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Music News Articles
Screen - The Business of entertainment

Disadvantage No. 1
Anyone who has recently heard the music of the films - Joru Ka Ghulam, Beti No.1, Kunwara, Hadh Kar Di Aapne and Dil Ne Phir Yaad Kiya - will concur that our Hero No. 1 isn’t at all fastidious about what passes for music in his films. Govinda, the one-man entertainer in showbiz after Amitabh Bachchan, loses out to the Khans and even most of the other top-bracket stars in this crucial department.

On the positive side, it may be said that Govinda has remained in the top-stratum of stars consistently since Aankhen (1993), despite a low average of hits and an almost insignificant list of chart-topping scores and songs. But let’s face it - movies get initials today on their music and song picturisations, and good music may not make or mar a film but certainly enhances its repeat and perennial value.

The tragedy is that Chi-Chi is attempting a Bachchan minus his flair for hit songs. Amitabh Bachchan’s persona inspired his filmmakers and composers to be at their best, in direct contradiction to the myth that he destroyed music. But then he was surrounded by master filmmakers who knew how to work in hit songs into a good script and composers like Laxmikant-Pyarelal, Kalyanji-Anandji, R.D. Burman and Rajesh Roshan. The role of songs like Khaike paan Banaraswala, My name is Anthony Gonsalves or Mere paas aao mere doston cannot be understated for their contribution to AB’s sustained supremacy.
Govinda is working in a set-up where item songs are bull-dozed into (mostly) pathetic scripts and music-makers who are more concerned with their own insecurities. He is also shunned for no specific reason by the few music-conscious filmmakers around.

But let us forget memorable numbers and see at least his hits. The last truly chart-topping Govinda number was Ankhiyon se goli maaro (Dulhe Raja). In the entire ’90s, he has had a mere handful of chart-toppers like Sarkailo khatiya (Raja Babu), Meri pant bhi sexy (Dulaara), Kisi disco mein jaaye (Bade Miyan Chhote Miyan) and Lal dupatte wali (Aankhen) to name a few. Considering the fact that the man has done almost 80 films in this period, this is catastrophically low. Add the fact that none of these songs have been musical masterpieces likely to stand the test of time - in which category he may barely have a song or two like Sanam mere sanam (Hum) - and you know why Govinda is still considered a downmarket also-ran despite being way ahead of his contemporaries in calibre and range.

Hum and Pardesi Babu apart, no Govinda film in the ’90s boasts of standard music. On the contrary the bulk of his music ranges from mediocre (Saajan Chale Sasural) to horrendous (Hum Tumpe Marte Hain), and now that he is irretrievably trapped in the clowning genre, his music too seems to be automatically downgraded, just as it was in the ’80s when he was labelled as a kind of junior Mithun Chakraborty.

There’s only one way out of this impasse. If Chi-Chi cannot work with a higher calibre of filmmakers, he at least needs someone who can guide him in his music. Over the decades, heroes have been known to pick and choose their music carefully. Involvement has led to fantastic results in the case of stars like Shammi Kapoor, peak-time Dev Anand, Manoj Kumar, Rishi Kapoor and Rajesh Khanna, to name just five.

The debate on whether a star makes a song or vice-versa is frankly irrelevant here. By hook or by crook, the most versatile actor of this generation must become a Maahir instead of an Anaari No.1 in matters musical.

Rajiv Vijayakar

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