Holi Song 2016
The bold and bawdy Bollywood Holi
First, the screen usually bursts into a phantasmagoria of yellows, blues, greens, pinks, violets and reds.
The
young man, along with his rowdy friends, then sprints in, holding a
water-gun in one hand and dragging his voluptuous, pretend-coy, lady
love with the other. Sometimes he would be alone as she watches from the
sidelines for a while, as if to delay the pleasure by a few precious
minutes.
Sooner than later, she must give in to his peremptory wooing.
This very public display of affection is usually induced by a generous helping of bhang—a traditional cannabis concoction.
And
then there is no stopping the lovebirds for the next four or five
minutes. They gyrate, they gesticulate, they hop, they skip. They
lip-sync often innuendo-laden lyrics. All amid a profusion of mini
polychromatic explosions on screen. An off-screen ensemble of violins,
shehnais, dholaks and tablas adds aural madness to the visual.
Pristine white apparel, of course, is a must. Nothing like whites to showcase the day’s unruliness.
This,
for beginners, was the template for a quintessential Bollywood Holi
song sequence till recently. From that very first spurt, it became
evident that Holi and the film industry were simply made for each other.
Despite
its very Hindu roots, this spring festival is more universal in its
appeal than most other such popular occasions such as the secular New
Year’s Day or Diwali with its attendant rituals.
Perhaps,
what informs this widespread acceptance is the way it is
celebrated—intoxication is generally winked at and social segregations
are temporarily forgotten.
According to
veteran music composer Khayyam, this spirit is derived from lord
Krishna’s days in the Brij region of northern India where he is said to
have indulged in sensuous frolicking with his consort Radha and other
belles (Gopikas) of his village. Brij is also where the Hindi language
partly derives it’s form and spirit from.
This legend of Krishna exemplified spontaneous, unconditional, and universal love.
“They
(Krishna, Radha, and the Gopikas) set a message of unity. Their legend
carries romance, youthful exuberance, pranks, and banter. Cinema took
that spirit straight to heart. That is what is now often seen on
screen,” Khayyam told Quartz.
The leitmotif of
Holi songs is the mixing of various hues. It symbolises the
disappearance of social distinctions behind a colourful veil. One of the
most popular numbers in the genre is from the iconic curry western, Sholay (1976). Part of its opening lines mean “even enemies shed their differences and hug each other on Holi.”
In
many ways, this grand coming together has been an enduring trait of
Bollywood, too. For decades, professionals of varying religious,
linguistic, political, and cultural backgrounds have come together to
create one of the world’s most prolific movie industries.
The classic Holi song is a product of such an unlikely confluence.
“What
we have often heard as Holi song on screen is essentially folk music.
And that too mostly Gujarati and Rajasthani folk music,” Pyarelal Sharma
of the legendary composer duo Laxmikant-Pyarelal said.
And
this combination—western Indian folksy tunes plugged with lyrics in
Hindustani, the lingua franca of northern India and Pakistan—hasn’t
changed much over the last 75 or more years.
It all began in 1940, nine years after the first Indian talkie, Alam Ara, introduced sound and music to the industry.
“Till
then, Hindi cinema was mostly dominated by filmmakers, producers and
composers from Bengal and Maharashtra (both non-Hindi speaking regions
of India). Holi was not that significant in their parts of the country,”
said Manohar Iyer, founder of Keep Alive, a Mumbai-based organisation
that strives to revive and maintain interest in vintage Bollywood music.
“By
1940 many north Indian and Punjabi artistes had entered the field,”
Iyer said. That year, two nasal, yet silken, voices—of Sitarabai
Kanpurwali and Amritlal Ojha—were heard singing the first ever Holi
song.
Penned
by D N Madhok, it was tuned by Khemchand Prakash, an erstwhile court
singer of the Bikaner royal family of Rajasthan. Prakash went on to
become one the greatest music composers of the industry.
Interestingly, the name of the movie itself was Holi.
Since
then, every decade in Bollywood has had its Holi moment and song. With
the black & white era slowly fading away by the late 1950s, the
festival seeped irreversibly into this cinematic universe, with even
Maharashtrian director V Shantaram indulging in a riot of colours in his
classic Navrang (1959).
The early 1980s churned out what went on to become the ultimate Holi song, unsurpassed till date in its popularity.
Composed by classical musicians, Santoor maestro Shiv Kumar Sharma and veteran flautist Hariprasad Chaurasia, Rang Barse (“It’s
raining colours”) was sung and enacted by mega star Amitabh Bacchan
himself. The lyrics, by Amitabh’s poet-father Harivanshrai Bacchan, were
based on a centuries-old Rajasthani hymn, deftly altered to suit the
adulterous plot of Silsila (1981).
Ever since, no Holi celebration in India reached a crescendo without Rang Barse being sung and danced to.
Like
this one, the typical Holi sequence often gives viewers a knot in the
tummy. By now, it is a well-used tool of scriptwriters to kindle anxiety
about the following scene.
“For long, Holi has been the precursor to darker plots unfolding. It could be an attack by dacoits like in Sholay, or a build-up to trouble in the family like in Silsila, or the stalker’s scary presence like in Darr,” Iyer of Keep Alive said.
More than two decades after Silsila, Amitabh Bacchan sang and lip-synced another Holi number in Baghban (2003)—its rustic opening notes sneaked from a lively interlude of Rang Barse
itself. This time, though, Amitabh was a retiree, getting his widely
dispersed family to spend time together. As expected, the revelry comes
moments before familial discord sets in.
Another Amitabh releases, Waqt (2005),
too had Holi as a moment of dramatic changes in the plot. A novelty
this time was the use of English words to capture the spirit of what is
quintessential Hindi heartland fiesta. With “Do me a favour, let’s play Holi,” a whole new generation was being wooed by the industry.
Today,
the lady’s coyness has made way for bolder, more ready, body movements.
The setting has mostly shifted from rural to urban. The sound is more
techno than rustic.
But the colours, fervour and playful bawdiness are unmistakable.
Holi Song 2016
Reviewed by Unknown
on
15:58:00
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