UncategorizedMay 3, 2007 11:52 am
कभी कभी मेरे दिल मे खयाल आता है
कि जिंदगी तेरे जुल्फ़ों की नर्म छाओं में
गुजरने पाती तो शादाब हो भी सकती थी
ये रंज-ओ-गम की स्याही जो दिल पे छाई है
ये तिरागी जो मेरी जीस्त का मुकद्दर है
तेरी नजर की शुआँओं मे खो भी सकती थी

अजब न था कि मै ये बेगाना-ए-आलम हो कर
तेरे जमाल की रानाइयों में खो रहता
तेरा गुद्दाज बदन , तेरी नीमबाज आँखे
इन्ही हसीन फ़जाओं मे मै हो रहता

पुकारती मुझे जब तलखियाँ जमाने की
तेरे लबो से हलावत के घुंट पी लेता
हयात चीखती फ़िरती बरेहना-सर और मै
घनेरी जुल्फ़ों की छाओं मे छुप के जी लेता

मगर ये हो न सका
मगर ये हो न सका और अब ये आलम है
कि तू नही, तेरा गम, तेरी जुस्तुजू भी नही
गुजर रही है कुछ इस तरह जिंदगी जैसे
इसे किसी सहारे की आरजू भी नही

जमाने भर के दुखों को लगा चुका हूँ गले
गुजर रहा हूँ कुछ अनजानी रहगुजारों से
मुहीब सोये मेरी सिमट भरते आते है
हयात-ओ-मौत के पर-हाल खार-जारों से

न कोई जदा , न मंजील, न रोशनी का सुराग
भटक रही है खयालों मे जिंदगी मेरी
इन्ही खयालों मे रह जाऊँगा कभी खो कर
मै जानता हूँ मेरे हम-नफ़स, मगर यूँ ही
कभी कभी मेरे दिल मे खयाल आता है —-साहिर

 
 
PastFebruary 16, 2007 5:29 pm

American sweetheart - Shirley Temple dances with best dance partner Buddy Ebsen in her movie "Captain January". What an entertainment Shirley is!

Here is the lyrics:

Next Friday night your all invited
To dance from 8 to 5
All the fishes still alive
Are having a ball

Its some affair they’ll all be there
From the Herring to the Whale
They’ll turn out to shake a scale
In Neptune’s Hall

Come along and follow me
To the bottom of the sea
We’ll join in the Jamboree
At the Codfish ball

Lobsters dancing in a row
Shuffle off to Buffalo
Jelly fish sway to and fro
At the Codfish ball

Finn-an-haddie leads the eel
Thought an Irish reel
The Catfish is a dancing man
But he can’t can-can like a sardine can

Tunas trucking left and right
Minnies mooching what a night
There won’t be a hook in site
At the Codfish ball…

Thank you Shirley…Thank you very much!!

UncategorizedJanuary 5, 2007 7:06 pm

I came across this beautiful song sung beautifully by Mohd. Rafi saheb for the movie Bheegi Raat Meena Kumari(1965). Music director was Roshan Lal and lyrics by Sahir Ludhyanvi. Main actors were Meena Kumari, Pradeep Kumar, and Ashok Kumar.

While I was searching for this song in google, I found this song in the list which was titled "Don’t play these songs on your wedding"…lol. Ya, I agree, it has a some taunting in it. Whatever, this beautiful poem is a gift to gazal lovers by Sahir Ludhyanvi saheb. His style of writing will always inspire others. His strong urdu basement makes the shairi more melodious and ornamental. This song - Dil jo na keh saka… has been composed very differently. The rhyme scheme is awesome. Here is the lyrics of the song I am talking of:

Dil jo na keh saka wohi raaz-e-dil kehne ki raat aayi -2
Dil jo na keh saka…

Nagma sa koi jaag utha badan mein,
Jhankaar ki si tharthari hai tan mein -2
Hooo, mubarak tumhe ki kissi larazti baahon mein
Rahene ki raat aayi…
Dil jo na keh saka…

Tauba ye kisne, anjuman saja ke,
Tukde kiye hai gunchaye wafa ke -2
Hooo, uchalo phoolon ke tukde, ki rangin fizaon mein
Rehne ki raat aayi…
Dil jo na keh saka…

Chalyye ye mubarak, jashn dosti ka
Daaman to thama, aapne kisika -2
Hooo, hume to Khushi yehi hai tumhe bhi kisiko apna,
Kehne ki raat, aayi
Dil jo na keh saka..

Sagar uthao dil ka kisko gham hai,
Aaj dil ki kimat jaam se bhi kam hai -2
Ho, piyo chahe khoon dil ho…
Ke peete pilate hi…

Wo hi raaz-e-dil kehne ki raat aayi…
Dil jo na keh saka…

(nagma=song; anjuman=assembly/meeting; gunchaye=bouquets; jaam=peg)

**Lataji has also sung the same song (with some different wordings) in the same film, just as Nagma-o-sher ki and rang aur noor ki for movie Gazal. We owe a lot to Sahir Saheb!!

PresentJanuary 4, 2007 11:10 am

Any  account  of  Indian  playback  music  starts  and  ends  with  the name - Lata Mangeshkar.Lata Mangeshkar
With  awards  like  Bharat  Ratna  and Dada  Saheb  Phalke  Award  conferred  upon  her,  her  list  of  awards  would  outnumber  even  the  total  songs  sung  by  most  singers.  Singing  for  almost  everyone  from  Nargis  to  Kareena,  she’s  been  the  voice  of  India’s  cinema.  Her  melodious  voice  has  won  hearts  of  millions  across  the  world.  Known  as  the  nightingale  of  India,  she’s  truly  the  pride  of  India -  Lata Mangeshkar

…to be continued…


 

Uncategorized 10:50 am

Nagpur Improvement Trust (NIT) building, Sadar, Nagpur

The contrast cannot get starker than this. Maharashtra’s winter capital city is also the capital city of the state’s suicide zone, Vidarbha. It’s a lively city, and has abundant green pastures, literally as well as figuratively. The sleepy, almost static city is at the cusp of a transition. The famed economic boom finally seems to have finally descended on the zero mile city.

Defining Nagpur takes much more than clichés could tell. It’s the same city where Dalit messiah Dr BR Ambedkar embraced Buddhism. It’s the same city where India’s ideological Right, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, has its headquarters. And, of course, it is still India’s geographical centre.

But the Multimodal International Hub Airport at Nagpur (MIHAN), said to be the country’s first, could catapult it at the centre of a great economic activity. And, to use the mother of all clichés, it is India’s orange city. Time is just ripe for Nagpur’s oranges to go places.

The 24-lakh-plus city is no more condescendingly considered a big village. Its transition phase has already morphed Nagpur into arguably the most happening Tier-II city in Maharashtra. A poll to elect its 136-member civic body could not have come at a better time.

For the state BJP president Nitin Gadkari, this is a big match as Nagpur is his home ground. Mr Gadkari has to win this one for his party, and for himself. In this RSS bastion, the BJP has only once won the Lok Sabha election. And only once it has ruled Nagpur Municipal Corporation, between 1996 and 2001. So, it’s a prestige battle for BJP though Mr Gadkari would like to keep it low-key. “It’s like any other election for me and I am fighting it as an ordinary BJP karyakarta,” maintained the BJP heavyweight.

BJP legislator from West Nagpur Devendra Fadnavis, who was mayor when the BJP ruled, is clear that Nagpur has reached a take-off stage as a result of the foresight shown by his party. “In 1996, we planned for ten years and achieved half of it by the time we left office. But the Congress has not been able to carry forward that legacy. Nagpur’s profile has changed but the civic rule has not caught up with the rising aspirations,” Mr Fadnavis maintained.

Giving the BJP a tough time are two Congress satraps — Nagpur MP Vilas Muttemwar, who is also union minister of state (independent charge) for non-conventional energy, and Maharashtra minister for textiles Satish Chaturvedi. Mr Muttemwar claims MIHAN has always been his brainchild and it’s happening now because of the Congress rule in Nagpur, state, and at the Centre. Here the Congress has not formed a pre-poll alliance with the NCP.

Apart from the Rs 7,000-crore MIHAN, an SEZ that is being developed as part of MIHAN has already bagged investment commitments from IT majors such as Satyam Computer, L&T Infocity, and real estate major Shapoorji Pallonji. US aircraft manufacturer Boeing has announced an investment of $185 million in setting up a maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) facility and an aeronautical training institute in Nagpur. Clearly, a modest civic budget of Rs 500 crore does not represent Nagpur’s potential.

Nagpur’s success story has spawned an unprecedented real estate boom, says prominent developer Vishwas Sahasrabhojanee. “The feel-good factor is definitely working in Nagpur. It used to be called orange city in the distant past. Then, its rich green cover earned it the honour of the second greenest city. Swanky roads added another feather of getting famous as a clean city. Now, it’s being regarded as the cream city where all this has created a good investment climate and a realty boom,” Mr Sahasrabhojanee says.

Vidarbha Industries Association president Mohan Agarwal could not agree more. “Nagpur’s moment of glory seems to have finally arrived. It’s time the municipal authorities and city fathers seized the moment and planned for the future. Planning henceforth must factor in 25%-30% rise in population in next 10 years and the economic growth,” Mr Agarwal recommends.

That’s what Nagpur expects from the 2007 civic poll — a holistic plan for the future. Just as the city celebrates the end of a virtual economic drought, it wants its civic rulers to remember what happened to Pune when it started rocking. “What we can learn from Pune is plan well in advance so that economic activity does not take the better of civic infrastructure,” Mr Fadnavis prescribes.

-a report by Abhiram Ghadyalpatil