Down melody lane

 

 

KL SAIGAL TheDefinitive Biography by Pran Nevile. Penguin/2011

Asian Age/ Deccan Chronicle.  June 08, 2011

Back in the ’70s and ’80s, as we did not have a television at home, our media habits were fairly restricted to All India Radio. As the old Hindi film music played, my mother would sing along and often point out the highlights of the particular song. She was also instrumental in shaping our opinions (however relevant they might be) on particular singers. For her, Mohd. Rafi was no good (it’s only later we disagreed on this, forever), Kishore was ok, Talat was pure silk, Mukesh was a star singer as he was closest to the singer superstar K.L. Saigal (to this I still agree, the K.L. Saigal bit I mean). So when this book came, packaged with archival stills, filmography, synopses and even film reviews of Saigal’s films, I grabbed it.
With an attractive cover, written by the eternal nostalgist Pran Nevile, famous for his writings on Lahore, this book promised to be treat for Gen Next nostalgists like oneself. The definitive biography of Kundan Lal Saigal. Very few would disagree that the man, the eternal Devdas, truly was India’s first superstar. Tragedy King, Romantic Hero, Angry Young Man came much later.
In his introduction, Pran Nevile interestingly highlights the journey of Indian music, from the origins till it became synonymous with films and reached the masses. As a reader, this is an important chapter to understand the interesting points of convergence between mediums, disciplines and the various technologies. More importantly, he paints the scenario like a stage backdrop now ready for the superstar’s entry.
The book takes us through the milestones of Saigal’s life, based on the writer’s research, his interactions with the family members, film fraternity, fellow fans and his own memories of the great Saigal experience. One gets a peek into the life of an adolescent possessed with only music from his very early years as he accompanied his mother singing bhajans, his anxiety over his broken voice, the untrained genius who went around an undivided India doing odd jobs till he finally heard his calling and devoted himself to singing.
Acting was a bonus and the star arrived in 1932 with his debut hit Mohabbat ke Aansoo, produced by The New Theatres, Calcutta. Success was followed by super success. It is from here that the book slowly starts moving from a definitive biography to a chronological listing written well. The reader goes through the star’s journey, film after film, Puran Bhakt, Chandidas, Devdas, President, Street Singer, Bhakt Surdas, Tansen, hit after hit, in awe but often missing a probe into the man, forever pasted as the singing hero but nothing beyond.
In an era, when film viewing in India was more of a musical experience, one truly misses a peek into the star’s inner life; an investigation into Saigal’s oblivious lens of stardom, elements that only Pran Nevile could’ve provided. For example, it was an insight to learn that Saigal never particularly enjoyed his shift to Bombay and that his heart longed for the company in Calcutta. For the forever fans of Saigal, I am sure this too would be a fact well known. Interestingly, his personal account of attending Saigal’s only concert in Lahore, struggling in the queue, purchasing a ticket in black provides a far lucid account than many of the other chapters.
Personally, what come as a revelation is Saigal, the poet. His verses were a private affair, only in the company of his family and very select friends. Nevile brings those lines out for us. By the end the book is written by a die-hard fan, who’ll hear or say nothing less than a compliment. Hence, Saigal’s alcohol problem in the later years, a fact well-known in the Saigal circuit, is a touch and go. This clearly is a book by a fan for a fan. In the second half, Pran Nevile does a commendable job by providing lyrics of Saigal’s hit songs, his film reviews that appeared then, even web links to find the man on the virtual world.
What one longs for, is a bit more on the man himself. Baalam aye baso more man mein…

Vishwajyoti Ghosh is a Saigal fan and the author of Delhi Calm

View original post: http://www.asianage.com/books/down-melody-lane-397

My review of I See the Promised Land/ Tehelka

The creative mistakes of globalisation

This book attempts to coerce Indian Patua art into a graphic novel but falls flat, says Vishwajyoti Ghosh

I See The Promised Land
I See The Promised Land Arthur Flowers, Manu Chitrakar & Guglielmo Rossi Tara Books 138 pp; Rs 550

 

THIS GRAPHIC novel on Martin Luther King Jr is a product of creative globalisation. The author Arthur Flowers, a performance poet and American academic, considers himself heir to the western written and African oral traditions. Here he collaborates with Manu Chitrakar, a Patua artist of West Bengal, and his tradition of singing storytellers who unfold their stories visually through painted scrolls. With our thriving traditional visual practices, sooner or later this “jam session” (as the blurb calls it) had to happen in India. Channel [V] and animators have been on this bus for a while now; graphic novels have just hopped on with books like Lie, Bhimayana and I See the Promised Land.

Flowers writes lyrically in Afro-American English and the book reads well. Today, though, historical narratives are often challenged as the reader looks for something more. This book is a creative interpretation, humanely highlighting King’s prophetic vision and his alleged dark side. Still, it’s surprising to see King’s clarion call of “I have a dream” as a mere mention and not the strong double spread one expected.

Playwright GP Deshpande once said that “folk art can be very seductive”, which is a danger visible here. One misses a strong singular visual representation of King — the few references of Gandhi appear much more distinctive. It becomes clear the artist is illustrating, not co-writing, much less co-conceiving. Chitrakar is interpreting a foreign subject and a space in his own style, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But the dissonance lies between the points when he chooses to interpret more freely vs when he doesn’t. For example, he interprets ‘I have a dream’ as text in Bangla over a few placards and King’s thoughts on destiny, the Gods and the divine forces through Hindu iconography. The black jazz player may be in Patua style but he stays in a suit and plays the sax.

I See The Promised Land
Illustration: Mayanglambam Dinesh

One senses the images were conceived as free-size illustrations and then abridged, truncated and coerced into boxes for a modern graphic novel. And this brings in the third player, graphic designer Guglielmo Rosi, who re-reinterprets the structure, words and visuals through his layouts that open yet another dimension. In my opinion, design in a graphic novel should effortlessly facilitate the narrative. This book’s layout loses its lyrical text and vibrant illustrations, uses an overbearing typeface and creates three distinct, strong aesthetics working upon-each-other rather than with-each-other.

To quote King: “All I’m saying is simply this, that all life is interrelated… Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. For some strange reason, I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be. You can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be. This is the interrelated structure of reality.”

With words, visuals and design, so it is with graphic novels.

Ghosh is the author of the graphic novel Delhi Calm

View original post: http://www.tehelka.com/story_main49.asp?filename=hub210511Creative.asp

Am I getting old?

I was 10 when Asiad happened in Delhi. Much of the newer Delhi that the south & central delhi has lived on was built in that period. This city was with the state and supported the games. It was grand and Ravi Shankar’s “Swagatam” had a royal aura than AR RAhman’s college Hi school musical. No one complained. People were nationalist then too. But if you walk down Delhi these days and see the appalling condition of the roads (as a basic example) after all the money spent it really makes one’s blood boil. Trust me you’ve to see it, walk it. The people of this city were not averse to the games when they were awarded in 2003. There was hope. Funnily the first tender fr the job came out in 2008! 5 years it took? Clearly the idea was to push it till the last moment, create chaos n confusion, leave no room fr a transparent process and get your own men. If one thinks this is just an opinion, then remember the AM Vehicles scam fr the Queen’s baton when Kalmadi said “what do we do, London Police told us in the last minute”, that fraud fax from Raju sebastian n so on. The thing is that everybody’s forgotten that scam act coz larger acts unfold everyday.
You’re not the only one saying that lets look at the positive side, good things have been built, well with the amount of money spent (and we r talking of some huuuuuge money here) thats the least that had to get done. ‘Lets applaud the good work’- I mean isn’t that a basic premise of any project to begin with? Yes things could’ve been done at a fraction of the money spent and there’s no doubt about that. 70 crores for a balloon that will float above? And what will happen on it? Images will be projected. What images? Kalmadi & co running in London (yes he’s a 30 sec. sportsman too) with the baton in purple suits. I am not saying Kalmadi should be singled out, it is a multi level, multi organisation scam (including the gora bosses) that has operated and sadly they got caught. Am not even getting into tall claims “this will be better than Beijing” and much as I think that the ‘Filthy Village’ issue has also been a clasic turncoat case, considering the same people were happy with the progress on September 16. The problem is that every part of every committee has given them a chance to say this. Every thing has been a goof up is a rhetoric. The footbridge collapsing was not making me angry, in the times of reality live I thought I was watching Jane bhi do yaaron LIVE. Wasn’t it hilarious when Jaipal Reddy said watch fr these apartments after the games. The same apts. will get sold fr crores. Their intentions are clear or they are made to face the camera and defend fr deeds they had no clue about till it happened.
I am with you when you said that the “criticism is fair” and am with you on “action has been taken” only this afternoon after finally the PM snubbed sports minister Gill (as he stood up to make a presentation on the glorious state of things) and told him it was finally time fr some action. What took the PM so lonnnnnnnnnnng? If he could put his foot down n steer the nuclear deal (at the cost of losing a govt.) or the nuclear liability bill, here he positively had the support of a billion. What took him so long?
What is appalling more than the goof ups or the media is the thickness of their skin, their arrogance. Much as I try to look for something positive this time I just can’t feel nationalist enough. I am getting old but not enough to get cynical. Just enough not to feel jingoistic.
Ok running now to rehearse for an item no. for the opening ceremony…

Jai Hind!

They Are Not Exactly Comics

They are political books. Just that everything isn’t merely spelt out, it’s also sketched. And as Indian graphic novels get more and more ambitious, they’re busy re-imagining history, Ambedkar, The Emergency, Jurassic Hyderabad and a lot more.

BY Pramila N. Phatarphekar in OPEN

From 'Delhi Calm'

From ‘Delhi Calm’

About the Dandi March, we know. But the Mahad Satyagraha? It draws a blank, though this watershed event in Mahad, Maharashtra, exposes India’s freedom schisms. In 1927, 3,000 satyagrahis were striding towards a public lake for a sip of water, led by a tall bespectacled scholar with MA, PhD, MSc and DSc degrees. As his followers were attacked, the scholar, Dr BR Ambedkar, shouted: “Don’t strike back!”

Though Gandhian, it was a satyagraha that pitched Mahatma Gandhi versus Dr Ambedkar. The Dalit satyagrahis were assaulted by Hindus, not Whites. Despite the 1923 British legislation allowing ‘untouchables’ to use public water bodies, Dalits were (and are) denied this right. As this schizophrenic Swaraj movement built up, Gandhiji asked Indians to burn clothes made in Manchester, while the Dalit Declaration of Independence of Dr Ambedkar burnt the Manusmriti, which was written in ancient India.

The above isn’t from a chapter of a history book. These are scenes from a soon-to-be published graphic novel that captures caste fault lines. Some 2,400 years after The Ramayan, Dr Ambedkar stares out of the pages of Bhimayana—as a Dalit-prophet who’s faced equally enduring ‘experiences of untouchability’.

S Anand, founder of the imprint Navayana, says, “Ambedkar’s struggles are erased from public memory.” Though a tall national leader, economist, barrister and orator, Dr Ambedkar is only seen in two distant dimensions— as a statue and as the author of our Constitution. To aesthetically resurrect this prophet, Navayana approached award-winning Pardhan Gond artists Durgabai and Subhas Vyam in 2008. It wanted them to illustrate Waiting for a Visa, Ambedkar’s Diary of Dalithood.

Injustice is an Adivasi issue too. “The artists were angered by the story,” says Anand. But when he suggested the Manga comics style to them, they protested: “Don’t stifle us.” They re-envisioned Ambedkar in Gond-pointillism, dotting a Buddha-orange face, outlining Dalit-blue spectacles, filling specks-and-lines on an iconic raised hand. He’s set in an animistic Gond landscape where the train is a snake and tank is a fish (Anand scribbled text on its fins). In Mahad, Ambedkar’s mikes become surreal water sprinklers. As the unlettered artists interpreted caste politics, co-authors Srividya Natarajan and Anand, “re-edited 40 per cent of the text to suit the art”. Though unfinished, Bhimayana has lofty admirers. The legendary art-theorist John Berger wrote the foreword. A blurb by the great graphic non-fictionist Joe Sacco says, ‘By boldly using the Pardhan Gond tradition, Bhimayana conveys why caste and Ambedkar matter in India today.’

Slam-dunking readers face first into the past, by collapsing fact and fiction into ‘faction’, some Indian graphic novelists are drawing out history’s shadowy faces and facets with paint, ink, brushes and PhotoShop. In their hands, hindsight is a sharp-edged etching tool, which prevents these ‘comics’ from turning into coloured textbooks. Situated in a hibernaculam of history, the Hyderabad Graphic Novel Project (HGNP) is trying to fill in 400 years of a sketchy Deccani past with thrilling colour panels.

The Pao Collective’s anthology, conceptualised at Delhi’s Sarai Media Lab, will include Orijit Sen’s Kabir in charcoal imagery, Vishwajyoti Ghosh’s Lahore Reporting in pen and ink, and an 18th century Lucknow-Gothic story by Iram Ghurfan and Ikroop Sandhu. This effort will reach readers by the end of 2010.

Mainstream publishers also have graphic novels in their catalogues. The mood of the 19 muzzled months of India’s Emergency was recently evoked graphically by Delhi Calm, a book that took a relook at this expunged era with murky-brown brush-strokes. Its sepia-stained art drags you onto the capital’s hushed streets on 26 June 1975, ‘a day when Delhi hangs to its holder like a fused bulb’. “This is not Emergency for dummies,” insists author-artist Vishwajyoti Ghosh. At five back then, he was too young to understand why the State’s iron fist slammed down on civil liberties. He only recalls volatile arguments about politics, rising prices and dwindling salaries “suddenly happening in whispers, behind drawn curtains and closed windows”. Connecting his brushstrokes from The Emergency to life today, Ghosh says, “We now have an auto-censor fit into our systems.” Ask banished Indian artist MF Husain.

The move from T-shirts to a graphic novel was only a swap of protest media for Orijit Sen, an NID graduate who co-founded the ethical boutique The People Tree, in Delhi. He authored one of India’s first graphic novels, River of Stories, in 1994. “This anti-Narmada Dam Project comic actually got published with government funds,” he says with a laugh. A craving for black coffee, hot debate and a dog-eared collection of comics unites Sen with fellow graphic novelists. Their political degrees? Those they’ve got from the University of Life. Consider this quick scan of their day jobs in Delhi, Kolkata and Hyderabad: hoteliering, health care, publishing and advertising.

The arc of desi-political-graphica is inspired by Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer prize winning work on the Holocaust, Maus, Marjane Satrapi’s award-winning Persepolis about life under Iran’s Islamic Revolution, and Joe Sacco’s illustrated-reportage in Palestine, which air-drops readers into the intifada. With eyes slit wide open by images in Maus and Persepolis, HGNP’s 31-year old Jasraman Grewal has teamed up with 30-year-old Jaideep Undurti. “Hyderabad is a 0.0 point on a Cartesian plane for us,” says Grewal. Though neither was born here, they claim their psyche’s been Hyderabadised. “The architecture of the city holds the blueprint of how a human mind will develop,” explains Undurti.

Somehow, this city’s minars, Irani cafés and congested gallis (bylanes) led them to ferret out facts about Marco Polo’s first sight of the Koh-i-Noor, studded in the turban of a Kakatiya queen, and surrealist-painter Rene Magritte’s revelations in La Golconde. They’ve recently published a sampler of their work online, the Late Cretaceous Incident, which adventurously ushers you into the era of Deccanausouras Rex. One look and you’re relieved. These first-time writers aren’t novelists, pulling out the lint of their own life to be stuffed between covers. “Our lives in a book would be even less wanted than a Swahili-to-Telugu dictionary,” quips Grewal, who’s busymining the unlucky history of the Hope Diamond, believed to be from Golconda.

Unlike them, Ghosh stared into a blackout. Today, even 35 years on, the heavy dark cover shrouding The Emergency can’t be lifted. Estimates of arrests, sterilisations and demolitions from 1975–77 that exist contradict each other. Won’t-be-censored newspapers printed blank pages. Janardhan Thakur’s book, All the Prime Minister’s Men, describes a Mephistophelean cabinet led by a prime minister with an insecurity streak. More recently, Ramachandra Guha’s tome India After Gandhi, even-handedly but briefly traced this period. But the grand cover-up continues.

Last week, in the Rajya Sabha, the BJP’s Ravi Shankar Prasad called the Union Carbide factory “an illegitimate gift of The Emergency”. Widely opposed, permission for the factory was granted in October 1975, and within nine years a noxious gas leak from this factory caused the world’s worst industrial disaster.   To portray this dark time in “sepia, a visual shortcut for memory, added a staid controlled feel”, says Ghosh,  who has specialised in applied art. For verve, he blended ideas with burnt sienna, chrome yellow and a judicious drop of black.

In Delhi Calm, stars of the hit film Bobby wonder about attending ‘the Prophet’s’ rally (alluding to Jayprakash Narayan’s first public meeting that united the Left, Right and Congress dissidents).

“By instructing Doordarshan to screen Bobby, VC Shukla, information and broadcasting minister, used a cherubic Rishi Kapoor and 16-year-old Dimple to keep people home and away from the rally,” says journalist Paranjoy Guha Thakurta. “I could have been a banker or economist, but The Emergency, which prevented elections even at hostel level, made me decide to be a journalist,” says Guha (he’s just written a report titled Paid News Corrupting Indian Democracy).

Graphic novelists are looking further back in history too. Sen, for example, is trying to translate Kabir’s verse into visuals. In his Delhi-based studio, sitting in front of an Apple Mac with his face lit up by charcoal-shaded spreads, he says: “Every frame of a comic is like a jump-cut that forces readers to imaginatively read between them.”

Stirred by the power of Kabir’s poetry, Sen is using “its rhyme as an editing device to shift the narrative between Gurgaon and Banaras”. As for this desi-political-graphica phenomenon, says Sen, “We’re at the stage right now where cinema was when it began. Who knew there would be war movies and Westerns?”

View original post: http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/art-culture/they-are-not-exactly-comics