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We need a break!

We need a break, dear music companies. From the two entities that are in insane overdrive today - Punjabi pop and Pancham pop (as in R.D. Burman - original and remixed). And you need to apply the brakes.

Make no mistake. Our film music is replete with regional as well as foreign influences that have enriched our songs enormously. Take away the southern influence of A.R. Rahman, the monumental contribution of Bengalis and Muslims, and the colors of Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra, and where would our film music be? Obviously, there were phases when one or more of these flavours were at the acme of their popularity, as were the Punjabi styles and the era of Rahul Dev Burman.

Even among Western influences, we had the eras of Eena meena deeka, Shammi Kapoorian jazz, disco and rap (though it originated in India). All these were rejected as soon as they went into excess supply. Last but certainly not the least, the saccharine but monotonous and derived melodies of Nadeem-Shravan too lost their bearings after saturation, and then Rahman and Anu Malik appeared in 1993-4.

But in the last two years of thereabouts, there has been a literal battering ram attack of bhangra/Punjabi pop and of R.D.Burman in non-film as well as film music. In the case of the latter (whose compositions are good, bad and average, even find their way or dominate remixes and even basic albums in mutilated forms), it is of course the supreme tragedy of his erratic career during his lifetime, when he was reviled rather than given his due for his ingenious skills. And today, the younger generation is unfortunately being exposed to downright vile ‘worse’ ions of his compositions.

Equally regrettable is the fact that two of the oldest music companies in the business are releasing a surfeit of his songs in compilations, thereby doing an injustice to the sterling compositions of practically every one of his illustrious contemporaries, and even seniors and juniors. If for nothing else other than to spare RD, the remixes must also target an increasing number of songs by other composers!

As for the Punjabi breed, the music is as confusing as the names, so much so that if you have heard one album, you have heard ’em all. And it’s not even as if this is a gold rush - 9 out of 10 such albums have less substance than the proverbial house of cards, and collapse as ignominiously! Most of the videos are obnoxious and sexist too, even if they expose (pun intended) the album’s only catchy track. In short, these disastrously cacophonous efforts are doing nothing but damage to the years of hard work put in by our film composers to popularise Punjabi music, which is essentially extremely colourful, energetic, vibrant, rugged and - at it’s best - even more infectious than the common cold. Men like Ghulam Haider and Khemchand and Prakash must be turning in their graves, and O.P. Nayyar and Ravi must me seething with impotent rage.

Among the rest, we had a generous dollop of Punjabi music from Laxmikant Pyarelal, and sizable contributions from so many composers like Sonik-Omi, Shanker Jaikishan, Madan Mohan, Khayyam, Salil Chaudhary and even R.D. Burman.

Sadly, the very people who should be revolting against this abuse of their own folk, the Punjabis, are not complaining. I happen to know that several music critics do not even bother to write reviews of such films any longer. In this column many months ago, I had mentioned this malaise, but today the disease has reached fulminating levels.

And to make it worse, a substantial chunk of this trash comes from NRI’s or as imports from small UK- and USA- based Indian music companies.

Of the two overdoses, the RD one (at least in its original compilations form) is far less objectionable. But it is a supreme irony that a colossus like Pancham is being thrust in such excessive quantity on us when the man himself lived his entire career in search for more variety, experimentation and innovation. And what a tragedy that after his death, this truly-great composer has to be actually categorised with the likes of Bhupis, Sukhbir Manna, Kulbirs, Jassis, Sukhshinders and what-have-you-balle-balles as someone who is beginning to generate ennui. Excess is always bad. And it will be a great tragedy if the music consumer begins to revolt against two major assetes to popular music - Punjabi folk and R.D. Burman’s brilliance.

Rajiv Vijayakar

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