Sunday, August 31, 2014

A Thousand Wings


So, what are you thinking about, my dear?
What brilliant dreams these tiny eyes hold?

Are you thinking of why the trees are all different shades of green?
Or why there are so many flowers of different kinds?
Are you thinking of why water, sometimes, falls from the sky?
Or are you trying to decipher where the sun goes at night?

Why the mud and the sand feel so good in your tiny hands?
Or why the wind makes a swoosh sound when you swing on the swing?
Or why your stomach tickles in the merry-go-round?
Are you thinking why the grass smells so good in spring?

Why wet, cold water makes you squeal with laughter?
Or why the sun feels so hot on a hot summer day?
Why I always get tired, but you can keep playing in the park?
And where do I get a new story, every new night to say?

The answer, my dear, is this little thing called childhood
It’s the most precious gift from god to man
It’s the only time to be free; truly, really free
A time not bound by life, nor bogged down by routine

A time when you have a thousand wings in your little pink bag
A time your flight is not restricted, by the height of the sky

Friday, August 08, 2014

A tribute to Kishore Kumar

A friend once said that when you are happy you listen to the music, but when you are sad you listen to the lyrics/song.

This is probably most true about Kishoreda's songs.

Recently there was a lot of buzz on my Watsapp groups around Kishore Kumar and when I checked online, I found that it was the maestro's 85th Birthday (on 4th Aug).

Being an eternal fan of Kishorda, I got on to Youtube and played a few of my all-time favorite Kishoreda songs,

  • Kuch toh log kahenge from Amar Prem
  • Chingari koi bhadke from Amar Prem again (this movie has some of the best songs EVER. Each one is a gem), and
  • O Saathi Re from Mukaddar ka Sikandar

And I got thinking “What is it about Kishoreda and sad songs? We keep listening to them and loose ourselves. It seems like he has never sang any other songs except sad songs.”

Being the versatile artist that he was, he has definitely sang all kinds of songs. Who can forget the perfect melody (and the yodeling) in “Mere Sapno ki Rani kab aayegi tu”, the rain-drenched romanticism of “Ek Ladki Bheegi Bhagi si”, the hilariously funny and absolutely crazy “Ek Chatur Naar” and that old party/picnic favorite “Dekha na hai re socha na”.

But beyond all those romantic songs, the funny songs and the crazy songs, it is Kishoreda’s sad songs that have made an immense impact on me and on a lot of other fans.

In fact, some of his romantic songs sound hauntingly sad. Take for example, “Hame tumse pyaar kitna”, “Chukar mere mann ko” or my favourite “Phir wohi raat hai”. These songs touch some chord deep on the heart and although, these are romantic songs and pictured as such, they feel sad and longing.

It is some kind of a deep hurting poignancy that his voice brings to these songs and that elevates the song to a whole new level.

Listening to Kishoreda's songs makes you realize the true value of love, even if you have not lost it. These songs sometimes are about the unfairness of life and the helplessness of man in the face of circumstances. But I think THAT, exactly, is what gives us the strength to carry on too. As one song goes “Hum kyon shikwa kare jhootha, kya hua jo dil toota” or other one “Ek raah Ruk gayi, toh aur jud gayi, main muda to saath-saath raah mud gayi”.

Kishoreda lives on in our lives, minds and senses through his music. And why we can’t forget him is as much because of his versatility and genius as because, maybe, like all of us (lesser mortals) he was probably a very sad man.

Within all the despair, all the sorrow and all the heart-break, life is still wonderful. Just like Kishordas songs.

Thank you Kishoreda for the music. I know you are yodeling away into a dense forest somewhere in the minds of fans.