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True Voice – Mohd Rafi

Sunday, December 15th, 2002

The following article was brought to my notice when Sharad posted it on MAS. The article has been trimmed down a bit keeping afloat Rafi details. However, anyone interested can go visit the source at http://tfmpage.com/forum/4980.6302.04.57.19.html

I am Swaminatha Iyer and I am 78 years old. I hail from Tiruchi and I am a part of music associations in Tiruchi, M’as as well as in West Bengal and Maharashtra.

I think it is wrong to condemn music or artists on either side of Vindhyas. Our Indian music is one of the few which has not been cleaned off by the western music though there has always been a influence. It speaks a lot of the richness of our music. Sometime back director of MTV had said that MTV westernized the music wherever it went but in India , MTV had to be Indianized for it to be accepted. A lot of this credit goes to the Indian film music. (more…)

Snippets from Film Sangeet Magazine (April 1970 issue)

Friday, December 13th, 2002

This article is by Mr. Rajinder Bhatia

Mr. Rajinder BhatiaMOHAMMAD RAFI ON TO HAJ PILGRIMAGE (more…)

Excerpts from a 1970 Film Sangeet Magazine

Saturday, December 7th, 2002

This article is by Mr. Rajinder Bhatia

Mr. Rajinder BhatiaFriends, While going through a box of some old books, I found a treasure – a couple of “Film Sangeet” magazines from 1970. This magazine used to be published by “Sangeet Karyalaya” from Hathras in UP and was actually run by Shri Prabhu Lal Garg, very famous for his humorous poetry under the name “Kaka Hathrasi.” (more…)

Thank you for the music, Rafi Saheb

Friday, November 15th, 2002

By Ramesh Babu for Hindustan Times. Source : Mohammed, Sheik & Ashok Harkara

Hero worshipper: Kunjli Soppy

P.M. KUNJLI Soppy’s life revolves around the legendary Hindi playback singer Mohammed Rafi. Soppy’s home is named Rafi Manzil. His son is named Mohammed Rafi. Soppy’s instruction to the teenaged Mohammed Rafi is: “At my funeral, you must play Janewalle kabhi nahin ate … my all-time Rafi favourite.” (more…)

Tum Mujeh Yun Bhula Na Paavoge

Friday, September 13th, 2002

How right he was! They don’t make singers like Mohammed Rafi any more. And there was no one quite in the same class even before. It was on a gloomy, evil, rain-drenched July 31, 1980 that Rafi achieved immortality. Two decades later, I would like to recall the monarch of playbackdom through 20 of his […]

How right he was! They don’t make singers like Mohammed Rafi any more. And there was no one quite in the same class even before. It was on a gloomy, evil, rain-drenched July 31, 1980 that Rafi achieved immortality. Two decades later, I would like to recall the monarch of playbackdom through 20 of his less-celebrated solos that are in no way inferior to his hundreds of acclaimed triumphs. (more…)

His Undying Tenor Survives

Thursday, August 1st, 2002

A tribute to the musical genius on his 22nd death anniversary by Quamar Ashraf

Mohammad Rafi was one of the most versatile and talented singers that the world of music has ever produced . He is heard in different tones in a wide range of romantic, classical and devotional songs and ghazals, in genres as diverse as qawwalis and bhajans. (more…)

July 31st

Wednesday, July 31st, 2002

This article is written by Mr. Robin Bhat

July 31st is always a sad day for Hindi film music listeners. And again on this July 31, the pain of not hearing the living voice of Mohammed Rafi for 22 long years is as unbearable as it was in 1980. (more…)

Sawan Ke Mahine Mein…

Thursday, July 4th, 2002

This article is written by Mr. Robin Bhat

Dear Fellow Rafi Lovers at “Meri Awaaz Suno”, (c/o Pradeep)

Another July is upon us. A month of dark, ominous clouds, which conquer the cerulean skies, and for days on end, shut out the sun itself. A month of little light, depressing overcast and like the torrential waters, bringing a swirl of memories of older, better days.

To Hindi music lovers, July is a similarly somber period. A month when we lost not one, but two suns. At the time, an eclipse of somewhat frightening proportions, all the more because it was sudden and irreversible.

It was a black Monday in 1975, when on July 14, while planning for a movie named ‘Salim-Anarkali’ at his friend Chetan Anand’s place, the legendary Madan Mohan left us, to never come back. Or, to come back only briefly and haunt us with his two final gifts – Mausam and Laila Majnu.

One man who must have suffered a heavy blow at the loss of Madan Mohan was Rafi. So many towering ghazals, soft romantic classics, heartbreaking emotional songs and the many, splendid faster songs from this incredible team! How sad he must have been to listen to his classics of Laila Majnu without the company of their creator.

Here is a quote from an article by Sanjeev Kohli –

” Whenever we asked him to pose with the harmonium for a photograph, he would play and sing the song ‘tumhari zulf key saaye mein’ from Naunihal and keep telling me that this was his favourite and why it was such a brilliant composition. It was my first encounter at being told by somebody I worshipped, that my father was way above the others. He also told me that MM had given him a new lease of life with Laila Majnu.

“At the time, everybody, including the hero of the film, wanted Kishore Kumar to be the male lead singer for the film. Rafi Saheb was not at the peak of his performing career, yet my father put his foot down, adamant that only Rafi should sing the songs or he would leave the film.. Of course, after Laila Majnu, Rafi became Rishi Kapoor’s voice in films like Karz., Amar Akbar Anthony, etc., etc”…

—————

And five years after this fateful day, came that terrible, last Thursday and last day of July, 1980. No more Rafi !! To those of us who grew up in those wondrous times, it is still somewhat unbelievable that Rafi-saab is no more. Every time I hear a Rafi song, I feel that he is still with us. ….’tu kahin aas-paas hai, ae dost’…

Such is the permanence of this man’s voice.

Many charlatans have come, pretending to be like him. They have all been discarded into the dustbin of history. One has scampered up on the rungs of Rafi’s voice and may go far, but by his own admission, he is not a patch on the master. Dudh ka dudh aur paani ka paani hi rahega.

Long live Madan Mohan and Mohammed Rafi !!

As we go through July, we can think of them with these lines –

‘Tum jo mil gaye ho, to ye lagta hai, ke jahaan mil gaya..
Ek bhatke hue raahi ko, caravan mil gaya…
Tum kya jaano tum kya ho,
Ek surila nagma ho…

Best regards…..Robin



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