RAJESH ROSHAN
25 years of melody
Music composer Rajesh Roshan completes 25 years
in the film industry this year. Despite changing trends and tastes, he has
more than
managed
to hold his own over the last quarter of
a century...
Twenty-five years ago,
there were three music directors who had established a stronghold so tough
that no other composer - new or old - could break through their monopoly.
But proving the axiom that you cant really stop a real talent. Rajesh
Roshan, younger son of the late genius Roshan, broke through into this elite
Kalyanji-Anandji/R.D. Burman/Laxmikant-Pyarelal league with Mehmoods
Kunwara Baap.
With his very first film, Rajesh Roshan topped the
annual Binaca Geet Mala, the only countdown show of the time, with Saj rahi
gali meri amma, the hijra song sung by Mohammed Rafi. Main hoon ghoda yeh
hain gaadi, Jai Bholenath jai ho Prabhu and Aa ri aaja nindiya added to what
was virtually an all-hit score.
The most refreshing feature of his songs was that
Rajeshs musical idiom was totally different from that of any other
music composer, which included dad Roshan and Laxmikant-Pyarelal, under whom
he had learnt his practical ropes.
His second release was Julie (1975), produced by B.
Nagi Reddy, the man who had been Columbus to his actor-brother Rakesh. This
all-hit score bagged Rajesh Roshan a major award. Probably for the first
time in Hindi films, a full-fledged English song, My heart is beating, was
composed and picturised in typical Hindi film fashion - and was a huge hit.
Other nuggets from the film included Dil kya karen; Yeh raaten nayi purani;
Saancha naam tera and Julie, I love you.
Between then and 1982, Rajesh Roshan went from strength
to strength with scores as varied, refreshing and, above all, invidualistic,
as Swami; Priyatama; Doosara Aadmi; Inkaar (all 1977), Khatta Meetha and
Des Pardes (1978), Mr Natwarlal (1979), Swayamwar (1980), Yaarana (1981),
Khuddar and Kaamchor (1982).
Then followed a low-key phase, when the Hyderabad-school
of filmmaking and Bappi Lahiris disco music held sway. But even in
this period, Rajesh scored a hit with Jaag Utha Insan (1984) and Khoon Bhari
Maang (1988).
In the 90s, when even the mighty Laxmikant-Pyarelel
and the doughty Bappi Lahiri gradually lost their bearings, Rajesh has endured
through films like Jurm and Bahaar Aane Tak (1990) and after another
dull phase, Karan Arjun and Sabse Bada Khiladi (1995), Papa Kahte Hain (1996),
Koyla (1997) and now Laawaris and Daag - The Fire, both of which are climbing
the charts.
In an era when only a hit films score is noticed,
Rajesh has also delivered impressive scores in such non-starters as Kaun
Sachaa Kaun Jhootha and Dastak (1996), and Dandnayak and Main Solah Baras
Ki (1998).
Apart for his aversion to publicity, Rajesh is known
in the industry for his soft-spoken nature. Laxmikant termed him The Last
Of The Originals and Kavita Krishnamurthi terms him the most gentlemanly
of all the composers. In his Juhu, Mumbai music room (where his father too
composed his unforgettables). Rajesh rewinds and unwinds to Screen across
his fathers harmonium which he continues to use.
Excerpts from the interview:
How would you sum up the last 25 years?
(Smiles) On the whole, Id say they have been
very smooth, despite the massive changes which have been taking place continually
in music and in the working system (in musical tastes). Thanks to true music
lovers, I have never once felt left out in these 25 years.
There was a time when I had just two films on hand,
my brothers Bhagwan Dada and Vimal Kumars Ghar Sansar. But I
did my best and they both proved musical hits. My determination to stay in
the race saw to it that I adapted to major changes in trends.
What would you rate as your greatest
achievements?
(Ponders). I think I am the only composer who has
successfully coped with a complete revolution in the working system and in
the structure of film music. When I started out, I used to record
live with a 100-piece orchestra. Only in a rare song would
electronics come in - I remember Viju Shah as a musician using a small mini-Korg
synthesiser. Today 90 per cent of my work is done on a state-of-the-art Korg.
And I have still maintained my individual style.
I have been called The last of the originals. Now
isnt that a big compliment from a senior?
In my own way, I have also been a trendsetter. What
is considered modern film music is very close to my style of music in Julie,
which was totally new at that time.
Finally, I am proud of the fact that my music from
the 70s and 80s is still popular, and that I will be remembered
only because my music lives on, and not because of controversies.
What is the most important change you have seen
during this 25-year period?
That the producer and director have taken away the
right of the music director to compose and be himself? That creative environment
has gone. Do you know that for the five song situations of Julie I gave just
five tunes to Nagi Reddysaab? He never even asked for a sixth tune.
The music director was judged by the quality of his
work, not by the quantum of assignments or how he promoted himself. Today,
a producer thinks that a music director who has twenty films is better than
one who has five.
Similarly, you are asked to play several tunes and
are assessed on that basis. They say, Aap ne chaar hi dhuney sunayi? (But
you only presented four tunes!) Music director bees dhuney sunvaate hain!
(Music directors usually present twenty tunes). They even take days to decide
whether they want a particular tune or not.
Some even come with cassettes of South Indian or Punjabi
hits, or tell us to re-work Western songs, or even ask me for songs that
can be re-worked! If you want to keep working you have to do it!
A related problem is that they ask you to compose five
songs in a jiffy. The producer approaches you weeks or months after he has
signed you, just a week before he is to leave for his song picturisation
schedule. And if you dont keep his deadline, its everyones
loss. Today, only about one out of my ten films satisfies me.
Is that why you have done a whole bunch of Western
copies recently?
In 1995 - and you must write this - there were five
copies of A.R. Rahmans Muqabla including mine in Sabse Bada Khiladi.
I have seen charts where the original Muqabala was at no. 8 and the copy
at no. 2 or 3! As I said, one must survive even in such a milieu.
In my own case, however, it is my original songs which
have been huge hits throughout. But does anyone acknowledge this fact? Ghar
se nikalte hi from Papa Kahte Hain was a chart-topper in the midst of the
Rahman brand of music.
Honestly speaking, where are the genuine music critics
today? Why are the genuine music lovers silent? Today, good music clicks
only if the film is a hit. Can you give a single instance of a great song
from a flop film which has been even nominated for any award, leave alone
actually bagging the award?
But if one song is a hit, is over-promoted on TV, and
the film also clicks. You even get the best music award even if the rest
of the songs are not upto the mark.
Does all this make you bitter?
Look, I dont blame anyone. Everyones caught
up in this system. I am cool about it. There are tremendous pressures but
I have survived. Even todays singers do several songs in a day.
Thats just not possible without spoiling both ones voice and
some or all of the songs they sing. But they too have to look at their own
survival. A singer is judged by how many films he is doing and the number
of songs he gets to sing in a day, and not how well he or she sings
them.
I remember Kishoreda, at his peak, would cancel a second
recording if he needed more takes for the first!
Is that why the soul is lacking in most
of todays songs?
All these factors do contribute. In our time, we cashed
in on the masterly singers who could go beyond our compositions because they
had been well groomed by an earlier generation of composers. We reaped the
benefits of their hard work.
I have introduced or given major breaks to so many
singers - Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik, Sadhana Sargam, Preeti Uttam etc. But
we never got the opportunity to spend time on grooming them.
You have never tried to fight or beat the
system?
Well, I have resisted the temptation to do twenty or
more films at a time, though I know that I would have been considered a bigger
name - and been richer, too.
HMV and Muzaffar Ali offered me a film two years ago.
They quoted a fabulous price and said I would get whatever I asked for. But
they wanted nine songs in two months. I politely declined and told them that
we could work again some other time.
Now tell me, would any other composer have refused
such a film and such big money coming within just two months? But I saw no
reason why my other producers and their music should suffer.
What are your forthcoming assignments?
Apart from my brothers Kaho Na... Pyar Hai, there
are Tips Friends, directed by Kundan Shah; Officer; Ashok Mehtas
Moksha; Dil Ke Aas Paas; and Vimal Kumars new film with Govinda.
Given a chance, what would you change if you could
re-live these 25 years again?
(Thinks) I have been very firm about a few things in
the past, and I have lost major banners for it. For example, I would insist
on a particular singer like Latabai or Ashabai even if the producer wanted
someone else, because I knew which composition demanded which voice. I would
probably listen to them now - at least if they are insistent despite my
persuasion.
Of the top of your head, what would your personal
top ten read like?
Kunwara Baap, Julie, Des Pardes, Yaarana, Karan Arjun,
Papa Kahte Hain, Khudgarz, Mr Natwarlal. Does that make ten?
That makes eight...
You can add Jurm and yes, Khatta Meetha, I am rather
fond of the songs from in this film.
Off-hand, can you recollect any one incident which
makes all this work worth it?
I remember the day Kishoreda was to record for my Tumse
badhkar duniya mein, for Kaamchor. In the morning he was to do a song for
someone else and record with me in the evening. On the way he was hearing
the cassette I had given him to rehearse. He almost reached the studio, which
was 15 km from his house, when he suddenly asked his driver to turn back
and drive back home. Kishoreda told him, This song is so good that
I wont be able to do justice to it if I record another song in the
morning!
And any regrets?
Well, there is one regret which applies to all composers
as well. In the West, pop icons churn out less than 10 albums in a lifetime,
of which about six are hits, and they earn fame and money in multiples of
what our composers do with 75 or more hit albums to their name! |