The Melody Queen Lata Mangeshkar: She came, She sang and She conquered!!!
Babushahi Bureau
Chandigarh, February 6, 2022: The angelic voice that made millions of admirers swoon and fall in love, Lata Mangeshkar breathed her last today 06 February 2022 at 8.12 am. She has died because of multi-organ failure after more than 28 days of hospitalization post-COVID-19.
She left behind a rich musical legacy and the coming generations will remember her as a stalwart of Indian culture.
Elevating the tunes to soaring musical heights, evoking a gamut of emotions and encompassing practically every genre of Indian music, Lata Mangeshkar had captivated the listeners from all walks of life and became the most glittering star of Hindi film music.
Her voice, like Mahatma Gandhi's loincloth and Rabindranath Tagore's beard, became a part of India's collective unconscious. She elevated playback singing from its surrogate status to that of a highly valued component of the country's burgeoning entertainment industry.
The sweetness, tenderness, and melodiousness of her singing had remained unmatched. She had an uncanny knack for conveying very succinctly the feel behind the lyrics of a song.
Restraint in the externalization of emotions was the beauty of Lata's singing. She was no Goddess but her prime era voice was plain divine. She became an integral part of musical sensitivity, cinematic history and social fabric of India. Rightfully, she earned the sobriquet of ‘The Nightingale of India’ and even won the highest national honour Bharat Ratna.
The story of Lata Mangeshkar, reads like a powerful feminist script: the single woman's search for identity in a male-dominated society, her eventual triumph and the dramatic turn of fortune.
From the heavy, mushy, melodramatic rendition patterns of 1930-1940s, she brought a rare finesse, softness and subtlety of expression into film-songs. Madhubala's stunning beauty and the young Lata's mesmerizing voice created history with ‘Aayega Aanewala..’ (Mahal-1950).
She bargained with the producers to jack up the remuneration to five-figure for every song and shared a part of the colossal royalty paid by the record manufacturing companies.
Her choice of songs and her expressive style of rendition brought a never before dignity and decorum in film music. Bade Ghulam Ali Khan called her ‘Ustaadon Ki Ustaad’ and commented “Kambakht, kabhi besuri hi nahi hoti.”
Kumar Gandharva complimented that ‘What Lata achieves in a film song lasting three minutes is equivalent to what a great classical singer might achieve in a three hour long mehfil. She was not only the voice of the dreamy romantic love she was also the voice of a sharing wife, caring mother, doting sister and innocent child of the family.
Her emotional rendition of the patriotic song ‘Ae Mere Watan Ke Logo’ after the Chinese aggression had moved the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to tears.
Lata Mangeshkar's early life was a Dickensian saga of nightmarish poverty and drudgery. She was born as Hema on September 28, 1929 in Indore, but later rechristened as Lata. Her father, Dinanath Mangeshkar, was a classical singer and owned an itinerant dramatic troupe. An attack of smallpox, when she was two years old, left indelible marks on her body. She had no schooling as she started singing and acting in her father’s musical plays at the age of five. In 1942, her father died of pleurisy and Lata only 13, put on full war paint to act and sing in Master Vinayak’s “Pahili Manglagaur” (Marathi film).
Lata played the heroine's sister and had three songs. A month earlier she had recorded her first song in a Marathi movie Kiti Hasaal (1942). But the song ‘Naachu Yaa Gade Khelu Saari’ was chopped off at the editor's table.
After ‘Pahili Manglagaur’, Master Vinayak enrolled her as staff artiste on monthly salary of Rs 60. When the company shifted to Bombay, Lata took a house at Nana Chowk on monthly rent of Rs 25. It was not easy to fork out with eight mouths to feed. She became disciple of Aman Ali Khan Bhindi bazarwala to learn classical music.
When Aman Ali left for Pakistan, she found a new guru in Amanat Ali. She made entry into the Hindi film arena with ‘Paa Laagun Kar Jori.. (Aap Ki Seva Mein-1947). After the closure of Prafull Pictures, she became jobless. During those days, she happened to meet Master Ghulam Haider, who was struck by the range and sweetness of the young girl's voice. He took Lata to Subodh Mukherjee, who rejected her saying that the ‘poor little thing’ had a "squeaky" voice. Masterji told him “The day is not far off when producers would queue up to sign the singer you are rejecting today.” How prophetic his words proved to be!!!
While waiting for a local train, Haider asked Lata to sing ‘Bulbulo Mat Ro...’ again. She sang and Haider kept tapping a tin of 555 cigarettes. The trains whistled in and out but he was immersed in the song. An hour later, Lata Mangeshkar was singing the same song for the film ‘Majboor’ at Bombay Talkies. The recording for Majboor was not easy it was recorded at the 32nd take. A whole battery of music directors were present at the rehearsal room of Bombay Talkies to listen to Haider's "discovery". She was flooded with singing assignments. The first was Naushad, who signed her for ‘Andaaz’ and Bhagatram got her to sing for Badi Bahen. Then came Barsaat where she sang ‘Jiya Bekaraar Hai..’, a song whose popularity is undiminished even today. She was paid just Rs200 for a Barsaat song.
In those days, playback singers were not credited on record labels, perhaps to conceal the fact that actors did not sing their own songs. When the 78 rpm record of ‘Aayega Aanewala..’ (Mahal) was released the song was credited to the character ‘Kamini’. Faced by a crescendo of demands, HMV revealed that a new singer Lata Mangeshkar has rendered this song. Kamal Amrohi, composer Khemchand Prakash and Lata brought much inventiveness to give the song a ghostly feel. She stood in a corner of the studio, with the microphone at the centre. She walked towards the microphone singing the opening verse from ‘Khamosh Hai Zamana...’ to ‘Is Aas Key Sahare’ and when she got close to the mike, she sang the refrain ‘Aayega, Aayega..’. This proved a smashing hit and she became one of the most sought-after voices of Hindi cinema.
The first half of her career is beyond compare. Lata’s voice had all the intrinsic qualities: Sweet and soft, serene and soothing, sentimental and spiritual to perfectly suit that era’s idealistic Indian woman’s clean-cut virginal screen image. The maestros like Anil Biswas, Naushad, Shankar-Jaikishan, C. Ramchandra, S. D. Burman, Madan Mohan, Roshan, Salil Choudhary, Hemant Kumar and Vasant Desai etc. composed exquisite tunes and Lata added her own magical virtuosity to create unforgettable songs. The peerless composers of this era no doubt played their part in creation of ‘The Lata Legend’.
The second half of her career did not really go well with her rightfully earned title of the ‘Melody queen’. Some composers used her miraculous range to compose unbelievably high-pitched compositions. Shanker-Jaikishan’s Ehsaan Tera Hoga Mujh Par.. (Junglee) and O Mere Shah-e-Khuba (Love In Tokyo) were meant for the male vocal range. Kumar Gandharva voiced that by making Lata sing at abnormally high pitches, the composers were damaging the natural sweetness and flair of her voice. Her voice started sounding aged and jaded. But she marched on relentlessly. The soundtracks like Do Raste, Ek Duje Ke Liye, Love Story, Chandani, Maine Pyar Kiya, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, Hum Aapke Hain Kaun and Dil To Pagal Hai kept on reminding of her Midas touch of belting out hits after hits. An occasional Pakeeza, Aandhi, Kinara, Razia Sultan, Lekin, Rudaali even showed flickering glimpses of her best.
Lata Mangeshkar gave voice to the Indian silver-screen’s glitterati and the well-known actresses of the day wanted her to sing for them. She had lent her voice to four generations of heroines, an unparallel and iconic phenomenon in Hindi cinema. Her voice was best suited for heroines with either honey on their tongues (Nargis, Nutan) or high-decibel shirkers (Asha Parekh, Saira Banu). Jaya Bachchan once said, "No heroine felt that she has arrived until Lataji sang for her".
A nostalgia-trip to her melody-land, her most significant songs: ‘Aayega Aanewala.. (Mahal); ‘Jiya Beqarar Hai.. (Barsaat); ‘Yeh Zindagi Usi Ki Hai.. (Anarkali); Aye Maalik Tere Bande Hum.. (Do Aankhen Barah Haath); ‘Pyar Kiya To Darna Kya.. (Mughal-e-Azam); ‘O Sajna Barkha Bahar Aayi.. (Parakh); ‘Aye Mere Watan Ke Logon..’; ‘Aa Jaane Jaan.. (Inteqam); ‘Chalte Chalte Yun Hi Koi Gaya Tha.. (Pakeeza); ‘Ek Pyaar Ka Nagma Hai.. (Shor); ‘Didi Tera Devar Deewana.. (Hum Aapke Hain Kaun); ‘Are Re Are Yeh Kya Hua.. (Dil To Paagal Hai) and ‘Tere Liye Hum Hain Jiye.. (Veer Zaara) and there are at least a thousand songs left out of the queue.
Many of her non-film albums like Meera Bhajan, Chaala Vaahi Des, Lata Sings Ghalib and Shraddhanjali etc. have carved a musical niche of their own. She composed music for a few Marathi movies, mostly under the pseudonym ‘Anandghan’. Lata launched her own music label ‘LM Music’ with an album of bhajans ‘Swami Samarth Maha Mantra’ in 2012.
Her private and professional life had always remained shrouded in controversies: her infamous non-alliance with O.P. Nayyar, tiffs with some senior composers, differences with Rafi and Raj Kapoor over the song-royalty issue, alleged blocking of other singers and quietly acceptance of exaggerated entry in Guinness book of world records. The budding career of Suman Kalyanpur, Sudha Malhotra and Vani Jairam to Anuradha Paudwal was nipped simply because no one dared to question the hegemony. Remaining at top of the profession for more than five decades, she must have stepped on quite a few toes, hurt quite a few souls and bruised quite a few egos. However, she weathered all these storms with a dignified stoic silence and never indulged in mudslinging.
By early 1963, C. Ramchandra-Lata relationship had cooled off as he had come in the way of her wedding with glam boy Jaikishan. Before C Ramchandra, there had been Pt. Husnlal, Shyam Sunder, Sardul Kwatra etc. in her life. She finally got to the point of marrying Kumar Rajsinh of Dungarpur but his father Maharawal Laxmansinhji put his foot down. Her favourite Indian singer was K.L. Saigal and she always put on a tiavaratna ring belonging to Saigal. She was essentially a secretive person, a lone ranger in a gregarious world of glamour. She imperceptibly thrown a sort of cordon sanitaire around her. She lived up to the public image of a modern Meera, the single woman in a white sari who visited the Mahalaxmi Temple every week in a white Ambassador car, a white vanity bag dangling from her hand.
She had performed all over the USA, Canada and Europe selling the "voice" to the petro-dollar market with cheering, clapping of Indo-Pakistanis. In 1974, she became the first Indian to have performed in the Royal Albert Hall, London. She pursued addictive hobby of photography since 1947. She was crazy about perfumes and a perfume named after her ‘Lata Eau de Parfum’ was launched in 1999.
Lata Mangeshkar had recorded songs for more than 1000 Hindi films and in over 36 Indian regional and foreign languages. She is the pride recipient of innumerable National and International Awards and accolades which include: three National Film Awards, four Filmfare Awards, Dadasaheb Phalke Award, Bharat Ratna and France's highest Civil Award “Officer of the Legion of Honour”. Six universities have conferred on her honorary Doctorate degree.
It was a Filmfare Awards night in 1970, just before the winner singers Lata Mangeshkar and Kishore Kumar started singing ‘Acchha To Hum Chalte Hain’ as the concluding number, Lata kept her purse hanging on the mike. As the song was near finish, she picked up the purse and stylishly waving it to the audience, walked off the stage singing that famous ‘Tata... Bye Bye’ indicating her decision never to compete for the Award. The entire audience drew a collective gasp. Nobody knew of her decision before and the ‘Daughter of India’ did it in such a great style. Today, she left for her heavenly abode leaving teary-eyed nation of admirers who grew up listening to her immutable voice that gave wings to the words.
तुम न जाने किस जहाँ में खो गए, हम भरी दुनिया में तन्हा हो गए!!!!!!!