Mumbai, June 29 : A big fan of
Ghulam Ali, singer
Javed Ali, known for the hit song "
Jashn-e-bahaaraan", is confident
that ghazals will not die a silent death. He is all set to release his
debut
ghazal album.
"I will make a
ghazal album. I have a taste
for ghazals and I like them. Within a few months, I will release one,"
Ali told IANS.
Talking about the fading away of ghazals with the
demise of Mehdi Hassan and Jagjit Singh, he said that nowadays there are
"upbeat songs" as people want to make "the audiences sing and dance
with them immediately".
"Ghazals have a different audience and I
know that the era of ghazals will come back for sure," he added saying
he also wanted to be a ghazal singer.
"When when I was young, I
used to listen to his (
Ghulam Ali) ghazals. I used to think that I will
become like him one day. But then I came into the film industry, I got
the concept of world music. I have sung all kinds of songs - be it
ghazals, qawwalis, romantic numbers or peppy numbers," he said.
Ali
came into the industry almost 10 years ago and has given some hit
numbers like 'Ek din teri raahon mein' from "Naqaab" and "Guzaarish"
from "Ghajini".
He agrees that music has changed over the years and that he welcomes flexibility in people's attitude.
"I
feel that melody, style of singing has changed. 10 years ago, when I
was new, people used to always ask, 'Do you sing like someone?'.
Nowadays, they want to see new things. This is very good. Everyone has
their own individuality and it is important that it comes out," he said.
His
next is Sony Mix's "MIX Solos", which endeavours to bring people closer
to music. The idea is to show a a 30-90 seconds clip featuring a singer
singing unplugged version of his song and sharing story about its
making.
Ali believes in the show and said: "I am happy that
there is one channel which makes people realise how many people's
efforts go behind a song. People will get to know stories and develop an
interest for music," he said.
For isntance, there is an anecdote
behind Kishore Kumar's song "Khaike paan Banaras wala", said Ali and
added: "We know that Kishore da sung the song while chewing paan."
Anecdotes
arouse interest, feels Ali. "When we listen to the song, we are able to
relate to it. Our songs also have stories, when it will come in front
of people, they will like it and remember the song."
It is often said that today's songs have less shelf life and Ali blames the volume.
"Earlier,
one song used to be recorded in a month and now 30 songs get recorded.
How many can you even remember? The frequency has increased. It is the
age of sound. Songs are played on sound," he said.
© IANS