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Any
account of Indian playback music must start and end with Lata
Mangeshkar.
Born September 28, 1929 in Indore, Lata Mangeshkar has been
active in all walks of Indian popular and light classical
music having sung film songs, ghazals, bhajans and pop. She
is the supreme voice of popular Indian music, an Indian
Institution. Until the 1991 edition, when her entry
disappeared, the Guinness Book of Records listed her as the
most recorded artist in the world with not less than 30,000
solo, duet and chorus-backed songs recorded in 20 Indian
languages between 1948 and 1987. Today the number might have
reached 40,000!!!
Dinanath Mangeshkar, her father, owned a theatrical company
and was a reputed classical singer, a disciple of the Gwalior
school. He gave her singing lessons from around the age of
five. She also studied with Aman Ali Khan Sahib and later
Amanat Khan. Her God-given musical gifts meant that she could
master the vocal exercises effortlessly on first pass and
from early on she was recognized as being highly gifted
musically.
However when her father died in 1942, the onus of being the
breadwinner of the family fell on Lata. Between 1942 and 1948
she acted in as many as 8 films in Hindi and Marathi to take
care of the family's economic problems. She also made her
debut as a playback singer in the Marathi film Kiti Hasaal
(1942) but the song was edited out!
The first Hindi film in which she gave playback was Aap ke
Sewa Main (1947) but her singing went unnoticed. When Lata
entered the Film Industry, heavier Punjabi voices like
Noorjehan, Shamshad Begum and Zohrabai Ambalewali ruled the
Industry. Ironically Lata was even rejected for Shaheed
(1948) by producer S. Mukherjee who complained that her voice
was too thin! However Ghulam Haider unable to use her in
Shaheed gave Lata her breakthrough song with Dil Mera Toda
from Majboor (1948).
1949 saw the release of four films. Barsaat, Andaaz (1949) ,
Dulari and Mahal. The songs of all four films were runaway
hits particularly Aaega Aanewaalaa from the last mentioned.
By 1950 the Lata wave had changed the Industry. Her
high-pitched singing rendered obsolete the heavy basy nasal
voices of the day. Only Geeta Dutt and to a certain extent
Shamshad Begum survived the Lata onslaught. Asha Bhosle too
came up in the late 1950s and the two sisters were the queens
of Indian playback singing right through to the 90s.
Lata's initial style of singing was reminiscent of Noorjehan
but she soon got over that to evolve her own distinguished
style. With her search for perfection she corrected her Urdu
by hiring a tutor!
Her phenomenal success made Lata the most powerful woman in
the Film Industry. She waged battle with Mohd. Rafi in the
1960s and stopped singing with him over the issue of royalty
to playback artistes. She refused to sing for S.D. Burman
from 1957 - 62 and such was her clout that she had her way
and they came back to her.
Though Lata sang under the baton of all the top composers
barring O.P. Nayyar and with all the top playback artistes of
the day, special mention must be made of her work for
C.Ramchandra who made her sound her sweetest and Madan Mohan
who challenged her voice like no other music director. The
1960s and 70s saw Lata go from strength to strength even as
there were accusations of her monopolizing the field.
From the 80s Lata cut down on her workload to concentrate on
her shows abroad. Lata Mangeshkar sings infrequently now but
even today the songs of some of the biggest hits of today Dil
To Paagal Hai (1997), Maachis (1997), Hum Aapke Hain Kaun
(1994) and Dil Se (1998) are sung by her. From Nargis to
Kajol she's sung for them all. Lata Mangeshkar is in fact
that rare artist who has realized her search for excellence.
A Phalke Award winner for her contribution to Indian Cinema,
the latest jewel in Lata's crown is having India's highest
civilian award, the Bharat Ratna conferred on her.