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Mukesh : The Showbiz Legend |
No
other singer was capable of projecting emotions in
their raw, unfurnished state the way he could. His
was a voice that could on one hand be deeply
melancholic and on the other hand exude a
profoundly innocent and mellifluous sweetness.
Mukesh Chand MathurMotilal brought him to Bombay, kept him in his own house and arranged for Pandit Jaganath Prasad to groom him. Mukesh even did a Hindi Film during this period as hero, Nirdosh, 1941 but it flopped. His first break in films came in 1945 under the baton of Anil Biswas in the film "Pehla Nazar". The raag was Darbari and the song was "Dil jalta hai to jalne de", picturized on Motilal. Though a huge hit, admittedly it sounded as if the young man was just another K.L. Saigal imitator. It was under Naushad with Mela, 1948 and particularly Andaaz, 1949, that Mukesh finally discovered his own style. Andaaz, 1949 was a major triumph for Mukesh. Mukesh was a favourite of all music directors.
He sang for almost all the great and not-so-great
music directors of the yesteryears and produced
masterpieces for them. But it was his partnership
with the duo of Shankar-Jaikishen that
produced the maximum number of hits. The
inimitable team of Mukesh-Raj
Kapoor-SJ-Shailendra-Hasrat Jaipuri were
responsible for producing one memorable hit after
another for almost two and a half decades starting
from Barsaat in 1949. It is said the
Mukesh-Raj Kapoor was an alliance made in
heaven. The Mukesh-RK combination gave new
dimensions to popular Hindi music. It flourished
during a period which is often called the Golden
Age of Hindi film music and the standards were
raised to dizzying heights which were seldom
touched before or thereafter. Another music director who utilized Mukesh to the fullest was the great Salil Chowdhury. And it was this mutual admiration for each other`s music that led to evergreen hits like Suhana Safar, Madhumati, Nain Hamare, Annadata, Kahin door jab din dhal jaaye, Anand, Kai baar yun bhi dekha hai, Rajnigandha and of course the unforgettable Zindagi Khwab hai, Jaagte Raho". S.D. Burman was a true professional who would not typically use a singer, however talented he may be, if his voice did not match the situation in the movie. And Dada Burman would often turn only to Mukesh whenever he needed a song to be played in the background. Two such examples are Chal ri sajni and O Jaanewale ho sake to laut ke aana.
He was not proficient in classical numbers, but it was the innocence of his voice that made simple compositions stand out from the other. It was this simplicity that fills one`s eyes with tears as he listens to Sajanwa behri ho gaye hamar or Jaaoon kahan bata ei dil. O.P. Nayaar, it is said, did not think very highly about him. But even he was stunned by the popularity of his apparently simple composition of Chal akela chal akela. Unparalleled in tragic numbers, Mukesh was equally good in fun songs like Awaara Hoon, Mera joota hai Japani, Dum dum diga diga or Kehta hai Joker.
In 1974, he received the National Award for the Kahin baar yun bhi dekha hai from Rajnigandha. His last song was Chanchal Sheetal Nirmal Komal from Satyam Shivam Sundaram in June 1976. Immediately after on 27th August, 1976, the great singer breathed his last of a sudden heart attack in Detroit, while on a tour of the U.S. |
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