Naushad Ali
is regarded as one of the greatest Music
Directors of Indian Cinema. Since early
childhood in Lucknow he was an avid listener
to the live orchestras accompanying silent
films. He studied under Ustad Ghurbat Ali,
Ustad Yusuf Ali and Ustad Babban Saheb.
Before coming to Bombay, he repaired harmoniums
and composed for amateur theatricals such
as the Windsor Music Entertainers.
He moved to Bombay in the late 1930s to
try his luck as a musician but had to really
struggle and saw days of acute deprivation.
He even had to spend nights on the footpath
before he worked as a pianist in composer
Mushtaq Hussain's orchestra. He joined music
director Khemchand Prakash (whom he considers
his teacher) as his assistant.
Prem Nagar (1940) was his first
Independent break but he first got noticed
with Sharda (1942) wherein 13-year-old
Suraiya did the
playback for heroine Mehtab. It was Rattan
(1944) that took Naushad right to the
top and enabled him to charge Rs 25,000
a film then. Ankhiyaan Milake and
Sawan ke Badalon became the most
popular songs of the day.
Naushad churned out hit after hit in the
1940s mainly in the films of A.R. Kardar
- Shahjehan (1946), Dard (1947),
Dillagi (1949), Dulari (1949)
and Mehboob Khan -
Anmol Ghadi (1946), Elaan (1947),
Anoki Ada (1948), Andaaz
(1949). Naushad was among the early
composer who gave Lata Mangeshkar an
opportunity to sing and Andaaz and
Dulari were instrumental in her rise
to the top along with Mahal and Barsaat
that year.
Naushad was one of the first to introduce
sound mixing and the separate recording
of voice and music tracks in playback singing.
He was the first to combine the flute and
the clarinet, the sitar and mandolin. He
also introduced the accordion to Hindi film
music and was among the first to concentrate
on background music to extend characters'
moods and dialogues through music.
But perhaps Naushad's greatest contribution was to bring Indian
classical music into the film medium. Many
of his compositions were inspired by Ragas
and he even used distinguished classical
artistes like Amir Khan and D.V. Pulaskar
in Baiju Bawra (1952) and Bade Ghulam
Ali Khan in Mughal-e-Azam (1960).
Baiju Bawra demonstrated Naushad's
grasp of classical music. To quote India's
greatest playback singer Lata Mangeshkar
who sang for him in the film.
"The music he composed for Baiju Bawra
surprised even me. It was entirely different
from what he had done before. Different
ragas were used for different situations
and the purity of the ragas were maintained
to the greatest possible extent."
Naushad has been criticized about the lack
of variety in his music but that is unfounded.
He could compose with a 100-man orchestra
as he did in Aan
(1952) and could go Western if the situation
demanded it (Jadoo (1951)). Naushad
used to study every aspect of his tunes
thoroughly. If he weren't satisfied with
even one word, he would ask the lyricist
to write the whole line. He would take a
fortnight to compose a single song and often
could compose music for just two films a
year. To quote him,
"In my 62 years in the film industry,
I composed music for 66 films. These days,
you come across people who have done the
music 200 films in two years. What I'm saying
is that, we used to agonise over every tune
and phrase in music, spend sleepless nights
over a song, and work on it until it was
perfected. And I am still looking for perfection."
This reduced workload worked to his advantage
as he went on to score the music for perennial
classics - Mother India (1957),
Mughal-e-Azam (1960), Ganga Jamuna (1961)
and Mere Mehboob (1963). In Mughal-e-Azam,
Naushad's musical score was outstanding
particularly the two songs by noted classical
singer Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (Shubh Din
Aayo and Prem Jogan ke Sundari Pio
Chali) not to mention the Lata Gems
(Mohabbat ki Jhooti Kahani pe Roye,
Pyaar Kiya to Darna Kya) and
Mohd. Rafi's Ae Mohabbat Zindabad
with a chorus of 100! It was indeed shocking
that Naushad lost the Filmfare award that
year to Shankar-Jaikishen for their populist
score in Dil Apna Aur Preet Parayi
(1960).
With the 1960s and the decline of Dilip Kumar,
Naushad who used to compose music for most
of the thespian's film also suffered a reversal
of fortune as film after film of theirs
came unstuck at the box-office. Naushad
completed Pakeezah (1972)
after Ghulam Mohammed's death and continued
doing an occasional film right up to the
1990s but the magic of old was missing.
A winner of the Dadasaheb Phalke Award
for his contribution to Indian Cinema, the
last film that Naushad composed music for
was Akbar Khan's Taj Mahal: An Eternal
Love Story (2005). He passed away in
Mumbai on May 5, 2006 due to cardiac arrest.
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