Salil Chowdhury (Bangla: সলিল চৌধুরী) (1922-1995) was a famous Hindi and Bengali composer,poetand a playwrigtht. He was born on November 19, 1922 and died on September 5, 1995, just before his 73nd birthday.
One of India's original musical geniuses, he was widely recognised and acknowledged in the Bombay film industry as one of the most prodigious composers ever. He was also an accomplished arranger and was proficient in several musical instruments, including flute, the piano, and the esraj. Regarded as one in the league of intellectuals having born in the state of West Bengal, he was also widely acclaimed and admired for his inspirational and original poetry. He was fondly and reverently called Salilda in Bollywood.
Contents |
| This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007) |
Much of Salil Chowdhury's early childhood was spent in the tea gardens of Assam, where his father was a medical doctor. A lot of his childhood was spent in listening to the Western Classical collection of his father, which shaped his musical thinking. Salil's father was reputed to stage plays with coolies and other low-paid workers of the tea-gardens. His father's strong anti-British feelings, and constant concern for the condition of the tea-estate workers were a source of inspiration to him. He graduated from Bangabashi College, Kolkata and it was during this period of time that his political ideas were formulated quickly along with a considerable maturity in his musical ideas.
Living through the Second World War, the Bengal famine and the precarious political situation of the 1940s, he became acutely aware of his social responsibilities. This is when he joined the IPTA (Indian Peoples Theater Association) and became a member of the Communist Party of India. During this period he wrote numerous songs and, together with IPTA, took them to the masses. The theatrical outfit travelled through the villages and the cities and his songs became exceptionally popular and went on to become the voice of the masses. These songs were influential, echoing protest and human empowerment, that made people conscious of the rampant social injustice surrounding them. In fact, Salil always retained his strong feelings against the social injustice and he very often wrote songs which reflected this outlook. He called these songs the 'Songs of consciousness and awakening'. These compositions became ringing songs of cheer during India’s Independence movement and, interestingly, are still performed all over Bengal.
Salil Chowdhury's Bengali songs brought in sweeping changes to Bengali music dramatically and almost abruptly. The people of West Bengal were thrilled with the new wave of music introduced by Salil Chowdhury. The new wave seeped in with Salil Chowdhury continued its influence on Bengali music for the next three decades. Most notable singers of west bengal sang for him at the peak of their careers.Singers like Shyamal Mitra, Manabendra Mukherjee Pratima Banerjee all sang for him.
There are two distinct phases in Salil's life. The first phase, very much non-professional in intent and appearance, started in the pre-independence era of the 1940s and went on till mid '50s. This was followed by the second phase which was more professional in its content. During the first phase he was a brilliant lyricist,songwriter,poet and a playwright. He was much more mature composer than anything else in the second phase. The composer in Salil reached the greatest heights in his second phase which basically started when he arrived in Bombay to compose music for the film 'Do Bigha Zameen'. This was the Hindi version of the successful Bengali Film 'Rikshawalla'. He himself wrote the story of 'Rikshawaala' and composed its music as well.
Since Do Bigha Zameen, he has composed for over 75 Hindi films, over 40 Bengali films, around 26 Malayalam films, and several Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Gujarati, Oriya and Assamese films. To the music connoisseurs, he was better known as the non-conformist music composer whose unceasing search for perfection towered above everything else in his life.
Salil's music was a unique blending of the Eastern and the Western music traditions. He had once said: 'I want to create a style which shall transcend borders - a genre which is emphatic and polished, but never predictable'. He dabbled in a lot of things and it was his ambition to achieve greatness in everything he did. But at times, his confusion was fairly evident - 'I do not know what to opt for: poetry, story writing, orchestration or composing for films. I just try to be creative with what fits the moment and my temperament' he once told a journalist.
Salil's love for Western classical music started when he was a young boy growing up in an Assam tea garden where his father worked as a doctor. His father inherited a large number of western classical records and a gramophone from a departing Irish doctor. While Salil listened to Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Chopin, etc. everyday, his daily life was surrounded by the sound of the forest, chirping of the birds, sound of the flute and the local folk-music. This left a lasting impression in young Salil. He became an excellent self-taught flute player and his favourite composer was Mozart. His compositions often used folk melodies or melodies based on Indian classical ragas but the orchestration was very much western in its construction. He developed a unique style which was immediately identifiable.
The noted playback singer, KJ Yesudas said: 'When Salil and I sat together by the piano and heard his compositions, I was overwhelmed by a divine feeling that his music brought and I have never felt this magnitude of divinity in any other composer’s music.'[citation needed] Raj Kapoor once said about Salil: 'He can play almost any instrument he lays his hands on, from the tabla to the sarod, from the piano to the piccolo'.[citation needed] His music for movie "Anand" is teworthy and popular. his compositions "Jiya lage na" enderd by Lata, "O sajana barkha bahar aayi", rendered by Lata Mangeshkar, "Koi hota Jisko apna" rendered by kishorekumar , "Gujar gaye din " rendered by kishorekumar re very diffiult to sing and they are very ipressive and melodious.
No comments have been added.