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KAILASH MEHRA SADHU
A real song never disappoints
- (Kailash Mehra (Sadhu)
in conversation with Dileep Kumar Kaul)
Kashmir
Sentinel, Jammu, October 15-31, 1994 Q: When did you start
singing?
A: I was in class 3rd
in Devaki Arya Putri Pathshala, Hazuri Bagh, Srinagar. On Saturdays the
students would do cultural programmes and in one of these programmes my
teacher Mr. Swarup Nath Sapru sent me on to the stage to sing. For a moment
I could not understand a thing but then I sang a Bhajan and f rom that
day I knew that I could sing.
Q: Then you had regular
training?
A: In the beginning
I learnt at school. Then Mr. Shambhu Nath Sopori groomed me in the Indian
classical music. What I am today is because of him.
Q: You were from a Dogra
family, how could you be so conversant in Kashmiri songs?
A: My forefathers lived
in Kashmir. I too have lived in Kashmir since I was a little child. The
language was never a problem. When I was in school, Asha Bhonsle had sung
a Kashmiri song 'Lalas vantay chhu sawal'. My Guru Sopori Sahib made me
learn it and also the famous Ghazal of the noted Kashmiri poet Abdul Ahad
Azad i.e. ''bedard lolaki Bahana kari kari'. I sang this song on many occasions.
Q: In the early seventies
you sang two songs 'Karsa myon nyay ande' and 'Mas bu gosay rat
ke pyalay hano'. These proved big hits. People still remember these
songs. How could you get that 'Kashmiriness' into these songs?
A: It is the Kashmiri
folk element which made these songs famous--the feeling which is Kashmir
and which flows through my arteries and veins.
Q: But these were solo
songs. Do we have solo singing in Kashmiri folk music?
A: Yes, primarily
in Sufiana music. Many of the compositions I sang were in Sufiana music.
In group singing also there are moments when every body does not know the
song. So a singer sings and all others follow. In Kashmiri Pandits there
were professional 'wanwun' singers who would tell the ladies what to sing
and then sing with them. So there is ample scope for the solo singing.
Q: Why is the folk song
so important?
A: Because the folk
song is the real song, and a real song never disappoints you.
Q: What do you mean
by a real song?
A: A real song
is the song of the people. At the core of any folk song, there is a call
for the people, call for them to join the song. If a singer grasps the
essence of this call, it is very easy to communicate with the people.
Q: Then how can we differentiate
between the folk songs of different places?
A: To live in
this world we need to communicate with each other. A man has to call another
man. This call varies from individual to individual, from society to society
and from time to time. For example, a Kashmiri will never call you the
way a Dogra does. It is the specific way of calling which makes the song
of a particular place. It is the call of that place.
Q: Today when our community
in exile is facing the worst times of history, what are the possibilities
for our music?
A: There is tremendous
pain and agony. We cannot but sing the song of pain. Like our lives, our
music also needs an establishment, an identity.
Q. You mean the song
of pain will give an identity to our music?
A: The song of pain
is everywhere. Even our marriage songs have something of it. Our literature
in exile is full of the songs of pain. The artist is the pulse of his times.
He cannot escape the pain, agony, struggles and even the joys of his times.
And if he does not respond, future will question him, his very being as
an artist.
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