Lava, Javed Akhtar, Star Publications Pvt Ltd., Dec
2011.
Kaifi Azmi once memorably described a film
lyricist’s job as first digging a grave and then finding a body to fit it!
Needless to say, he managed to find some spectacular bodies. So has Javed
Akhtar, one of the most popular film lyricists of our times and,
coincidentally, Azmi’s son-in-law. In fact, several of Akhtar’s songs have far
exceeded the brief extended to a song writer by the Hindi film industry; they
have risen beyond their time and circumstance and spoken to our collective
consciousness. Blurring the definition of lyric and poetry, there is a great
deal in Javed Akhtar’s cinematic ouvre that is outstanding poetry, such as this
lyric from the film 1942: A Love Story which
contains within it tremulous beauty and technical finesse in near-perfect
proportions:
Kuch na kaho,
kuch bhi na kaho
Kya kahna hai kya sun-na hai
Mujhko pata hai, tumko pata hai
Samay ka yeh pal thum sa gaya hai
Aur iss pal mein koyi nahin hai
Bas ek mein hoon, bas ek tum ho
The Hindi film industry
— and its sorority of regional-language sister industries in the sub-continent
— has elevated the song-and-dance sequence to a rare art form. Inspired partly
by turn-of the-century stage adaptations of popular "musicals" in the
West and partly by the equally popular though entirely home-grown Parsi
theatre, film songs serve a variety of purposes. Studded at judicious intervals
all through the story, they can make a more telling statement than mere
dialogue; they can be both entertaining and illuminating; they can, of course,
leaven an otherwise flat story with humour and spice and colour. Though the
average song "picturisation" does tend to require large dollops of
"willing suspension of disbelief" — given the mind-boggling change of
costumes, the hordes of incredibly dressed background artistes who descend
every time the hero and heroine romance against sylvan backdrops (imagine
something more incongruous than Rajasthani folk dancers on a Swiss
mountainside) and the callisthenic exercises that pass for dance movements —
the results are, to say the least, eye-catching. In fact, many a
"hit" song has contributed to a "hit" film!
It would be fair to
say, film songs have, by and large, served the Hindi film industry rather well
in the last 80-odd years of constant use and abuse. Yet, oddly enough, little
serious work has been done either on the craft of song writing itself or on the
men who pen these lyrics. Though there are plenty of biographical studies of
eminent film personalities, there has been nothing whatsoever on the film
lyricist, his compulsions and inspirations. For the average film buff, there is
precious little on what goes on behind the scenes, what constitutes a great
song that might catch the nation's fancy for a given time till the next big one
comes along and why some songs stay "evergreen", the oldies-goldies
as they are lovingly called.
However, since much of
film lyric-writing is in the nature of a command performance, Akhtar has
written another set of poetry too, one that is a truer reflection of his real
concerns and a more faithful echo of his own poetic voice. His first
collection, Tarkash, meaning ‘quiver’
published in 1995, established him as the writer of the nazm. With his second
volume, Lava, we see him dabbling in
both the ghazal and the nazm and I personally rate his ghazals as being
superior to his nazms. Conventionally, and by the admission of several poets
themselves, the ghazal is relatively easier to write; the poet has a
time-honoured ‘mould’ of the two-line couplet (sher) in which the poet pours an equally time-honoured repertoire
of words and images. The nazm, on the other hand, demands far more mehnat and mushaqqat (labour and diligence) from the poet; as the late poet Shahryar
used to say, the nazm has a will of its own and often takes the poet on an
uncharted course in a way that the ghazal can not and does not.
The matter of technique and labour aside, I do
believe Javed Akhtar reveals himself fully to us as a poet in his ghazals. The
nazms contained in this collection, several of which he has recited with great
verve and passion at recent mushairas, have immense aural charm; stunning,
multi-hued images tumble out of them as though in a kaleidoscope, dazzling us
with bursts of ideas and thoughts. The nazms also have a questioning, probing
quality as though the poet is using the nazm to ask larger metaphysical questions
about the world around him, as in Kainat,
Aansoo, Yeh Khel kya Hai? where he
creates an avalanche of questions.
The pace and tempo, the almost quicksilver-like
quality of the nazms, is replaced by a quiescence and lucid stillness in the
ghazals. If the nazms have the swiftness and haste of a bubbling mountain
brook, the ghazals have the sedateness and leisure of a river that has
descended to the plains.
Brimful with the pain of loss, longing and
loneliness, the ghazals contained in Lava
show Akhtar’s mastery over the genre. Using both short and long beher (metre and rhyming scheme), he
infuses the classical template of the ghazal with a sensibility that is modern
and unconventional, as in:
Bahut aasan hai pehchan iss ki
Agar dukhta nahi to dil nahi hai
(It
is easy to tell its identity
If
it doesn’t ache, it isn’t the heart)
Or,
Aaj woh bhi bichad gaya hamse
Chaliye yeh qissa bhi tamam hua
(Today,
I lost him too
So,
this matter too ends here)
Like
the earth that spews molten rock from deep within its bosom in the form of
lava, Javed Akhtar’s ghazals emerge from some deep crevice within his soul. Flowing
like a molten river, gleaming and incandescent on the surface but rippling with
a singeing and scorching heat, this collection hides unexpected depths.
But just as, upon cooling and calming, the lava that erupts from the innards of
the earth can also nurture and nourish, so too can this collection of poetry
that is by turns angry and philosophical, questioning and answering, restless
and restful.
Loved every bit oops I mean word ;-) of it.So so beautifully written and heart touching... Bought 7 copies and gifted to close friends and family too and they too loved it :-).
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