Md.
Rafi, Music, Heaven
Rafi was divinity personified. His voice instantly connected you to a realm of consciousness which can more appropriately be explored only through the discipline of meditation. While meditation needs you to close your eyes and urge your mind to direct itself towards a focal point, Rafi Saab's songs automatically make your eyes shut, mind focused and heart beat with a rhythm impossible to achieve through an intellectual procedure.
Rafi was divinity personified. His voice instantly connected you to a realm of consciousness which can more appropriately be explored only through the discipline of meditation. While meditation needs you to close your eyes and urge your mind to direct itself towards a focal point, Rafi Saab's songs automatically make your eyes shut, mind focused and heart beat with a rhythm impossible to achieve through an intellectual procedure.
I have been a committed blogger for the past few years and have been trying to write on a variety of topics. Blogging is a wonderful way to express oneself beyond the expectations of the marketplace which any writer, desirous of being addressed as a `best-selling author`, cannot get away from. However, one of the subjects missing from a wide array of blogs I have written is one on Md. Rafi, especially given that I am such a huge Bollywood buff. I am correcting that anomaly through this piece.
One of the great things for an `abnormal` guy like me is that nobody looks at me with suspicion when I say I am a Md. Rafi fan. In fact, you would be counted amongst the abnormal and uncultured lot if you said you were not particularly a fan of India's most iconic singer. Yes, Rafi is not just representative of a great lineage of singers in our country, but is part of the overall Indian artistic tradition. When you think of music, you cannot but think of Rafi as a top-of-the-mind recall.
My generation grew up listening to Rafi Saab, Kishore Kumar, Lata Manageshkar and Asha Bhosale. My favourite has always been Rafi, simply for the divinity in his voice and the charm of his singing. In our growing up years, we are deeply influenced by certain public figures who leave a permanent impression on our psyche. Rafi Saab is one of them, besides my generation's other usual favourites like Sunil Gavaskar, Kishore Kumar and Amitabh Bachchan. But what is incredible about Rafi is that over three decades after he passed away, far from his voice being silenced by the destiny of death, his songs reverberate with even more freshness.
Rafi was
divinity personified. His voice instantly connected you to a realm of
consciousness which can more appropriately be explored only through
the discipline of meditation. While meditation needs you to close
your eyes and urge your mind to direct itself towards a focal point,
Rafi Saab's songs automatically make your eyes shut, mind
focused and heart beat with a rhythm impossible to achieve through an
intellectual procedure.
Hindi films,
in general, have always been thought to provide a mechanism of
escapism to tired masses from the humdrum realities of life by
transporting them to an unreal reel life. But what Rafi achieved by
leveraging the same platform was spiritual in nature – he provided
joy when alive and continues to do. That truly is his legacy.
Rafi was not
just a great and one-of-a-kind singer, but also a stupendous human
being. His humility was legendary. His career evolved through
tumultuous times in post-independence India and he sang songs with
equal conviction across genres as well as those which represented
part of any religious tradition. He was equally at ease with
classical as well as non-classical and racy numbers.
No doubt,
his talent, range and versatility are the stuff dreams are made of.
It may even make one feel envious that one man can be bestowed with
so much grace, while we mere mortals are left wondering about our own
talents. After all, we all could so easily be singing for Rafi the
song he rendered: `Khuda Bhi Aasmaan Se Jab Zameen Par Dekhta Hoga,
Mere Mehboob Ko Kisane Banaya Sochata Hoga`.
But to
attribute greatness merely to talent is grossly unfair. Sure, God
perhaps constructed Rafi's voice in his own image, but what made him
a legend amongst legends was his commitment and inventiveness. He
ensured the actors he sang for received as much glory as his own
singing by employing imagination and transporting himself into the
shoes of the actors' personalities and roles.
While actors
like Dilip Kumar and Shammi Kapoor made Rafi's voice their own, Rafi
too made the actors' `voice` his own. That's why even today when we
listen to a Rafi song, what simultaneously flashes across our mind is
the image of the actors on screen lip-singing that song. You feel as
if Dev Anand, Shammi Kapoor or Dharmendra themselves are singing the
song.
Rafi had
this unique power to surrender himself to the character on screen,
thereby ensuring that not just his, but also the actors' careers
flourished. Today, when we think of a Shammi Kapoor or a Dev Anand,
we think not just of their films, but also their songs. Today's
generation of actors do not have this luxury. They need to fend for
themselves purely on the basis of their talent and the roles they
portray.
It is unfair
to compare any modern day singer with Rafi, for Rafi was the
original, whereas, everyone else, be they professional or bathroom
singers like me, simply sing by picking up the threads from the Md.
Rafi gharana. Rafi Saab was
absolutely right when he sang `Tum Mujhe Yun Bhla Na Paoge.
Jab Kabhi Bhi Sunoge Geet Mere Sang Sang Tum Bhi Gungunaoge`.
Generations
to come will experience the Rafi magic, for Rafi Saab
is not just part of our culture, he is part of the Indian
consciousness. Rafi the person will be missed, but his music –
Never.
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