Saturday, April 29, 2006

Local society to honour famous Indian singer

Apr 29, 2006

The Pavarotti of Indian classical music is being honoured in Hamilton Monday.

Ghazal singer Jagjit Singh will be the star attraction at the dinner reception hosted by the India-Canada Society of Hamilton, at which he will become the honourary patron of the society.

The event celebrates Singh's 40-year contribution to Indian music and honours his role in returning traditional forms to popularity.

It also marks the Hamilton launch of May's South Asian Heritage Month.

Singh made his reputation singing ghazals, a traditional Urdu form that has its roots in the Arab world.

The style is often considered a love song, but it is better defined as songs or poems that speak to or about women.

The 65-year-old's singing and composing traverses the range of human emotions. He deals with the passions and pangs of separated lovers, offers devotional works and melancholy notes. His imprints leapfrog international borders.

Singh was born Feb. 8, 1941 in western India to a religious Sikh family. He began by performing traditional religious music and then turned to the ghazals.

Historically, ghazals travelled from Persia (now Iran) to India along with Muslim merchant-settlers and got assimilated in Indian culture. It flourished when the Moghuls ruled the sub-continent.

His career started with him performing at weddings and then developed into a session singer for Indian movies.

Singh's fortunes turned when he began simplifying and modernizing the style of the music so that it appealed to a wider audience.

Singh is widely acclaimed in South Asia for reviving interest in ghazals, after they lost momentum in the mid-70s. One of his novelties was a balanced combination of western instruments and Indian classical ragas.

The "King of Ghazals" has a massive fan following in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Middle East and Central Asia. But his popularity extends practically everywhere there is a South Asian community.

Singh will perform to a full house tomorrow in Toronto at Roy Thomson Hall.

His star power has been further amplified through the medium of Bollywood films, several of which have featured his compositions and playback singing.

Limited tickets for Monday's dinner at McMaster's University Club at 7 p.m. are available by contacting Nikhil Adhya at 905-388-0079.


Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Lifetime Achievement Award

The eighteen-minute film will be screened in New York this week where the poet filmmaker will be felicitated.

It's a daughter's tribute to her father," says Meghna Gulzar, currently in Paris, about her eighteen-minute film on her poet-filmmaker father. The untitled film will be screened this week in New York at a function to commemorate Gulzar.

"She has just completed the film. I loved it although there was one thing that puzzled me. How could my entire life be shown in just eighteen minutes? But jokes apart Meghna has made a sensitive film revolving around my body of work - films and literature," says Gulzar.

"In fact, my untitled film on my father is part of a larger full-length film that I plan to make on him shortly. So he doesn't need to feel that I've compressed his entire career in just eighteen minutes," adds Meghna.

Gulzar is off to New York along with Jagjit Singh shortly. "We are going to be part of the silver jubilee year celebrations of the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in the US," he says.

"Sanskrit scholar Dr. Jai Raman is the director of the organisation and this is all his doing. On April 21 there will be a concert by Jagjit Singh where I'm supposed to introduce him. The following day there's a mushaira where two Hindi and two Urdu poets will participate. I don't know which language I've been chosen for since I'm at home with both these languages."

On April 24, Singh and Gulzar will be bestowed with the lifetime achievement awards by the Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan. "I've completed 45 years while Jagjit Singh has completed 40 years," says Gulzar.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Jagjit Singh Live in Concert


Jagjit Singh Live in Concert

Friday 28th April 9PM
COMMERCE BANK ARTS CENTRE
Sewell, New Jersey

Jagjit Singh Live in Concert

Jagjit Singh Live in Concert
SATURDAY 22nd APRIL 8PM
RITZ THEATER
Elizabeth, NJ
Click here for more info

Jagjit Singh Live in Concert

Jagjit Singh Live in Concert
on
Saturday Apr 15, 2006 at 8:30
 at DAR Constitution Hall,
Washington DC
for more details click here

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Saregama celebrates association with Ghazal King


Friday, March 31, 2006
Saregama Pvt. Ltd held a get-together to celebrate their long association with Ghazal King Jagjit Singh and to mark the release of two premium albums, The Life & Times Of Jagjit Singh in a special 8-CD pack, and also Jagjit Singh - Live At Sydney.

The function was held at a Mumbai club on March 21. Among the guests were Khayyam and Jagjit Kaur, lyricist Gulzar, singers Anup Jalota, Roopkumar and Sunali Rathod and producer-director Ramesh Sippy.