Bollywood has a unique distinction. Not just that it has
songs, but that there is a song for any occasion.
You can think of anything at all, starting from a simple
romance with the couple running around trees in Kashmir or Switzerland or
Amsterdam (Neele gagan ke tale), to a lady just waiting for her lover to return
from work (Na, jiya lage na, from Anand or Kis liye maine pyaar kiya from The
Train), to a group of people on a picnic (O Manchali kahaan chali), to a dad
bidding goodbye to his daughter after her wedding (Babul ki duaaen leti jaa, ja
tujhko sukhi sansaar mile), a dad raising a child (Tujhe suraj kahoon ya
chanda, tujhe deep kahoon ya taara) to a
ghost calling her boyfriend from a past life (like in Woh kaun thi, or Bees
Saal Baad- kahin deep jale kahin dil), you have a song for every occasion.
Creativity must have been at an all-time high among lyricists who had to write
for all these situations. Hats off to them.
Aap logon ka jawaab nahin.
Some more situations- song of liberation (Aaj phir jeene ki
tamanna hai), Folk song at a rural party (Chunri sambhal gori udi chali jaaye
re), celebration of a festival (Govinda aala re aala), decrying a lost friendship
(Dost dost na raha, pyaar pyaar na raha),
club songs (Laila main laila), Lullabies (Nanhi pari sone chali), Kids
having fun (Lakdi ki kaathi kaathi pe ghoda, or Re mama re mama re), cabaret songs (Piya tu ab to aaja), college
students having fun (Mannubhai motor chali pump um pum), reflections about life
(Zindagi ka safar, Yeh jeevan hai, Zindagi ek safar hai suhana, Zindagi ke
safar mein guzar jaate hain jo makaam), the celebration of the present (Aane
wala pal, jaanewala hai, ho sake to isme zindagi bita do), teasing (Hamaare
siwa tumhaare aur kitne deewaane hain), dance competitons (made famous by Nasir
Husain in Hum Kisise Kum Nahin in a series of four songs- Mil gaya, humko
saathi mil gaya..etc.).
More categories? Lost and found songs that unite siblings
(Yaadon ki baaraat knikli hai aaj dilke dwaare), lovers complaining about lost
chances (Hazaar raahen mudke dekhi , kahin se koi sadaa na aai), protagonist describing the state of his heart (Dil aaj shaayar hai,
or Dil kya kare jab kisise kisiko pyaar ho jaaye), kids singing about parents’
romance (Papa ko mummy se, mummy ko papa se pyaar hai), angst (Har koi chaahta
hai ek mutthi aasmaan), the wedding song (Aaj mere yaar ki shaadi hai), the
disco song (I am a disco dancer, Hari om hari), the birthday song (Baar baar
din yeh aaye, baar baar dil yeh gaye tum jiyo hazaaron saal), mujra (Inhi logon
ne, or Jab pyaar kiya to darna kya, or Salaame ishq meri jaan zara qubool
karlo), qawwali (Hum kisise kam
nahin), songs about the river or sea (O
maajhi re), the seduction song (Main kya karoon ram mujhe Buddha mil gaya),
Bhajan or arti (Om jay jagdeesh hare), teaching each other (Saawan ka mahina,
pawan kare sor).
Patriotism (Mere Desh ki dharti, or Nanha munna rahi hoon
desh ka sipahi hoon), distracting a crying child (Rona kabhi nahin rona chahe
toot jaaye koi khilona), madness in an
asylum(Mere bhains ko danda kyun maara), brooding over lost love (Din dhal
jaaye haaye raat na jaaye), enjoying a tonga (horse carriage) ride (many OP
Nayyar compositions with hoof-beats in the music),are some more situations that
are amenable to songs in Hindi movies. Disguises in the villain’s den are also
another common category of songs (Duniya mein, logon ko from Apna Desh, for
instance).
Maybe I have missed a few, but you get the point…
3 comments:
gana aaye ya na aaye gana chahiye...(even if you don't know how to sing.
I am amazed at the epiphany that the first song writer had who portrayed it on film and rest is history. I mean who in their right mind sings? Best fiction ever! Jobs has nothing on him.
It has also had the desirable effect of keeping all of us busy for years..what would we have done without film songs?
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