Bhatiali Song : The Song of the Boatman - Page 2

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filmi_chick99 thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
wow very informative thread i'm not finished but it looks really interesting 😃
Barnali thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago

Originally posted by: filmi_chick99

wow very informative thread i'm not finished but it looks really interesting 😃

here r some bhatiali songs sung by S D Burman

 

manjujain thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago

barnali di, yeh songs to nahut ache hain aur sune hue. I think popularf bhi hue the. thanks for making us understand more about it.

Originally posted by: Barnali

here r some bhatiali songs sung by S D Burman

 

soulsoup thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
Thanks Di ðŸ˜Š
My most favorite Folk format - Bhatiali!!

And Nirmalendu Chowdhury - WAH!

Do you have the songs of the movie 'Ganga' by any chance?
*Jaya* thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
Thanku so much di 😊 Just love Bhatiali songs 😳 Looking fwd to more links to songs on this thread 😛
soulsoup thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
One of the great Bhatiali songs - used as film music: "Uthali pathali Amar.." by Manna Dey and Nirmalendu Choudhury from the movie Ganga 😊
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juggyE thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
Barnali ji/Anol ji,

I had posted a Q in the other Baul thread but maybe this is the correct place...

Why is the title song of Prem Pujari a Bhatiyali song though? Its picturized on Indian soldiers and not on boatmen...

The only reason I can think is that maybe, the same music was originally used by SDB picturized on a boatman in a Bangla movie...
Barnali thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago

Originally posted by: juggyE

Barnali ji/Anol ji,

I had posted a Q in the other Baul thread but maybe this is the correct place...

Why is the title song of Prem Pujari a Bhatiyali song though? Its picturized on Indian soldiers and not on boatmen...

The only reason I can think is that maybe, the same music was originally used by SDB picturized on a boatman in a Bangla movie...

juggyE bhatiali is definitely a boatmans song bt is also a raag. so songs based on tht Raag will also be called as bhatiali songs. it follows the same tune as the general Bhatiali songs tunes.

 

Bonie thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
Barnaliji and Qwestji, thanks a lot for starting this interesting thread. Your aricle has cleared some of my confusion. I didn't know Bhatiali means boadman songs. I think Abbasuddin was the pioneer to make Bhaoiya so popular. Is in't it Qwestji?

Nirmalendu Chowdhury was born in Sylhet, Bangladesh and did his schooling there. I think he left Sylhet during Partition time. Some of his popular songs are Sylheti Dhamail Geet like Shuhag Chand bodoni dhoni, Komalay nritto kore.... etc etc.

Dhamail is a typical dance where all villaige girls gather and sing those songs and at the same time dance during marraige ceremony.
Qwest thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
Contemporary sensibility
MUSIC
ANSHUMAN BHOWMICK

Anything but folk: Himangshu Goswami at Swabhumi
We thought Dilip Kumar Roy was long dead and, barring annual birthday celebrations put together by Sura-Kavya Trust, there is hardly anybody who cares a damn about the composer and performer par excellence. Occasioned by his centenary some contemporary singers attempted Roy's songs with limited success. The temperamental genius who scaled numerous heights both as a musicologist and a musician before settling in Pondicherry and later in Pune, faded away from popular memory. His gayaki — a heady mix of Hindustani dhrupad and Bangla kirtan — was so unique that a handful could dare emulating it. By the time his centenary celebrations were over, we knew Roy's music, unlike his father Dwijendra Lal Roy's, has died in want of a worthy successor.

Five years later, we are happy to be proved wrong by a singer who has just resumed singing after a brief hibernation. Sudip Bandyopadhyay's 45-minute-long recital (Sisir Mancha, July 8) was an eye-opener of sort. Bandyopadhyay shares an affinity to poet Joy Goswami. But his gayaki is a world apart from anybody presenting contemporary sensibilities in tune. A plethora of small phrases laced with gamaks, an easeful style made more pleasant by an effortless singing and a commendable mastery over a variety of musical forms, marked his recital. Once he started singing Pata keman kare shodhe alor dena, one could catch Roy's Vrindabaner leela abhiram at the back of one's mind.

One remarkable facet of Bandyopadhyay's repertoire is a propensity to induce a cultural interface through music. Khemtawali sounds like a baul number but what is planted within is an ongoing tussle between folk and court culture which was conveyed both through the words and the melody. The contradictory dictions of Vaishnava Padavali, bhatiali and kawali found a melting pot in Gahanakusumakunjamajhe which he fashioned after one of Tagore's adaptations of Vidyapati lyrics.

Curiously he set the song in a marching tune played over an ensemble of flute, sitar, guitar and various percussion instruments. Bandyopadhyay experimented with the rhythm as well. The .P. Nayyar effect was noticeable in rangin where kirtan finds a partner in pop. Mane karo chand haye uthechho echoed those Jim Reeves originals that the Salil Chowdhury protgs gladly appropriated in the 1960s.

He signed off with Sumane dekha halo sakale, a number penned by Joy Goswami and occasioned by Suman's return to stage on October 20, 2000. Musically the number brought back memories of Talat Mahmood's Je ankhite eto hasi lukano which V. Balsara composed. Bengali music will be enriched if Bandyopadhyay's individual talent continues a negotiation with tradition.

This Kabiyal evening also featured a recital by Mitul Dutta. A poetic streak runs through her self-composed numbers. She is adept in capturing the fleeting epiphanies of early romance (for example, Ekta bhari apattikar pakhi).

Conflict with the consumer culture brings out some ironic observations at times (Kena je dakle amay). Sexual overtures mark out Bandhura tariye diyechhe, her most commendable composition till date. Dutta prefers the upper octave at the risk of a strained timbre and comes out triumphant in a lovely lullaby (Raat jege lekha kabitar mato). Once she settles down with her own style, Dutta is sure to leave a mark. Kazi Kamal Naser also sang. At his best he can be described as a poor man's Kabir Suman, happy to remain overwhelmed by his mentor's shadow.

H imangshu Goswami's recital at Swabhumi Urban Courtyard was a disappointment (July 10). Organised by Halo Heritage and Nrityakutira, the soiree saw the London-based singer offering a confusion of musical sort in the name of folk music. Goswami falls under the category of singers who adopts the folk style to entertain a predominantly urban audience but claims authenticity by swearing in the name of Abbasuddin Ahmed and Nirmalendu Chowdhury, who pioneered this trend. Thus when he sang a bichchhedi song — Amay de go radhe — the scent of the soil was simply missing.

Numbers like Kakhano tumi jena explained his popularity among the non-resident Bangladeshis. It simply huddled together some names Bengali music would feel proud about in a lilting tune remote from Bengali folk. That's about all. One Basudev Ghosh composition dating back to the 16th century saved the organisers from severe embarrassment.

Inclusion of rock band Cactus for an unplugged performance defied all justification but one. Lately the band is venturing into folk territory with all earnestness and some stimulating experiences are to come. Even then, a self-titled Baul-Rock number like Tui amay pagal karli re was the last thing the sparse audience would have loved to listen that evening.

Edited by Qwest - 17 years ago