Thursday, December 31, 2020

Mohanlal announces sequel to his Malayalam thriller Drishyam, shares teaser on social media

The highly-anticipated Malayalam thriller Drishyam 2, starring superstar Mohanlal, will have its global premiere on Amazon Prime Video in 2021, the streamer announced on Friday.

Mohanlal dropped the teaser of the film on 1 January to give his fans a sneak peek.

Written and directed by Jeetu Joseph, and produced by Antony Perumbavoor under the banner of Aashirvad Cinemas, Drishyam 2 stars Meena, Siddique, Asha Sharath, Murali Gopy, Ansiba, Esther, and Saikumar in pivotal roles.

The story of the sequel will begin from where the prequel left off. The movie was already made into Hindi, starring Ajay Devgn and Tabu.

Mohanlal plays the role of Georgekutty in the movie. The sequel will details how his family is coping with the fall-out from the fateful night depicted in the original movie.

With the entire family harbouring a secret that could make or break them, the gripping teaser sets the premise of what lies in store.

Speaking about the film, popular actor Mohanlal said, "Drishyam was one-of-a-kind thriller, way ahead of its time, that was loved by all. With Drishyam 2, we are taking the story of Georgekutty and his family ahead from where we left it off.

"I am delighted to associate with Amazon Prime Video to release one of the most-awaited movies of the year. Prime Video has helped take some of the best stories of South Indian cinema to avid cinephiles not just in India, but across the world."

Vijay Subramaniam, Director and Head, Content, Amazon Prime Video India added, "Drishyam is a cult film and fans have been eagerly awaiting its sequel. We are thrilled to bring Drishyam 2 on Amazon Prime Video to customers in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide. At Amazon Prime Video, our aim is to constantly provide our viewers with content that provides wholesome entertainment and who better than Mohanlal and Jeetu Joseph to bring that out."



from Firstpost Bollywood Latest News https://ift.tt/2L6sRUC

Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Varun Grover reads 'Aaj Sajan Mohe Ang Lagalo'

सखी री बिरहा के दुखड़े सह सह कर जब राधे बेसुध हो ली
Sakhi ri birha ke dukhde sah sah kar jab raadhe besudh ho li

तो इक दिन अपने मनमोहन से जा कर यूँ बोली
To ik din apne manmohan se jaa kar yoon boli

आज सजन मोहे अंग लगालो, जनम सफ़ल हो जाये
Aaj sajan mohe ang laga lo, janam safal ho jaaye

हृदय की पीड़ा देह की अग्नि, सब शीतल हो जाये
Hriday ki peeda deh ki agni, sab sheetal ho jaaye

*

करूं लाख जतन मोरे मन की तपन, मोरे तन की जलन नहीं जाये
Karoon laakh jatan morey man ki tapan, morey tan ki jalan nahi jaaye

कैसी लागी ये लगन कैसी जागी ये अगन, जिया धीर धरन नहीं पाये
Kaisi laagi ye lagan kaisi jaagi ye agan, jiya dheer dharan nahi paaye

प्रेम सुधा... मोरे साँवरिया, प्रेम सुधा इतनी बरसा दो जग जल थल हो जाये
Prem sudha... morey saanwariya, prem sudha itni barsa do jag jal thal ho jaaye

आज सजन...
Aaj sajan...

*

मोहे अपना बनालो मोरी बाँह पकड़, मैं हूँ जनम जनम की दासी
Mohe apna banalo mori baah pakad, main hoon janam janam ki daasi

मेरी प्यास बुझा दो मनहर गिरिधर, प्यास बुझा दो, मैं हूँ अन्तर्घट तक प्यासी
Mori pyaas bujha do manahar giridhar, pyaas bujha do, main hoon antarghat tak pyaasi

प्रेम सुधा... मोरे साँवरिया, प्रेम सुधा इतनी बरसा दो जग जल थल हो जाये
Prem sudha... morey saanwariya, prem sudha itni barsa do jag jal thal ho jaaye

आज सजन...
Aaj sajan...

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Varun Grover reads: 'Aaj Sajan Mohe Ang Lagalo' (Pyaasa, 1957)

This song from Guru Dutt's Pyaasa is a testimony to Ludhianvi's songwriting acumen, where he could summarise the entire essence of a film in a song. With Sachin Dev Burman's music and Geeta Dutt's mellifluous voice, Ludhianvi penned a love song which is deeply rooted in the Vaishnava traditions. Pictured as a kirtan sung by a group of wandering Baul minstrels, the song depicts the yearning and love of the prostitute Gulabo (played by Waheeda Rehman) for the poet Vijay (Guru Dutt).

"Desire, surrender, love — all of this is in just one song, and that too in a bhakti song," points out Grover while talking about this gem from Ludianvi's repertoire. "These are two outcast people — the poet and the prostitute — and the lyrics go: 'मेरी प्यास बुझा दो मनहर गिरिधर, मैं हूँ अन्तर्घट तक प्यासी | Mori pyaas bujha do manahar giridhar, main hu antarghat tak pyaasi'," says Grover, talking about how this foreshadows the film's ending where both these characters leave this world of hypocrisy and start a new life together.

"Sahir saab has so masterfully used the narrative of the film to lend these lines to the characters on-screen."

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



from Firstpost Bollywood Latest News https://ift.tt/3o5MJ93

Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Kausar Munir reads 'Yeh Ishq Ishq Hai'

ना तो कारवाँ की तलाश है, ना तो हमसफ़र की तलाश है
Na to karwaan ki talaash hai, na to humsafar ki talaash hai

मेरे शौक़-ए-खाना खराब को, तेरी रहगुज़र की तलाश है
Mere shauk-e-khana kharaab ko, teri rehguzar ki talaash hai

*

मेरे नामुराद जुनून का है इलाज कोई तो मौत है
Mere namurad junoon ka hai ilaaj koi to maut hai

जो दवा के नाम पे ज़हर दे उसी चारागर की तलाश है
Jo dawa ke naam pe zehar de usi chaaragar ki talaash hai

*

तेरा इश्क़ है मेरी आरज़ू, तेरा इश्क़ है मेरी आबरू
Tera ishq hai meri aarzoo, tera ishq hai meri aabroo

दिल इश्क़ जिस्म इश्क़ है और जान इश्क़ है
Dil ishq jism ishq hai aur jaan ishq hai

ईमान की जो पूछो तो ईमान इश्क़ है
Imaan ki jo poochho to imaan ishq hai

तेरा इश्क़ है मेरी आरज़ू, तेरा इश्क़ है मेरी आबरू
Tera ishq hai meri aarzoo, tera ishq hai meri aabroo

तेरा इश्क़ मैं कैसे छोड़ दूँ, मेरी उम्र भर की तलाश है
Tera ishq main kaise chhod doon, meri umr bhar ki talaash hai

इश्क़ इश्क़ तेरा इश्क़ इश्क़...
Ishq ishq tera ishq ishq...

ये इश्क़ इश्क़ है इश्क़ इश्क़, ये इश्क़ इश्क़ है इश्क़ इश्क़
Ye ishq ishq hai ishq ishq, ye ishq ishq hai ishq ishq

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Kausar Munir reads: 'Yeh Ishq Ishq Hai' (Barsaat Ki Raat, 1960)

Often considered one of the longest qawwalis (approximately 12 minutes) recorded for a film, 'Na To Karwaan Ki Talaash Hai' / 'Ye Ishq Ishq Hai' is a "masterpiece" and a real tough act to follow — be in terms of the stellar music arrangement by Roshan; the vocals by Manna De, Mohd Rafi, Asha Bhosle, Sudha Malhotra and Shiv Dayal Batish, and of course the path-breaking lyrics by Ludhianvi. Legend has it that this song from the Bharat Bhushan-Madhubala-starrer Barsaat Ki Raat took nearly 24 hours to record and became a milestone for the representation of the qawwali form in popular Hindi music.

Kausar Munir believes 'Ye Ishq Ishq Hai' isn't just a qawwali but is a work of art spread across a wide horizon. "The song starts with the traditional Urdu shayari and then meanders through the hills and streams and fields and rivers of India. It paints a vivid picture of the syncretic culture of our country, of its ganga-jamuni tehzeeb," says Munir.

This allegorical musical gem has references to Sufi poetry; Radha and Krishna's love in braj bhasha; the devotion of Meerabai; mention of Musa (Moses) and Kohetoor (Mount Sinai), and even one interlude that pays a tribute to the immortal romances in the fields of Punjab. With this song, "Sahir Ludhianvi masterfully presents a comprehensive definition of ishq (love) and at the same time paints a cultural poetic history of India," Munir adds further stressing how every poetry lover must internalise this song in order to learn and appreciate the art and craft behind it.

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



from Firstpost Bollywood Latest News https://ift.tt/2KHNNl7

Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Irshad Kamil reads 'Main Zindagi Ka Saath Nibhata Chala Gaya'

मैं ज़िंदगी का साथ निभाता चला गया
Main zindagi ka saath nibhata chala gaya

हर फ़िक्र को धुँएं में उड़ाता चला गया
Har fikr ko dhuven mein udata chala gaya

*

बरबादियों का सोग़ मनाना फ़िज़ूल था
Barbaadiyon ka sog manana fizul tha

बरबादियों का जश्न मनाता चला गया
Barbaadiyon ka jashn manata chala gaya

मैं ज़िंदगी...
Main zindagi...

*

जो मिल गया उसी को मुक़द्दर समझ लिया
Jo mil gaya usi ko mukaddar samajh liya

जो खो गया मैं उसको भुलाता चला गया
Jo kho gaya main usiko bhulata chala gaya

मैं ज़िंदगी...
Main zindagi...

*

ग़म और खुशी में फ़र्क न महसूस हो जहाँ
Gham aur khushi me fark na mehsus ho jaha

मैं दिल को उस मुक़ाम पे लाता चला गया
Main dil ko us mukaam pe laata chala gaya

मैं ज़िंदगी...
Main zindagi...

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Irshad Kamil reads: 'Main Zindagi Ka Saath Nibhata Chala Gaya' (Hum Dono, 1961)

With Dev Anand in a double role, the 1961 film Hum Dono had two primary themes in the narrative — one of love, and the other of war. And somehow both are as topical in current times as ever. When the film was re-released in colour in 2011, a confident and optimistic Anand had said in an interview: "The story of Hum Dono is not dated. Romance is modern… war is modern and so is the song, 'Main Zindagi Ka Saath Nibhata Chala Gaya'."

The songs of this film remain hugely popular till date essentially for the soulful music of Jaidev and the memorable lyrics penned by Ludhianvi. The two most popular and acclaimed songs of the album — 'Main Zindagi Ka Saath Nibhata Chala Gaya' and 'Kabhi Khud Pe Kabhi Haalat Pe' — were sung by Rafi and immaculately depicted the head and heart of the lead actor [Dev Anand played the double role of army personnel Major Manohar Lal Verma and Capt Anand].

Particularly about 'Main Zindagi Ka Saath Nibhata Chala Gaya', Irshad Kamil reveals that it is actually not a song, but a ghazal; three couplets of this ghazal have been used in the film. Talking about why he admires this ghazal, Kamil says, "I believe this song is not just a creation of Sahir Ludhianvi — the poet, but also of the saint that dwells within him. One who lives in this world, but is not of this world."

In this song, coupled with Jaidev's ebullient melody, Ludhianvi, in his signature style, translates profound philosophical emotions into simple everyday words. And in doing so, he also lends a flow to the narrative of the film as well as the character arcs of the actors. "A shayar/ poet possesses the extremities of the world, life and journeys of all kinds within them. Ludhianvi too had a similar microcosm of his own within him."

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



from Firstpost Bollywood Latest News https://ift.tt/2KUSfga

Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Shellee reads 'Jinhen Naaz Hai Hind Par'

ये कूचे, ये नीलामघर दिलकशी के

Ye kooche, ye neelamghar dilkashi ke

ये लुटते हुए कारवाँ ज़िन्दगी के

Ye lutte huye karwaan zindagi ke

कहाँ हैं, कहाँ है, मुहाफ़िज़ ख़ुदी के

Kahaan hai, kahaan hai, mehfiz khudi ke

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

ये पुरपेच गलियाँ, ये बदनाम बाज़ार

Ye purpech galiyaan, ye badnaam baazaar

ये ग़ुमनाम राही, ये सिक्कों की झन्कार

Ye gumnaam raahi, ye sikko ki jhankar

ये इस्मत के सौदे, ये सौदों पे तकरार

Ye ismat ke saude, ye saudon pe takrar

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

ये सदियों से बेख्वाब, सहमी सी गलियाँ

Ye sadiyon ke bekhwaab, sehmi si galiyaan

ये मसली हुई अधखिली ज़र्द कलियाँ

Ye masli huyi adhkhili zard kaliyaan

ये बिकती हुई खोखली रंग-रलियाँ

Ye bikti huyi khokhli rang-raliyaan

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

वो उजले दरीचों में पायल की छन-छन

Woh ujle darichon mein paayal ki chhan-chhan

थकी-हारी साँसों पे तबले की धन-धन

Thaki-haari saanson pe tabley ki dhan-dhan

ये बेरूह कमरों में खाँसी की ठन-ठन

Ye berooh kamron me khaansi ki than-than

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

ये फूलों के गजरे, ये पीकों के छींटे

Ye phoolon ke gajre, ue peekon ke chhinte

ये बेबाक नज़रें, ये गुस्ताख फ़िकरे

Ye bebaak nazrein, ye gustakh phikre

ये ढलके बदन और ये बीमार चेहरे

Ye dhalke badan aur ye beemar chehre

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

यहाँ पीर भी आ चुके हैं, जवाँ भी

Yahaan peer bhi aa chuke hain, jawaan bhi

तनोमंद बेटे भी, अब्बा, मियाँ भी

Tan-o-mand bete bhi, abba, miyaan bhi

ये बीवी भी है और बहन भी है, माँ भी

Ye biwi bhi hai aur behen bhi hai, maa bhi

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

मदद चाहती है ये हौवा की बेटी

Madad chahti hai ye hauwa ki beti

यशोदा की हमजिंस, राधा की बेटी

Yashoda ki humzins, radha ki beti

पयम्बर की उम्मत, ज़ुलयखां की बेटी

Payambar ki ummat, zulaikhan ki beti

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

*

ज़रा मुल्क के रहबरों को बुलाओ

Zara mulk ke rehbaron ko bulao

ये कूचे, ये गलियाँ, ये मंजर दिखाओ

Ye kooche, ye galiyaan, ye manzar dikhao

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर उनको लाओ

Jinhen naaz hai hind par unko laao

जिन्हें नाज़ है हिन्द पर वो कहाँ हैं

Jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Shellee reads: 'Jinhen Naaz Hai Hind Par' (Pyaasa, 1957)

It is no wonder that Guru Dutt's 1957 magnum opus Pyaasa is considered one of the most defining films of all time. Not just the narrative, but each and every song in the film is a masterpiece in itself. SD Burman and Ludhianvi's stellar combination made Pyaasa immortal in every respect. 'Jinhen Naaz Hai Hind Par' is one of those songs where Ludhianvi makes a soul-stirring commentary on the deplorable conditions in which women of the marginalised communities — especially courtesans and prostitutes — live in our country. Macroscopically, he highlights upon the social injustices plaguing the very fabric of Indian society at large.

Ludhianvi, through Guru Dutt's character in the film, questions the upholders of society and justice and brings to the fore their misplaced pride in being an Indian. At the Jashn-e-Rekhta festival 2019, Javed Akhtar had said, "People feel elated to say that these writings on the social-political situation of the country are still relevant today. Saadat Hasan Manto, Ismat Chughtai and Sahir Ludhianvi wrote about social injustice, and it is sad that these themes are still relevant. Yeh koi khushi ki baat nahi hai, yeh bahut dukh ki baat hai. It only means that all those sufferings, suppression and social issues are still present in our society."

The song 'Jinhen Naaz Hai Hind Par' is a recreated version of one of Ludhianvi's poems/nazms titled Chakle. "The only difference between the nazm and the song from Pyaasa is the line 'jinhen naaz hai hind par woh kahaan hain'. In the original nazm, the line reads: 'sanaa-ḳhvaan-e-taqdees-e-mashriq kahaan hain'," mentions Shellee. He talks about how Guru Dutt was so impressed by this nazm from Chakle that he decided to use it in Pyaasa and in fact also created a whole situation to weave it into the film's narrative. However, he felt the recurring phrase of the original nazm was way too complicated for the layman and hence asked Ludhianvi to rephrase it into something easy and catchy.

"Sahir was as much a progressive poet as a romantic one, and his words, just like the meaning of his name, cast a magical spell on the readers/listeners," Shellee says.

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



from Firstpost Bollywood Latest News https://ift.tt/3obeSvy

Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Hussain Haidry reads 'Main To Kuch Bhi Nahin'

आप क्या जाने मुझको समझतें हैं क्या?
Aap kya jaane mujhko samajhte hain kya?

मैं तो कुछ भी नहीं
Main to kuch bhi nahin

इस क़दर प्यार इतनी बडी भीड का मैं रखूंगा कहां
Is qadr pyaar itni badi bheed ka main rakhunga kahaan

इस क़दर प्यार रखने के क़ाबिल नहीं मेरा दिल मेरी जां
Is qadr pyaar rakhne ke kaabil nahin mera dil meri jaan

मुझको इतनी मोहब्बत न दो दोस्तो
Mujhko itni mohabbat na do doston

सोच लो दोस्तो
Soch lo doston

इस क़दर प्यार कैसे सम्भालूंगा मैं
Is qadr pyaar kaise sambhaalunga main

मैं तो कुछ भी नहीं
Main to kuch bhi nahin

*

प्यार एक शख़्स का भी अगर मिल सके
Pyaar ek shaqs ka bhi agar mil sake

तो बडी चीज़ है ज़िन्दगी के लिए
To badi cheez hai zindagi ke liye

आदमी को मगर ये भी मिलता नहीं
Aadmi ko magar ye bhi milta nahin

मुझको इतनी मोहब्बत मिली आपसे
Mujhko itni mohabbat mili aapse

ये मेरा हक़ नहीं मेरी तक़दीर है
Ye mera haq nahi meri taqdeer hai

मैं ज़माने की नज़रों में कुछ भी न था
Main zamaane ki nazron me kuch bhi na tha

मेरी आँखों में अब तक वो तस्वीर है
Meri aankhon me ab tak woh tasveer hai

इस मोहब्बत के बदले, मैं क्या नज़र दूं
Is mohabbat ke badle, main kya nazar doon

मैं तो कुछ भी नहीं
Main to kuch bhi nahin

*

इज़्ज़तें शोहरतें चाहतें उल्फ़तें
Izzatein shauhratein chaahtein ulfatein

कोई भी चीज़ दुनिया में रहती नहीं
Koi bhi cheez duniya me rehti nahin

आज मैं हूं जहां कल कोई और था
Aaj main hoon jaha kal koi aur tha

ये भी एक दौर है वो भी एक दौर था
Ye bhi ek daur hai woh bhi ek daur tha

*

आज इतनी मोहब्बत न दो दोस्तो
Aaj itni mohabbat na do doston

कि मेरे कल की ख़ातिर न कुछ भी रहे
Ki mere kal ki khatir na kuch bhi rahe

आज का प्यार थोडा बचा कर रखो
Aaj ka pyaar thoda bacha kar rakho

मेरे कल के लिये
Mere kal ke liye

कल जो गुमनाम है, कल जो सुनसान है
Kal jo gumnaam hai, kal jo sunsaan hai

कल जो अंजान है, कल जो वीरान है
Kal jo anjaan hai, kal jo veeran hai

मैं तो कुछ भी नहीं हूं
Main to kuch bhi nahin hoon

मैं तो कुछ भी नहीं
Main to kuch bhi nahin

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Hussain Haidry reads: 'Main To Kuch Bhi Nahin' (Daag, 1973)

Ludhianvi's poems or nazms had this unique lyrical quality to it that made them just apt enough to be used as songs in films. There are many nazms of the celebrated poet-lyricist that went on to become memorable songs, be it Khubsoorat Mod which is popularly known by the song 'Chalo Ek Baar Phir Se Ajnabee Ban Jaaye Hum Dono' from the 1963 film Gumraah , or Chakle that we also know as 'Jinhen Naaz Hai Hind Par' from Guru Dutt's 1957 Pyaasa.

'Main To Kuch Bhi Nahin' is, however, a rare exception. "Ludhianvi wrote this nazm after receiving numerous congratulatory messages and accolades upon being conferred with the Padma Shri in 1971. The nazm was titled 'Aaj Ka Pyaar Thoda Bacha Kar Rakho'," mentions Hussain Haidry. Unlike his other poems, this wasn't made into a song. In fact, it was read out as a monologue by Rajesh Khanna in Yash Chopra's 1973 film Daag. In the scene, Khanna's character is also being honoured with some award and he says this poem as a thanksgiving note amid thunderous applause from the audience.

"This nazm is a favourite of mine because unlike most Urdu poems, its lines aren't on a single metre. It doesn't have stanzas; it's more like a free-flowing verse. Yet, it has a rhythmic pattern which is perhaps also a reason why it sounds rhythmic when it is used as a monologue in the film," adds Haidry.

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



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Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Raj Shekhar reads 'Man Re Tu Kahe Na Dheer Dhare'

मन रे तू काहे ना धीर धरे
Man re tu kahe na dheer dhare

वो निर्मोही मोह ना जाने, जिनका मोह करे
Woh nirmohi moh na jaane, jinka moh kare

मन रे...
Man re...

*

इस जीवन की चढ़ती ढलती
Is jeewan ki chadhti dhalti

धूप को किसने बांधा
Dhoop ko kisne baandha

रंग पे किसने पहरे डाले
Rang pe kisne pahre daale

रुप को किसने बांधा
Roop ko kisne baandha

काहे ये जतन करे
Kahe ye jatan kare

मन रे...
Man re...

*

उतना ही उपकार समझ कोई
Utna hi upkar samajh koi

जितना साथ निभा दे
Jitna saath nibha de

जनम मरण का मेल है सपना
Janam maran ka mel hai sapna

ये सपना बिसरा दे
Ye sapna bisra de

कोई न संग मरे
Koi na sang mare

मन रे...
Man re...

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Raj Shekhar reads: 'Man Re Tu Kahe Na Dheer Dhare (Chitralekha, 1964)

Unlike the common perception that Sahir Ludhianvi's poems and lyrics use rather difficult Urdu vocabulary, this song from the 1964 film Chitralekha is the best example how often the most profound feelings can be expressed in the fewest of words. And, Ludhianvi wrote this song in pure Hindi. Gulzar, in one of his memoir pieces on Ludhianvi, had said: "The spirituality is distinct in the lines: 'Rang pe kisne pehre dale... man re tu kahe na dheer dhare.' Even Hindi writers are not able to write so beautifully."

"Look at that line when he says 'koi na sang mare'... In those very four words, Sahir has been able to express the biggest philosophical truth — that we come in the world alone and we die alone," opines Raj Shekhar. "Imagine the amount of anxiety we have these days dealing with relationships; we tend to complicate everything when the real truth is so simple."

"For all of us writers, poets, listeners, I believe we have so much to unearth in Sahir and his words; they have multiple layers," Raj Shekhar adds.

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



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Mehfil-e-Sahir | Celebrating 100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: Mayur Puri reads 'Sar Jo Tera Chakraye'

सर जो तेरा चकराये, या दिल डूबा जाये
Sar jo tera chakraye, ya dil dooba jaaye

आजा प्यारे पास हमारे, काहे घबराये, काहे घबराये
Aaja pyaare paas hamaare, kaahe ghabraaye, kaahe ghabraaye

*

तेल मेरा है मुस्की, गन्ज रहे न खुस्की
Tel mera hai muski, ganj rahe na khuski

जिस के सर पर हाथ फिरा दूँ, चमके किस्मत उसकी
Jis ke sar par haath phira doon, chamke kismat uski

सुन सुन सुन, अरे बेटा सुन, इस चम्पी में बड़े बड़े गुन
Sun sun sun, arey beta sun, is champi mein bade bade gun

लाख दुखों की एक दवा है, क्यूँ ना आज़माये
Laakh dukhon ki ek dawaa hai, kyon na aazmaaye

काहे घबराये, काहे घबराये
Kaahe ghabraaye, kaahe ghabraaye

सर जो तेरा...
Sar jo tera...

*

नौकर हो या मालिक, लीडर हो या पबलिक
Naukar ho ya maalik, leader ho ya public

अपने आगे सभी झुकें हैं, क्या राजा क्या सैनिक
Apne aage sabhi jhuke hain, kya raja kya sainik

सुन सुन सुन, अरे बेटा सुन, इस चम्पी में बड़े बड़े गुन
Sun sun sun, arey beta sun, is champi mein bade bade gun

लाख दुखों की एक दवा है, क्यूँ ना आज़माये
Laakh dukhon ki ek dawaa hai, kyon na aazmaaye

काहे घबराये, काहे घबराये
Kaahe ghabraaye, kaahe ghabraaye

सर जो तेरा...
Sar jo tera...

***

“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

Mehfil-e-Sahir is Firstpost's ode to Ludhianvi, a collection of video tributes by seven leading Hindi film lyricists — from Varun Grover to Kausar Munir, Irshad Kamil, Shellee, Raj Shekhar, Mayur Puri and Hussain Haidry.

Each of these lyricists has picked the verses that speak most to them, explaining why Sahir's words resonate even three decades after his death.

Sahir Ludhianvi was born on 8 March 1921, in Ludhiana. His poetry and film lyrics from the 1940s onwards made him wildly popular, and earned him titles such as "the people’s poet” and “bard of the underdog”.

“Today we are witnessing new threats to democracy and secularism... In this context, Sahir's voice is essential,” Deol notes in his Firstpost essay. “The values he championed are here to stay for the better part of this century.”

View the complete Mehfil-e-Sahir series here.

***

Mayur Puri reads: 'Sar Jo Tera Chakraye' (Pyaasa, 1957)

Just when the drama begins to intensify in Guru Dutt's Pyaasa, Johnny Walker breaks into the scene out of nowhere, calling out "Maalish... Tel Maalish" — and we get this gem of a song in Mohd Rafi's mellifluous voice. It is said that SD Burman based the melody of 'Sar Jo Tera Chakraye' on a song in Hugo Fregonese’s 1958 British film, Harry Black, at the behest of Dutt, who had picked up the album during his trip in England.

While the other songs in Pyaasa are highly philosophical and profound in their meanings, Ludhianvi penned a very 'of-the-streets' song with 'Sar Jo Tera Chakraye', and it ended up becoming the anthem of the working class. "What's interesting to note in this comedy song particularly is how Sahir saab has kept his socialism intact," says Mayur Puri.

Ludhianvi beautifully lends dignity to labour when a maalishwallah proudly says that his massage can bring good fortune. Puri points out, "Imagine when he used a phrase as a social equaliser: 'Naukar ho ya maalik, leader ho ya public; Apne aage sabhi jhuke hain, kya raja kya sainik'," and further adds that in celebrating a song like 'Sar Jo Tera Chakraye', one actually celebrates the range of Ludhianvi's writing.

Editorial support, text and coordination by Suryasarathi Bhattacharya | Video edited by Akshay Jadhav | Art by Satwik Gade



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Ranbir Kapoor, Anil Kapoor to star in Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s Animal; see teaser

Ranbir Kapoor is all set to play the lead role in Kabir Singh fame Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s next directorial Animal.

On 1st January, the makers shared a teaser which sees Ranbir delivering a voice-over. His character could be heard talking to his father with an eerie whistle as the background music.

The video also announced that Anil Kapoor, Bobby Deol and Parineeti Chopra will also be a part of the film.

Check out the announcement here

The film is produced by Bhushan Kumar & Krishan Kumar’s T-Series, Pranay Reddy Vanga’s Bhadrakali Pictures & Murad Khetani’s Cine1Studios.

Meanwhile, Kapoor will be sharing the screen with Amitabh Bachchan, Alia Bhatt, Mouni Roy, and Akkineni Nagarjuna for Brahmastra. Touted as a fantasy adventure franchise, the movie is directed by Ayan Mukerji and will see Ranbir playing Shiva, a character with special powers, and Bhatt will essay a character named Isha

He will also be seen in Karan Malhotra's Shamshera alongside Sanjay Dutt and Vaani Kapoor. Set in the 1800s, Shamshera follows a dacoit tribe who fight for their rights and independence against the British.



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2020 and the pandemic has taught us that digital is here to stay, writes MAMI Artistic Director Smriti Kiran

2020 has been a watershed year in history, and that has also trickled down to the realm of entertainment. In this series, 2020 Unwind, stakeholders from the Indian entertainment scene weigh in on how they view entertainment now, how their skills had to evolve and adapt to changing patterns and whether the year has altered them as artists.

*

It is going to be hard to sum up the lockdown work experience in words but this is as hard as it gets for folks like me who come from a place of great privilege. I have survived the last 10 months with food, shelter, a job, the comfort of friends, the excitement of new connections, a rock-solid family, enviable colleagues, and my sanity. I am putting my thoughts down today with complete acknowledgement of my privilege, deep gratitude and understanding of the place where I am doing this from. We have all lost the right to and, frankly, the will to complain. Everything pales in front of the misery and devastation the world is facing. No matter how difficult it got to swallow food while looking at the millions suffering in abject poverty, hunger, rampant joblessness, debilitating depression, domestic violence, and disease, the fact remains that I was carrying spectator pain on a full stomach and a warm bed.

But this is me talking 10 months into the pandemic. Let me dial it back to when it all began. I had just come back from Dublin in the first week of March realising— like so many other things one has only been able to understand in hindsight — that I had escaped the early quarantine hell by a few days. The murmurs around COVID-19 had begun to gain serious ground. The news coming in from Italy was both scary and sad. In light of mounting fear, the Mumbai Academy of Moving Image (MAMI) office was one of the first to close its shutters in Mumbai. We went into WFH mode on 13 March, and cancelled the scheduled Year Round Programme screening of Waad Al-Kateab and Edward Watts’ incredible documentary, For Sama. It was the responsible thing to do. The festival was scheduled for (5 to 12) November edition without a break. But we are also an active academy through the year. We had launched the academy’s Year Round Programme in 2016, a free-of-charge initiative that brought together film lovers in the city every week for screenings, masterclasses, and conversations. All of the work we did through the year culminated into the annual festival, Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival, in October. Over the past few years without marketing, outreach or any tangible resources, we have around 16,000 members, a global database of over 50,000 people, an intercity imprint bringing its members the best of films and talent they deeply admire and want access to. It has taken us four years to build this programme from scratch. Can you imagine where this programme would be if we had media and money support? For the first time, the heaviness of this realisation engulfed me.

Smriti Kiran, Vishal Bhardwaj, Deepika Padukone, Rana Daggubati, and Anupama Chopra at Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival 2019

When the lockdown was announced, we were following the rollout timeline of launching three new academy initiatives apart from continuing with the festival properties — Word to Screen Market, Young Critics Lab, Half Ticket, and Movie Mela that we organise and curate as a run-up to the festival. The lockdown felt temporary (looking back, I want to laugh at this delusional optimism induced probably by disbelief in the earlier half of the year). In a country where culture is the last priority and funding is a constant struggle, Jio MAMI has been built with the blood and sweat of a lot of good people and the resources and kindness of generous partners. Inherently, I felt this was not the time for us to lose momentum. We knew we had to pivot fast. Pivot to what and for what were the larger questions. We had no platform to screen films, no technology to rely on (remember back in February, we didn't even know the word ‘zoom’ in any other context except in relation to cameras and lenses) and had no roadmap or contingency plan for a situation like this.

We were all about the in-person, on-ground, touch, feel, brick-and-mortar experience. We were everything that the digital experience does not offer. That was our USP. It felt like we were expected to run blindfolded.

Just like when you lose the use of a key sense, you develop and hone other faculties, the lockdown forced us to look in directions we had never had to. We took a first small step with the digital screening of Aunty Sudha Aunty Radha on 24 April. Props to Tanuja Chandra and Anupama Mandloi for putting their trust in us. Screening in a theatre is different. A digital screening opens you up to piracy, ambiguity with regard to the premiere status of your film (very important in the festival circuit), and probably puts filmmakers in crosshairs with streaming platforms. These questions had no answers 10 months back. Convincing a filmmaker to give us a new film to digitally screen a film without a foolproof system put into place was a tall task. Aunty Sudha Aunty Radha opened the floodgates for us. We got another booster shot when we were the only Indian festival amongst 21 prestigious international festivals invited by Tribeca Enterprises and YouTube to participate in the first digital global film festival – We Are One. Our Chairperson Deepika Padukone was amongst the global film personalities that gave people hope for better things to come as part of this festival. I curated the films for the festival and four of our best films (two features, two shorts) screened to staggering success at the event — Nasir, Eeb Allay Ooo!, Natkhatand Awake. A personal highlight was being a speaker along with Robert De Niro at the festival’s opening press conference. The successful screening of Aunty Sudha Aunty Radha and We Are One’s impact propelled us to take larger strides.

We launched our flagship property, a one-of-a-kind knowledge series, Dial M For Films on 31 May. Over the last six months, we have also launched Writer’s Block and The Long Road To Success within the series. The talent that has appeared on the show has been generous both with their time and experiences. We have featured Zoya Akhtar, Kabir Khan, Vikramaditya Motwane, Vicky Kaushal, Taapsee Pannu, Anvita Dutt, Richa Chadha, Shakun Batra, Mira Nair, Sudip Sharma, Abhishek Chaubey, Parvathy Thiruvothu, Anjali Menon, Bejoy Nambiar, and Jaideep Ahlawat amongst many others. Hosting, creating, and curating this series has been a dream come true. Nothing for me is more exciting than to pick the brains of artists. Here a host of people joined us on the call and did the same along with me.

Jio MAMI at We Are One

I have always imagined Jio MAMI as an institution that is a repository of all things films and creating for screen. As a space, where any person can walk in, ask any question about film, and our team would be ready to help with information, access, patience, and a cup of tea. Where can film lovers and aspiring film professionals go to talk to their film idols? Where do working film professionals go to speak to their contemporaries and seniors? Who will connect industry professionals across film cultures in India and the Indian talent to professionals abroad? These are a few of the many gaps I feel Jio MAMI can fill. Keeping these in mind, we also launched Storytellers Are Us: The Origin Story that I host with my partner in crime, the head of programming for Jio MAMI, Kalpana Nair. Zoya Akhtar met Prateek Vats, Anvita Dutt met Kislay, Juhi Chaturvedi met Achal Mishra, and watched each other's work because of Storytellers Are Us. Over 500 aspiring film professionals, working film professionals, and cinema lovers attended the Dial M For Films sessions on live Zoom calls with film personalities they always wanted to talk to.

There has been staggering love for both shows. Our biggest struggles are resources and media attention because both would give us a larger reach but we are happy with the way these two shows are making a difference. My heart is full and the fire in my stomach burns brighter because I know we are onto something cardinal. As with all labours of love, I know we just need to keep at it, and keep improving as we go along. With 30 episodes, Dial M For Films has become like a film school for aspiring talent, Storytellers Are Us is a meeting ground between creators working in the same industry but who have never met and 11 digital Year Round Programme screenings found us a plethora of audience beyond the city of Mumbai. This was value creation beyond clocking views. We resolved to carry this forward even after the pandemic was over. This period has taught us that even though the theatre and on-ground experience is unmatchable, our digital arm is here to stay.

Dial M for MAMI session with Mira Nair

But all this while, as we created properties, what we really hoping for was for cinemas to open. Sadly, the cinemas did not open in Mumbai in time for the festival. Despite all the preparations, we had to cancel the 22nd edition of the Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival in late August. Any later would have been unfair to all our stakeholders, especially the filmmakers. It broke our hearts but what was worse was the way every collaborator of ours was suffering. Business had come to a complete halt for PVR Cinemas, Turkish Airlines, BookMyShow, JW Marriott, Pentagon Events and Activations and many others who work with us. Companies that were no longer just companies. They were now friends and partners. I felt guilty for mourning the festival. It felt selfish. Their grace during this period of strife made it even worse. I am filled with nothing but even more respect for them than before.

I cannot sign off without talking about the experience of working during the pandemic. And the comforting myth associated with work from home. What could be better than lounging in bed with the laptop and typing emails in your pyjamas... right? Contrary to popular belief, the initial months felt like walking through cement. WFH without any scope for meeting even once a week is very challenging and requires a special kind of rewiring. You are expected to break patterns and a mindset that you have never had to think of an alternative for. What earlier got accomplished by a glance between teammates now took multiple Zoom calls, WhatsApp messages, emails, and minimum two rounds of feedback. The new way of life the team had to deal with on top of the anxiety that the pandemic brought did not help. But the initial frustration slowly turned into deep respect and empathy. I was fortunate to be part of a team which rose to the occasion every single time patiently and with perseverance. They did not always speak about their challenges but I know they were all battling difficult things like everyone around us. They showed up every day despite this. I cannot thank Kriti Dhanania, Gaurav Gupta, Yash Chhabria, Gavin Pinto, Ankit Patel, Sanchay Bose, Saurabh Mehendale, Pratyush Thaker, and Aaliya Bamboowala enough. The unshakeable faith of our Board of Trustees and our principal sponsor, Jio has given us the foundation that we stand on today. I mention this here where I have been asked to write about my pandemic work experience because nothing binds you more than solidarity in a crisis. You don't forget that and this will not be forgotten.

Lastly, in this dark and difficult time, it is impossible to separate the personal from the professional. The physical separation between home and work has literally vanished. Our lives have merged during the pandemic, and hence both aspects have spilt into one another. For all the lofty ambitions (plan to chase each one with ferocity) I have written about in this article, I would say, don’t turn down that coffee with a friend, chat with family, making that presentation for your dream project, showing up for yourself and people you love, for anything. We don’t know what tomorrow holds. And I don’t want to live with regret, guilt or unpursued dreams.

Smriti Kiran is Artistic Director, MAMI and Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival.

For more stories in the 2020 Unwind series, click here.



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भविष्यफल: कैसा रहेगा नया साल देश दुनिया और आपके लिए

नव वर्ष 1.1.2021 शुक्रवार को कर्क राशि तथा पुष्य नक्षत्र से आरंभ हो रहा है। अंक शास्त्र के अनुसार इसका योग 7 बनता है और 2021 का कुल योग 5 बनता है जो बुध का प्रतिनिधित्व करता है। हिंदू पंचांग के अनुसार इस वर्ष नव संवत 2078 ...13 अप्रैल 2021 मंगलवार के दिन मेष राशि के अंतर्गत नवरात्र सहित आरंभ होगा।

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कोरोना को पछाड़ने में सबसे आगे हिंदुस्तानी, ठीक होने की दर 96 फीसद के पार, स्वस्थ हुए मरीजों की संख्या एक करोड़ के करीब

मंत्रालय ने कहा कि भारत में उपचाराधीन मामलों में भी गिरावट आ रही है। चौबीस घंटों में देशभर में 21,822 नए मामलों की पुष्टि हुई है और 26,139 मरीज ठीक हुए हैं। इससे उपचाराधीन मामलों की संख्या में 4,616 की गिरावट आई है।

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संपादकीय: नए संकल्प

समय अपनी चाल से चलता रहता है। पुराने के बदल जाने का अहसास देता। नया कुछ रचने की उम्मीद बोता। मगर समय के कुछ निशान अमिट होते हैं। पूरी सभ्यता पर सदा लगे रह जाते हैं। मनुष्य के लिए सबक की तरह।

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राजस्थान से हरियाणा में घुसे किसानों पर भांजी लाठी, बैरिकेड्स लगाकर रोकने पर भड़के; पुलिस ने 40 लोगों को हिरासत में लिया

अलवर जिले के शाहजहांपुर में राजस्थान-हरियाणा सीमा पर भी किसान धरना दे रहे हैं। वहां अब तक धरना और प्रदर्शन शांति से चल रहा था। लेकिन गुरुवार को हिंसक झड़प हो गई।

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संपादकीय: उम्मीद का टीका

पिछले साल ज्यादातर वक्त दुनिया के तमाम देश कोराना महामारी की वजह से खड़ी चिंता से जूझते रहे। हर तरफ सिर्फ एक ही उम्मीद थी कि किसी तरह इस बीमारी का इलाज सामने आए, ताकि जनजीवन सामान्य हो सके।

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पश्चिम बंगाल: चुनावी टेंशन के बीच ममता बनर्जी ने आदिवासी महिला के साथ पकाया खाना, पहले मंच पर डांस भी कर चुकी हैं CM, कैलाश विजयर्गीय ने बोला हमला

मुख्यमंत्री का यह दौरा तब हुआ है जब इस महीने के शुरू में केंद्रीय गृह मंत्री अमित शाह शांतिनिकेतन में एक गायक के आवास पर भोजन करने पहुंचे थे और नवंबर में बांकुरा में एक आदिवासी के निवास पर खाना खाने पहुंचे थे।

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दुनिया मेरे आगे: वक्त का कारवां

यह समय का कालचक्र है। वक्त किस तरह से बीत जाता है, पता ही नहीं चलता। समय के शिलालेख इतिहास की दास्तान हो जाते हैं, वर्तमान भूत हो जाता है और आने वाले भविष्य के लिए शुभकामनाएं लेता और देता जिंदगी का कारवां यों ही चलता जाता है।

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राजनीति: जलवायु परिवर्तन के दुष्प्रभाव

एकल उपयोग वाले यानी सिंगल यूज प्लास्टिक के कारण भी जमीन बंजर हो जाती है। यह कचरे के साथ मिल कर मीथेन गैस बनाता है। यही पर्यावरण के लिए सबसे बड़ा खतरा है। मीथेन गैस कार्बन डाइआक्साइड की तुलना में तीस गुना अधिक खतरनाक है। जलवायु परिवर्तन के लिए भी यही गैस खासतौर से जिम्मेदार मानी जाती है।

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डिबेट शो में भड़के बंगाल बीजेपी अध्यक्ष, माइक हटा बोले दोबारा मुझे मत बुलाना…

पश्चिम बंगाल बीजेपी अध्यक्ष दिलीप घोष ने हाल ही में एक विवादित बयान दिया। घोष ने बंगाल में युवाओं से अपील करते हुए कहा कि हिंदुओं को रक्षा के लिए हथियार उठा लेना चाहिए।

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टीवी डिबेट में जीडी बख्शी का महबूबा मुफ्ती पर तंज, ‘जो कहती थी मैं तिरंगा नहीं उठाऊंगी, चुनाव में दौड़ी-दौड़ी आई जब दिखी ऑफिस की मलाई’

फारूक अब्दुल्ला के नेतृत्व वाले गुप्कर गठबंधन को जम्मू और कश्मीर जिला विकास परिषद चुनाव में बड़ी जीत हासिल हुई है।

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‘मेरे मरने के बाद शरीर का एक-एक अंग बेच कर चुका देना शासन का पैसा’, PM मोदी को खत लिख किसान ने की खुदकुशी

एएसपी समीर सौरव ने कहा कि किसान ने खुदकुशी की है। मामले की जांच शुरू कर दी गई है।

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मध्य प्रदेश: पिता ने बीवी और कुत्ते में बांट दी 18 एकड़ जमीन, वसीयत बनवाने के बाद बोला- बेटों पर भरोसा नहीं

छिंदवाड़ा जिले के चांद तहसील के बदीबाबा गांव निवासी ओम नारायण वर्मा पूर्व सरपंच है। उसकी चार बेटियां और एक बेटा है। लेकिन वह अपने बच्चों से नाखुश रहता है।

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सुरक्षा में सेंध! Indian AIR Force का कर्मचारी पाकिस्तान की खुफिया एजेंसी ISI के लिए काम करने के आरोप में गिरफ्तार, केस दर्ज

पंजाब के लुधियाना में पुलिस ने तीन लोगों को गिरफ्तार किया है। इन लोगों पर कथित तौर पर गोपनीय जानकारी लीक करने का आरोप है।

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2020, a year in Indian music charts: A reflection of how life came to a halt after the COVID-19 lockdown

Read more from our '2020, the year of...' series.

That life came to a standstill after the nationwide lockdown was imposed in the last week of March, was reflected on India’s music charts during 2020. The country’s independent acts released more singles, EPs and albums than ever before but as far as mainstream music was concerned, there were few monster hits from April onwards. None of the songs on Apple Music India and Spotify India’s year-end top tens came out after January, and while there are a few more recent releases on JioSaavn’s list, their survey only includes singles and tracks from albums put out in 2020. Here’s how different categories of music fared in this most unusual year.

Bollywood soundtracks

Despite the fact that hardly any major Hindi films were released between April and December, like in every year, songs from Bollywood OSTs were the most streamed tracks of 2020. And this, even though only one movie — according to Indian box-office monitoring website Koimoi.com — could be classified as a hit. However, no tunes from that film, the stridently jingoistic Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior, disturbed the music charts.

Instead, there were a bunch of soundtrack smashes from movies that either flopped outright or did average business: the 2020 reiteration of Love Aaj Kal, action thriller Malang: Unleash The Madness and the de facto threequel in the Any Body Can Dance series, Street Dancer 3D, the last of which scored the maximum chart toppers. Like many OSTs these days, it was more of a compilation comprising remakes/remixes/“recreations” of earlier hits such as AR Rahman’s “Mukkala Mukkabala” from the 1994 Tamil film Kadhalan and a pair of Punjabi pop tracks from 2017, Garry Sandhu and Jasmine Sandlas’ “Illegal Weapon” and Guru Randhawa “Lahore” as well as new versions of songs from the prequels. Among its few fresh tracks: “Garmi” by Badshah who had a good run on the charts (see “Non-film” music) despite his run-ins and run outs involving the police.

While a handful of the soundtracks for Bollywood movies released on video OTT platforms, including AR Rahman’s Dil Bechara (Disney HotStar) and Pritam’s Ludo (Netflix), were well received, their stream counts didn’t match up to those of tunes from the aforementioned theatrical releases.

International music

The year was short on international hits crossing over to mainstream Indian audiences. The most streamed English-language song on JioSaavn in 2020 was “Yummy” by Justin Bieber. Its success was on account of his strong fan base in India rather than a cross-generational appeal; the track’s total streams of over 15 million on JioSaavn were less than a third of the more than 46 million plays “On My Way” by Alan Walker and “Senorita” by Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello, the top English-language tunes of 2019, tallied on the service. That said, there were a few big English-language smashes even if their popularity was limited to those who listen to international music.

Two “foreign” favourites are common to the year-end top tens of both Apple Music India and Spotify India: The Weeknd’s“Blinding Lights”, the No.1 song of 2020 in the US, is a 1980s synth-pop homage that tapped into our need for nostalgia, while Trevor Daniel’s “Falling”, from way back in October 2018, was among the several singles that benefited from trending on the now-banned TikTok. A discussion about international music in India would be incomplete without a mention of BTS, which broke their own record for the largest number of streams in any given week on Spotify India when “Life Goes On” debuted with over 2.75 million plays in November, just three months “Dynamite” landed with more than 2.43 million in August.

(Clockwise from top left) Shayad - Love Aaj Kal; Firse Machayenge - Emiway; Ghungroo - War; Falling - Trevor Daniels

Independent music

With each passing year, the audience for Indian independent music or at least certain Indian indie acts grows to a critical mass, resulting in those artists managing to outrank their more commercial counterparts on the streaming charts. In April 2018, I wrote about how they were topping the iTunes all-genre charts in India. As we know, far more people stream music than buy it these days so it was great to see that this July, “Kasoor” by Prateek Kuhad became — as far as I know — the first Indian indie track to hit No.1 on Apple Music India’s daily Top 100 songs chart. Earlier this month, Divine’s Punya Paap crowned the streaming service’s all-genre Top Albums chart, achieving one spot higher than his debut album Kohinoor, which got to No.2 in 2019.

Two other tunes reached the top tens of both Apple Music India and Spotify’ Indias songs charts: Ritviz’s “Liggi” (No.4 on Spotify, No.10 on Apple Music) and Divine’s “Mirchi” (No.2 on Spotify, No.10 on Apple Music). “Liggi”, in fact, was so huge on Spotify that it just missed out on the top ten of 2020; it’s No.12. Of course, some might counter that Divine, who was signed to Universal Music’s sub-label Mass Appeal last year, is no longer an indie act. Those people are likely to say the same about Kuhad whose deal with Elektra Records, part of the Warner Music Group, was announced in October. In March, Arista Records, a subsidiary of Sony Music, got playback and pop singer Armaan Malik on board for his English-language career. This means that now, all the three major international record labels have Indian artists on their roster. (P.S. You can check out my personal picks of the best Indian indie of 2020 in this Spotify list, which is named after my monthly column of recommended listening.)

“Non-film” music

This strangely named genre is synonymous with commercial Hindi pop. It’s distinguished from the Indi-pop that emerged in the 1990s, the exponents of which were subsequently cannibalised by Bollywood after the turn of the decade. The reason “non-film” music isn’t simply called Indi-pop is because record companies, such as Universal Music that runs the “non-film” sub-label VYRL Originals, want it to stand as a genre of its own, never mind that sonically, the composers take their cues from Bollywood movie soundtracks.

In 2020, it seemed like they were taking their cues from the Hindi film OSTs of the early 1990s. From Jubin Nautiyal’s “Meri Aashiqui” and B Praak’s “Dil Tod Ke”, both the handiwork of Rochak Kohli, to various other tracks from the T-Series factory as well as the likes of Desi Melodies and Desi Music Factory, they all channelled the heartbreak ballads of the era with sad notes and strains of flute and strings. Notably, the year’s biggest “non-film” hit, Badshah’s “Genda Phool”, was an up-tempo cut. The song — released, incidentally, the same week the lockdown was announced — was based on a Bengali folk tune, the lyricist of which, Ratan Kahar, was credited and compensated only after public outrage.

Other “party” smashes were all released during 2020’s relatively carefree first quarter; Emiway’s “Firse Machayenge” and Tony Kakkar’s “Goa Beach” were out in January and February respectively. The label-less Emiway qualifies to be included in the independent music part of this round-up but he really belongs in a special category of ‘YouTube artist’. He’s unleashed over 30 music videos in the last 12 months, but none were as popular as his sequel to 2019’s “Machayenge”.

(Clockwise from top left) Genda Phool - Badshah; Blinding Lights - The Weeknd; Butta Bomma - Ala Vaikunthapurramuloo ; Malang - Malang

Regional-language music

Broadly, audio-streaming services such as Spotify and Apple Music tell us what music fans in mostly the metros are listening to and the likes of JioSaavn and YouTube, which have a deeper pan-India presence, reveal what those across the country are hearing. The main difference between the all-genre charts of the audio OTTs and those of the video-sharing platform is the dominance of regional-language music. Punjabi pop is the regional language genre with the largest audience overall, but its cousin Haryanvi pop rose as one of the fastest-growing within the segment, with two of the year’s most streamed music videos, “Moto” and “Feelings”.

On the other hand, the south Indian film industries, dealing with the same woes as Bollywood, were similarly short on hits. Composer Thaman S’ soundtrack for the year’s highest-grossing Telugu film Ala Vaikunthapurramaloo, released in January, boasted three huge songs, “ButtaBomma”, “Ramuloo Ramulaa” and “Samajavaragamana”, each of which performed impressively on both YouTube and audio-streaming services, with numbers higher than those of many Hindi “non-film” tunes.

Most streamed songs of the year:

Apple Music India

1. “Ghungroo” (from War), Vishal-Shekhar, Kumaar, Arijit Singh and Shilpa Rao, YRF (Bollywood)
2. “Makhna” (from Drive), Tanishk Bagchi, Ozil Dalal, Asees Kaur and Yasser Desai, Zee Music Company (Bollywood)
3. “Dance Monkey”, Tones and I, Bad Batch/Warner Music (International)
4. “Blinding Lights”, The Weekend, Universal Music (International)
5. “Memories”, Maroon 5, Universal Music (International)
6. “Senorita”, Shawn Mendes and Camilla Cabello, Universal Music (International)
7. “Falling”, Trevor Daniel, Alamo Records/Universal Music (International)
8. “Tujhe Kitna Chahne Lage” (from Kabir Singh), Mithoon and Arijit Singh, T-Series (Bollywood)
9. “Shayad” (from Love Aaj Kal), Pritam, Irshad Kamil and Arijit Singh, Sony Music India, (Bollywood)
10. “Malang” (from Malang), Ved Sharma, Haarsh Limbachiyaa and Kunaal Vermaa, T-Series (Bollywood)

JioSaavn

1. “Shayad” (from Love Aaj Kal), Pritam, Irshad Kamil and Arijit Singh, Sony Music India, (Bollywood)
2. “Muqabla” (from Street Dancer 3D), AR Rahman and Tanishk Bagchi, Shabbir Ahmed and Valee, Parampara Thakur and Yash Narvekar, T-Series (Bollywood)
3. “Garmi” (from Street Dancer 3D), Badshah and Neha Kakkar, T-Series (Bollywood)
4 .“Genda Phool”, Badshah and Payal Dev, Sony Music (Indian pop)
5. “Meri Aashiqui”, Rochak Kohli and Jubin Nautiyal (T-Series) (Indian pop)
6 “Illegal Weapon 2.0” (from Street Dancer 3D), Garry Sandhu, Intense and Tanishk Bagchi, Priya Saraiya and Jasmine Sandlas, T-Series (Bollywood)
7. “Malang” (from Malang), Ved Sharma, Haarsh Limbachiyaa and Kunaal Vermaa, T-Series (Bollywood)
8. “Bheegi Bheegi”, Tony Kakkar, Prince Dubey and Neha Kakkar, T-Series (Indian pop)
9. “Taaron Ke Sheher”, Jaani, Jubin Nautiyal and Neha Kakkar, T-Series (Indian pop)
10. “Chal Ghar Chalen” (from Malang), Mithoon, Sayeed Quadri and Arijit Singh, T-Series, (Bollywood)

Spotify India

1. “Shayad” (from Love Aaj Kal), Pritam, Irshad Kamil and Arijit Singh, Sony Music India, (Bollywood)
2. “Falling” , Trevor Daniel, Alamo Records/Universal Music (International)
3. “Ghungroo” (from War), Vishal-Shekhar, Kumaar, Arijit Singh and Shilpa Rao, YRF (Bollywood)
4. “Tujhe Kitna Chahne Lage” (from Kabir Singh), Mithoon and Arijit Singh, T-Series (Bollywood)
5. “Makhna” (from Drive), Tanishk Bagchi, Ozil Dalal, Asees Kaur and Yasser Desai, Zee Music Company (Bollywood)
6. “Illegal Weapon 2.0” (from Street Dancer 3D), Garry Sandhu, Intense and Tanishk Bagchi, Priya Saraiya and Jasmine Sandlas, T-Series (Bollywood)
7. “Blinding Lights”, The Weekend, Universal Music (International)
8. “Garmi” (from Street Dancer 3D), Badshah and Neha Kakkar, T-Series (Bollywood)
9. “Tu Hi Yaar Mera” (from Pati, Patni Aur Woh), Rochak Kohli, Kumaar, Arijit Singh and Neha Kakkar, T-Series (Bollywood)
10. “Malang” (from Malang), Ved Sharma, Haarsh Limbachiyaa and Kunaal Vermaa, T-Series (Bollywood)

YouTube India

1. “Genda Phool”, Badshah and Payal Dev, Sony Music (Indian pop)
2. “Moto”, Aman Jaji, Ajay Hooda and Diler Kharkiya, DIL Music (Haryanvi pop)
3. “ButtaBomma” (from Ala Vaikunthapurramaloo), Thaman S, Ramajogayya Sastry and Armaan Malik, Aditya Music (Telugu film)
4. “Feelings”, Khatri and Sumit Goswami, Sony Music (Haryanvi pop)
5. “Illegal Weapon 2.0” (from Street Dancer 3D), Garry Sandhu, Intense and Tanishk Bagchi, Priya Saraiya and Jasmine Sandlas, T-Series (Bollywood)
6. “Goa Beach”, Tony Kakkar and Neha Kakkar, Desi Music Factory (Indian pop)
7. “Firse Machayenge”, Emiway and Tony James (Indian hip-hop)
8. “Ramuloo Ramulaa” (from Ala Vaikunthapurramaloo), Thaman S, Kasarla Shyam, Anurag Kulkarni and Mangli, Aditya Music (Telugu film)
9. “Muqabla” (from Street Dancer 3D), AR Rahman and Tanishk Bagchi, Shabbir Ahmed and Valee, Parampara Thakur and Yash Narvekar, T-Series (Bollywood)
10. “Dil Tod Ke”, Rochak Kohli, Manoj Muntashir and B Praak, T-Series (Indian pop)

Amit Gurbaxani is a Mumbai-based journalist who has been writing about music, specifically the country's independent scene, for nearly two decades. He tweets @TheGroovebox



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Aanand L Rai tests positive for coronavirus, reveals he's asymptomatic and in self quarantine

Filmmaker Aanand L Rai has tested positive for coronavirus. The director took to social media to update fans about his health condition.

"I have tested covid positive today. Just wanted to inform everyone that I don’t feel any symptoms and I feel fine. I’m quarantining as instructed by authorities. Anyone who has come in contact with me recently is advised to quarantine and follow d govt protocols. Thank you for support(sic)," Rai wrote on Twitter.

Read Rai's post here

According to a report by Hindustan Times, Rai was shooting for his next directorial, Atrangi Re, starring Akshay Kumar, Sara Ali Khan and Dhanush. The shooting for the film was halted when the nation announced an indefinite lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus. The shoot for the film resumed in Madurai in October.

Talking about resuming shoot, Sara had said that sitting in a room where people are wearing masks, suits and gloves is a little strange and different. However, the actor added that the passion and excitement with which everybody in the film fraternity came to the set had not changed.

The actor had recently shared a picture from the sets of the film as well.

Check it out here

Recently the director announced the schedule wrap of his film, which was being shot at Taj Mahal, with a post on Instagram.

Here's the post



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Monkeypox In India: केरल में मिला मंकीपॉक्स का दूसरा केस, दुबई से पिछले हफ्ते लौटा था शख्स

monkeypox second case confirmed in kerala केरल में मंकीपॉक्स का दूसरा मामला सामने आया है। सूबे के स्वास्थ्य मंत्रालय का कहना है कि दुबई से प...