amjad Khan finished
the film with Zeenat Aman) and receiving, thanks
to Amjad Khan, better treatment than most other
directors would have afforded it
The
song opens with a free-form collection of
fragments played on the synthesizer (with a tone
that's so close to that of a flute) against the
background of delicate shimmering chimes. The next
segment in the build-up is a broken chord played
out on an electric guitar, whose output is deeply
flanged with heavy feedback. It literally drenches
the soundscape with the feedback swirls. Asha's
voice breaks in with a series of 'haa-haa's while
the guitar continues to provide the backing
soundscape with more arpeggios. A synthesizer
relay plays out next, and the guitar switches to
simple chord sweeps to accompany it. As soon as
the relay ends, the guitar plays the coda of the
free-form section of the opening musical fragment
to introduce the rhythm that follows. The rhythm
exploits electronica along with a combination of
the hi-hat, bass, the flanged guitar, and phased
synthesizer chords with delayed fades. The coda
you heard before the rhythm came in reappears as a
2-3-4/2-4 motif. Asha begins singing the muKa.Daa
accompanied by the hi-hat and enough active bass
playing to prove a worthy exercise. There's a
female chorus that provides a refrain to Asha's
lines along the melody of the 2-3-4/2-4 motif.
The
first interlude uses more electronica, the hi-hat
and the electric guitar providing subdued
presence. The flute-toned synthesizer plays out a
run before a couple of percussive cycles introduce
the a.ntaraa. The interesting thing about the
melody of the a.ntara is that it takes off from
the rhythm of the motif introduced in the opening
musical fragment and the refrain in the muKa.Daa.
The rest of the musical accompaniment features the
usual suspects: the running bounding bass, the
hi-hat and the flute-toned synthesizer. Listen
carefully and you can hear guitar strums along
with the swirls. The chorus appears near the end
as we return to the muKa.Daa.
The
second interlude opens with a trilling riff from
the flute-toned synthesizer (if that's a real
flute, I'd welcome a clarification). An acoustic
guitar provides chord strums (with the bass
providing single note complements for the chords)
and there's also a nice pattern played out on a
conga. Asha steps in with a "laa laa laa"
line and the conga pattern is replaced by a
pattern played out on a snare drum while the bass
begins bounding again. The flanged guitar plays
out a connecting riff before the usual rhythm
introduces the second a.ntaraa, which shares the
spirit and arrangement of the first.
Asha
follows up the muKa.Daa with the coda: the melody
is the same, but it's "laa"s instead of
words. The chorus now provides a continuous gentle
harmony instead of interjecting with the usual
refrain. There's no hi-hat now; just a synthesizer
and the bass providing the rhythm, along with
flanged swirls and a muted strumming pattern on
the guitar as everything fades out.
A
subtle yet interesting aspect of this song is the
absence of the violins and strings that inundate
most Bollywood songs. Another Pancham composition
that shares this honour is chho.Do
sanam from Kudrat.
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