| |
Veteran
Music Director Anil Biwas who gave music for
memorable films such as Roti (1942),
Kismet (1943), Anokha Pyaar (1948),
Waaris (1954), Pardesi (1957)
and Char Dil Char Raahein (1959) passed
away in Delhi on May 31.
Anil
Biswas was born in 1914 in Barisal, now in Bangladesh.
Being a talented tabla player, he worked initially
in amateur theatre as a child singer. His student
days saw him becoming a political activist,
going to jail repeatedly as he associated himself
with terrorist insurgency movements in Bengal.
He
received early musical assignments from Kazi
Nazrul Islam at the Megaphone Gramaphone Company.
Followed several Calcutta Theatre Stage Productions
notably at the Rangmahal Theatre where he scored
the music and did some acting as well. He moved
to Bombay in 1934 where he was first employed
at the Eastern art Syndicate. He then joined
Sagar Movietone and then its successor National
studio from 1940 - 1942 wherein he gave the
music for three outstanding Mehboob
Khan films - Aurat (1940), Bahen
(1941) and Roti (1942). His recitative
prose songs in the last mentioned film helped
give the film its parable dimension and came
close to an indigenous Brechtian mode. He then
shifted to Bombay Talkies where he worked from
1942 - 6.
His
biggest success at Bombay Talkies was Kismet,
coming the following year. The film itself was
a tremendous success running for over three
years at Calcutta. A lost and found crime drama,
one of the major reasons for its success was
Anilda's evergreen musical score. By now trained
singers were entering the Film Industry giving
Music Directors opportunities to try out newer
sounds. The songs in Kismet be it the
patriotic Door Hato O Duniyawalon Hindustan
Humaara hai or the sad Ghar Ghar Mein
Diwaali or the soothing lullaby Dheere
Dheere Aa sees Anilda make splendid use
of Amirbai Karnataki's full throated voice.
The last named song, a duet with Ashok
Kumar, often had Anilda jokingly comment
that perhaps it was the only song that Dadamoni
sang in tune! Some other films that Anilda gave
music for at Bombay Talkies include Dilip
Kumar's maiden film Jwar Bhatta (1944)
and Milan (1946).
Ani
Biswas's best-known compositions are among the
most effective film adaptations of theatrical
music with 12 piece orchestras and full-blooded
choral effects. In fact Anil Biswas's contribution
to film music is multi-faceted. Beyond all the
musical masterpieces that Anilda composed, he
was also responsible for being the man behind
such voices as Surendranath, Parul Ghosh (his
sister married to renowned flutist Pannalal
Ghosh), Sitara Devi, Mukesh,
Talat Mehmood besides monitoring Lata
Mangeshkar's early career. It was Anilda
who taught Lata and other singers the techniques
of breath control while singing and putting
emphasis on syllables that came on the beat
of the song. It was Anilda who not only discovered
Mukesh but encouraged him to come out of being
a K.L. Saigal
clone and it was he who insisted that Talat
keep the tremor in his voice which other composers
saw as a flaw. As it was, it was this quiver
in his voice that made Talat the unique singer
he was. This is best illustrated in two outstanding
songs among many others that he sang under Anilda's
Baton - Ae dil Mujhe Aisi Jagah Le Chal
(Arzoo (1950) and Seene Mein Sulagtein
Hain Armaan (with Lata from Tarana (1951)).
It is also said that Anilda was responsible
for the basic structure of film songs that we
know today and was a pioneer in using the counter
melody and the use of Raag Maala.
After
his stint with Bombay Talkies, Anilda freelanced
and his work in the 1950s include Music for
films by Filmistan (Heer (1956)), Mahesh
Kaul (Abhimaan (1957), Sautela Bhai
(1962)) and KA Abbas (Rahi (1952),
Munna (1954), Pardesi (1957) and
Char Dil Char Rahein (1959)).
Feeling
disillusioned with the changing trends and the
tragic end of his younger brother and elder
son in the year 1961, Anilda shifted base to
Delhi. He took charge of Chief Producer (Sugam
Sangeet) at AIR, Delhi on 1st March 1963
and served upto June 1975 (though with a break
in between). He was also vice-chancellor of
Jawaharlal Nehru University for 2 years. In
between he did the odd film like Mahesh Kaul's
Sautela Bhai before retiring with Motilal's
Chhoti Chhoti Baatein in 1965. The film
although failing at the box office is still
remembered for his singer wife Meena Kapoor's
rendering of Kuchh Aur Zamana Kehta Hai.
Incidentally Anilda's one grouse with the Film
Iindustry was that it never gave Meena Kapoor
(Rasiya re - Pardesi) her due. He always
used to say that here was a voice with base,
huskiness and sex! But the Film Industry just
didn't know how to use it!
Anilda later scored the music for Doordarshan's
pioneering TV series Hum Log (1984) and
a number of documentaries for Films Division.
Some of Anilda's other prominent films include
Gramophone Singer (1938), Jeet (1949),
Aaram (1951), Humdard (1953),
Faraar (1955) and Angulimal (1961).
|