Lataji saddened by Atif’s ‘Chalte Chalte’, Bollywood’s musicians join chorus of protests  

The new version of the song takes the delicate notes of the original tune out of context and leaves us with a sickening spill-over version which no one can identify as the memorabilia from Pakeezah

Photo courtesy: Twitter
Photo courtesy: Twitter
user

Subhash K Jha

For those of us who revere Lata Mangeshkar’s Chalte chalte yuhi koi mil gaya tha the mellow Mujra melody composed by the great Ghulam Mohamed for the mythic Meena Kumari’s swan song Pakeezah, the new version of the song by Pakistan’s Atif Aslam for a Bollywood film titled Mitron is a shocker.

It takes the delicate notes of the original tune, wrenches them out of context and  leaves us with a sickening spill-over version of the original which no one can identify as the memorabilia from Pakeezah except those responsible for this despicable  duplication.

Worse still, the composition is credited to Tanish Bagchi. Poor Ghulam Mohamed. He  died in penury.

Singer and  BJP minister Baabul Supriyo, no fan of Atif Aslam’s singing says, “Today, even the ‘Poetic’ term ‘Artistic Liberty’ is at the verge of extinction. With due respect (and disrespect) to Atif Aslam, as a singer myself, I will observe a 2-minute silence to mourn rather than offering a comment.”

For those of us who revere Lata Mangeshkar’s Chalte chalte yuhi koi mil gaya tha the mellow Mujra melody composed by the great Ghulam Mohamed for the mythic Meena Kumari’s swan song Pakeezah, the new version of the song by Pakistan’s Atif Aslam for a Bollywood film titled Mitron is a shocker.

Lataji , the living legend, the icon beyond icons who sang the song in Pakeezah to immortality has luckily not heard Atif Aslam’s desecrated version of the original. “And I don’t want to hear it. This trend of remixing  old songs saddens me.Where is the creativity in simply lifting acknowledged beloved classics and shuffling the notes around? I’ve heard that the lyrics are changed in the remixes. By whose consent? The original poets and composers wrote what they had to. Nobody has the right to tamper with the creativity of  these great composers and lyricists.”

Adds singer Alka Yagnik whose song Dilbar dilbar in Sirf Tum was recently re-mixed in Satyameva Jayate, “Arrey why don’t they make a new song and make it a superhit if they can... instead of picking up an already superhit song, distorting it, and releasing it again... then saying, .See, it’s become so popular!!! Chalo humaare gaanon ke saath ye zulm kartey hain... but their audacity is increasing by the day !!! Now they’ve started doing this to Lata Didi’s song as well!! Gunaah ki inteha hai !!!”

Follow us on: Facebook, Twitter, Google News, Instagram 

Join our official telegram channel (@nationalherald) and stay updated with the latest headlines