Bollywoods Reigning Queen
of Song: Asha Bhosle Sings Supremely of Love
With the appearance on mainstream American radar (and silver) screens
of Indian film stars such as Aishwarya Rai, and films such as Hollywood/Bollywood,
America is waking up to Bollywood, which takes the crown as the worlds
largest film industry. Popular Indian film has bred an equally popular
genre of music, as most of the films are musical epic sagas, interspersed
with fantastic song-and-dance numbers which play constantly on MTV
Asia and are known and loved not only across South Asia but from Europe
to Africa.
But behind the youthful looks and acting skills of Bombays stars
such as Rai, Karisma Kapoor, and Rani Mukherjee is what might be found
behind many successful women: a warm, dimple-cheeked matron. Seventy-two-year-old
Asha Bhosle, one of the most-recorded female voices in Bollywood,
is a playback singer whose songs have been lip-synched by hundreds
of Indian film actresses over her 50-some-odd-year-long career. Ashaji
(as she is lovingly called) will introduce American audiences to the
range of her well-known and well-loved repertoire this spring with
Asha Bhosle: Love Supreme (Times Square Records), a double CD ofyou
guessed itlove songs. The albuma two-sided coin of newly-recorded
ghazals (a classical song form based in Persian and Urdu poetry, which
Bhosle describes as a conversation between two lovers)
and her classic-romantic duets from some of Bollywoods best-loved
moviesis as diverse as the artist herself.
Only a handful of singers have consistently provided the singing voice
for almost all popular Bollywood actresses from the 1950s to date.
This elite, including Bhosle and her elder sister Lata Mangeshkar
(known as the nightingale of India), have playfully vied
to be the voice of the best roles for the biggest stars to lip-synch
to. Their relationship has been defined as much by Bollywood as anything
else, and since childhood, they have maintained a long healthy competition
based on a mutual respect for each others talents.
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Seventy-two-year-old
Asha Bhosle, one of the most-recorded female voices in Bollywood,
is a playback singer whose songs have been lip-synched by hundreds
of Indian film actresses over her 50-some-odd-year-long career.
_____________________
|
Moving to Bombay after the death of her father, nine-year-old Asha
and her elder sister started singing and acting in films to support
their family. Lata got a head start on the heroine roles,
while Asha did not hesitate to sing for the bad girls and vamps.
In the 1950s, Asha sang more songs than any other singer in Bollywood.
Ashas singing has outshined some of the films that they have
appeared in, such as Sharabi Aankhen. Though the movie
Madhosh, in which this song was featured, did not fare
well at the box office, the song became very popular and remains so
to this day.
Described even by her sister as playful, unorthodox, hopelessly romantic,
with a youthful rebelliousness and never-say-die attitude, Asha is
one of the most passionate, prolific, and versatile singers around.
While she is best known for her singing in Hindi films, Bhosles
work has ranged from the classical to the popular, to more fusion-type
Indipop and bhangra projects. She has recorded songs with Boy George,
boy band Code Red, and Michael Stipe. And Cornershop paid tribute
with their album Brimful of Asha.
She brings some of her flair to the interpretation of the classic
ghazals on Disc One of Love Supreme. The songs are produced in various
styles of contemporary music, ranging from lounge, pop and rock, to
funk and jazz, but the foundation for the music of the ghazal is based
purely on North Indian Classical Music.
When this record was released in India, it was only Disc One,
explains Yusuf Gandhi, the principal of Times Square Records. We
decided for North America, where Ashas music is reaching more
and more Bollywood newcomers, that we should also give them some of
the songs that made her popular in India, as well as a little more
diversity. I asked her to recommend a few of her favorite duets that
she enjoyed recording. So we have love songs, songs that she loves,
artists she loved working with.
Not only did Bhosle help select tracks for Disc Two, she contributed
her own personal stories about the duets, some of which were recorded
forty or more years ago. The two-CD packagewhich retails for
the price of a single discis enhanced with two music videos.
Despite her stardom, Bhosle is every bit the matriarch, glamorous
though she may be, in her trademark embroidered white saris and fine
taste in jewelry. When not recording or shooting music videos, she
can often be found in the kitchen, cooking. She has collected recipes
from across the country. Actor Randhir Kapoor once advised her to
stop singing and take up cooking as a profession. Shes not taking
his advice wholeheartedly, but she has embarked on a restaurant franchise
project, the first of which, Ashas, opened in Dubai in 2002
to rave reviews.
It may be a picture hard to imagine when her voice is coming out of
the mouths of characters caught in the throes of Bollywood drama,
but much of Bhosles inspiration comes from her home life and
family. Even in the studio, her family is with her in spirit. While
recording the song Chhod Do Aanchal, she recounts, I
was not getting the right expression in this song. So, Sachin Dev
Burman (the composer of this song), told me to imagine that my husband
was tugging at my sari and how I would react to that. That prompted
me to sing with the right expression!
Her children and grandchildren, many of whom work in the entertainment
industry, are her chief advisors in developing new directions for
her music. It is that intergenerational attunement that gives her
an appeal that has lasted for five decades. Around the time of her
winning of MTVs Indian Viewers Choice Awards in 1997,
journalist Sheela Raval described her this way:
The high priestess of Bollywood music has gone for an image
make-over. At 64. And grannys looking glamorous. The middle-class
Maharashtrian housewife next door is the new pop icon, taking over
from the no-holds-barred young breed. The awards are coming in so
quick, they may become a habit.
It seems Bhosles accomplishments in this life are due in part
to her capacity to come alive in many different roles; her success
is often attributed to her uncanny ability to change the color
of her voice, according to Rough Guide to World Music contributor
Ken Hunt. He says, She is convincing as the ingénue,
the matronly woman or the old lady looking back wistfully.
Music is like my breathing, she says. The day it
stops, my breath will stop too. There is so much to do and Im
afraid there is very little time left. I hope I can continue singing
in my next birth.
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