The first thing
that strikes one when you hear Geeta Dutt
sing was that she never sang. She just glided
through a tune. Of all her contemporaries
her musical training was perhaps the sketchiest
but what she lacked in training and technique,
she more than made up with her ability to
breathe life and emotion into any song she
was singing. To quote Raju Bharathan, Music
Critic...
" Geeta Dutt was thandi hawa and kaali
ghata rolled into one. The moment she came,
you got the refreshing feeling of aa hi
gayi jhoom ke. There was a rare swing in
her voice. She hit you like a thunderclap..........This
made Geeta Dutt the one singer that Lata
Mangeshkar really feared. In training
and technique Lata was way ahead but neither
training nor technique was of much use when
pitted against Geeta in the recording room........This
put Lata on the defensive and I think she
avoided singing with Geeta as far as possible.
I vaguely remember Lata acknowledging this
fact when Geeta died on July 20, 1972."
Geeta Roy was born in Faridpur District
in East Bengal in 1930. In 1942 when she
was just twelve her parents shifted to Mumbai.
Over there in their modest flat at Dadar
music director Hanuman Prasad heard her
singing casually. He gave her two lines
to sing in the film Bhakt Prahlad (1946).
But
her rendering of those two lines stood out
and astonished everybody in the recording
studio. A minor incident became the genesis
of a great musical career.
Her major assignment came the following
year, 1947, with Do Bhai. The music
of that film clicked in a big way particularly
Mera Sundar Sapna Beet Gaya and Geeta
became a top playback singer. 1947-1949
saw Geeta Roy rule as the number one playback
singer in the Mumbai film industry as she
moved from strength to strength.
However three films released in 1949.
Barsaat, Andaaz
and Mahal.
All three smashing hits. The music of each
film better than the other. In all three
films the heroine's songs were sung by a
young lady who had also made her debut in
playback singing in 1946 but till then
had not made any significant headway in
her career. The success of these films changed
all that. The song 'Aayega aanewala' from
Mahal soared to heights of till then unseen
popularity. ( It remains an all time favourite
even today ) The singer was ... Lata Mangeshkar.
Lata went on to become the greatest playback
singer the Indian screen has ever seen.
Only two singers managed to survive the
Lata onslaught in the 1950s. Shamshad Begam
and Geeta Roy. Though relegated to the second
spot, Geeta managed to hold her own against
Lata for more than a decade and she and
Lata were the premier two female playback
singers of the 1950s.
Initially Geeta was a singer well known
for bhajans and weepy, weepy sad songs.
But 1951 saw the release of a film, Baazi. The jazzy
musical score of the film by S.D. Burman
revealed a new facet to Geeta's singing.
The sex appeal in her voice and the ease
with which she went western was marvelous
to behold. While every song in the film
was a raging hit, one stood out for special
appeal - Tadbir se Bigdi hui Taqdeer.
From then on in the 1950s for a club dance
or a seductive song, the first choice was
Geeta.
During the recording of the song she met
the young and upcoming director of the film,
Guru
Dutt. Thus blossomed a romance, which
culminated in marriage on 26 May, 1953.
Geeta went on to sing some of her best songs
in his films while continuing singing in
various outside assignments as well. It
was however a stormy marriage as the couple
fought and made up repeatedly caused it
is said by her suspicious and possessive
nature.
S.D. Burman was among the earliest to discover
the magic in her voice with Do Bhai.
He effectively used the Bengali lilt in
her voice memorably in films like Devdas
(1955) and Pyaasa (1957).
The song Aaj sajan mohe ang lagalo
from the latter is one of the finest examples
of the Bengali kirtan put over on the Hindi
screen. In fact, no female singer has better
articulated the spirit of Burmanda's music
in its early years.
O.P. Nayyar developed the side of Geeta
which had emerged with Baazi. Under
his freewheeling baton Geeta developed into
a really hep singer who could belt out any
number - soft, sultry, happy, snappy, romantic,
teasing or tragic. It was Geeta Dutt's rare
gift that she could effervescently sing
for both the doll and the moll. And it was
O.P. who got Geeta to stop being overtly
emotional in sad songs. O.P.'s comments
on Geeta :
" ..........Who will deny there is a
unique quality to her singing. Give her
a blatantly westernized tune this momentand
a complex classical composition the next,
and she will do equal justice to both with
an ease of expression which a singer can
only be born with. She is particularly good
for songs accompanying boisterous jamborees.
With that tantalizing lilt and fascinating
curves she puts into her singing,she is
the ideal choice if it is seductive allure
you want in a song........Geeta Dutt is
an asset to any music director."
However
by 1957 her marriage had run into rough
weather and was on the rocks. Guru Dutt
had fallen for his new leading lady Waheeda Rehman.
The breaking up of her marriage also began
having repercussions on her career. To quieten
things down Guru Dutt launched a film Gauri
(1957) with her in the lead. She was
to be launched as a singing star and it
was to be India's first film in cinemascope
but the film was shelved after just a few
days shooting. This was the time when one
heard complaints from music directors about
her not being easily available for either
rehearsals or recordings.
In fact in 1957, when he fell out with
Lata Mangeshkar, Burmanda was looking to
make Geeta his main singer rather than the
upcoming Asha Bhosle.
After all by then Geeta was a mature singer
while Asha was still raw. But due to her
troubled marriage Geeta was not free to
practice in the style required by S.D. Burman
who was a hard taskmaster regarding rehearsals.
He joined O.P. Nayyar in shaping Asha rather
than wait for Geeta. Consequently Asha not
only took her place but also went beyond
her. And to make things worse, Geeta began
finding solace in drinks.
On October 10, 1964 Guru Dutt passed away.
Geeta was a broken woman, shattered by his
death. She suffered a nervous breakdown.
When she recovered she found herself in
a financial mess. She did try to resume
singing again, cutting discs at Durga Puja
and giving stage shows and even doing a
Bengali film, Badhu Bharan (1967)
as heroine! But her health kept failing
as she drank herself to a point of no return.
She died of cirrhosis of the liver in 1972.
But not before she showed she still had
it in her were she given a mike to sing.
The songs of Basu Bhattacharya's Anubhav
(1971), Meri Jaan Mujhe Jaan na Kaho
Meri Jaan, Koi Chupke se Aake
and Mera Dil Jo Mera Hota represent
some of the finest work that Geeta Dutt
ever did.
Apart from Hindi songs, Geeta was a leading
playback singer for Gujarati films singing
for scores of films under the baton of music
maestro Avinash Vyas. And in the period
from the late 50s to the early 60s, Geeta
Dutt returned to her roots so to say and
sang some of the most sublime and well-known
songs in Bengali Cinema during its golden
period. Most of these were for Hemanta
Mukherjee although she did some brilliant
work for music directors Nochiketa Ghosh
and Sudhin Dasgupta as well. Some well-known
Geeta Dutt film songs in Bengali include
Tumi Je Amar (Harano
Sur (1957)), Nishi Raat Baanka Chand
(Prithivi Amara Chhaye (1957)),
Ogo Sundor Jano Naki (Indrani
(1958)), Eyi Mayavi Tithi (Sonar
Harin (1959)), Ei Sundar Swarnali
Sandhya (Hospital (1960))
and Aami Sunchi Tomari Gaan (Swarilipi
(1961)). She also sang several Bengali
modern songs and cut discs at Durga Pooja
as well. |