Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
India

Creating Pride, Celebrating Unity In Diversity: The Anthems Of A New India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Aug, 2017 01:25 PM
    It may be tough for creative professionals to display their prowess unhindered for a government-sponsored project with a host of rules, regulations and red-tape to adhere to, but, given a visionary Prime Minister, not impossible. 
     
     
    As we learn, Rajiv Gandhi deserves credit for giving India two stirring ads on national integration, the latter of which has assumed near-anthem status.
     
     
    "The Torch of Freedom" and "Mile Sur Mera Tumhara", of the mid-1980s, are also abiding testimonies to the skill of India's ad makers. And there are stories galore behind their conceptualising and making as veteran adman K.V. Sridhar reveals in his absorbing and comprehensive account - possibly the first one - on a vibrant facet of Indian popular culture. 
     
     
    In "30 Second Thrillers: Tales that tell the stories behind the Ads we love!" (Bloombury India), Sridhar aka "Pops", recalling the early days on Doordarshan, contends it is necessary to mention "a milestone that gave advertising an entirely new dimension". 
     
     
    "No matter how long we traverse into the future, these two ads of the past shall always be legends that we shall keep referring to and learning from," he says, and goes on to explore them with veterans Piyush Pandey and Kailash Surendranath, but the late Suresh Mallick of O&M was "the actual creative heart and soul behind the two ads". 
     
     
    Sridhar cites Surendranath who recalls that in the mid-1980s, "the unanimous feeling that clutched the nation was that Indians were not proud of being Indians; they were a restricted and self-doubting lot" and it was Rajiv Gandhi himself who told them to "do something that would make the Indian population proud". 
     
     
     
    So Surendranath and Mallick "began brainstorming on the next moves. Something that would evoke the 'Mera Bharat Mahan' feel" and it was their passion for sports, and the influence of the Best Picture Oscar winner of 1981 that inspired them.
     
     
    But the logistics were overwhelming in those days before e-mail and mobiles as they could only contact the desired sportspersons by letters. Surendrnath admits the "sheer tedious way of communication cost us three months; to gather everyone and fix dates and schedules. The plan was so fluid that we were simply going where people were taking us; location wise".
     
     
    And there was no "solid plan" but improvisation in abundance which earned that stirring visuals of P.T. Usha and the young girl who insisted on running along her father, a celebrated Indian cricket captain. 
     
     
    There was another problem with Louis Banks' score with officials raising objections to its ending on the strains of the National Anthem but since Rajiv Gandhi liked it, the problem was resolved. 
     
     
    The emotional impact "Torch of Freedom" went on to create so impressed, Gandhi that he asked them to prepare another one. This was "Mile Sur..." with its colourful tapestry of personalities from sports, arts and popular culture, along with the common man.
     
     
    Pandey recalls Mallick, who was commissioned for a second add, hit on music as a combining thread and summoned him to write the lyrics. This took him multiple attempts as Mallick only approved them "the eighteenth instance". 
     
     
    While Banks had written the track, with Mallick "telling him how would the music turn and manifest into what, at each juncture of the ad", Surendranath says Pandit Bhimsen Joshi was sent the lyrics and came to Bank's studio two weeks later to give his verdict among how it should be presented. He began singing, "giving us an half an hour recording" out of which 40 seconds were used.
     
     
    The recording was passed to others like Carnatic music maestro M. Balamuralikrishna, Kavita Krishnamurthy and Vaidyanthan, who did "the ethnic part of the music".
     
     
    Surendranath says "Mile Sur.." was as improvised with several bystanders roped in, a prominent actor himself offering to feature silently, desperate attempts to arrange dates convenient for Amitabh Bachchan, Jeetendra and Mithun Chakraborty, who figure at the finale, and get Lata Mangeshkar. 
     
     
    Pandey also reveals that while most celebrities participated without payment, some asked but were refused and a prominent cricketer who asked how much he would get was not even featured and "am sure that he regrets this till date". 
     
     
    The makers tried for a hat-trick with "Desh Raag.." featuring all top classical musicians but this was a little too high-brow for the common man. But two out of three is not bad.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Women To Get Free Golf Coaching In Mohali

    Women To Get Free Golf Coaching In Mohali
    In a bid to promote golf among women, the Punjab Housing and Urban Development Department, headed by the Chief Minister, Capt Amarinder Singh, took the decision here today. 

    Women To Get Free Golf Coaching In Mohali

    Punjab To Do Away With 3 Police Ranges

    Punjab To Do Away With 3 Police Ranges
    Punjab will no longer have two supervisory levels in its policing structure. Among the last states to bring in the reform, it has abolished the post of DIG in different police zones. 

    Punjab To Do Away With 3 Police Ranges

    Differently-Abled Man Thrown Out Of Moving Train In Punjab

    Differently-Abled Man Thrown Out Of Moving Train In Punjab
    The incident comes close on the heels of the killing of a Muslim teen on board a Mathura-bound train.

    Differently-Abled Man Thrown Out Of Moving Train In Punjab

    In Goa, Mothers To Be Quality Controllers In Mid-Day Meal Scheme

    In Goa, Mothers To Be Quality Controllers In Mid-Day Meal Scheme
    The Goa government has decided to rope in mothers of students to taste and test the food served to their children under the mid-day meal scheme.

    In Goa, Mothers To Be Quality Controllers In Mid-Day Meal Scheme

    Woman Asked To Remove Toe Ring At Exam Hall, Writes To Union Minister Maneka Gandhi

    Woman Asked To Remove Toe Ring At Exam Hall, Writes To Union Minister Maneka Gandhi
    "Officers there asked me to break my bangles if required if I wanted to enter the school premises," she wrote.

    Woman Asked To Remove Toe Ring At Exam Hall, Writes To Union Minister Maneka Gandhi

    Rajasthan Man Who Pulled Rickshaw With Infant Daughter In Sling Dies

    Rajasthan Man Who Pulled Rickshaw With Infant Daughter In Sling Dies
    The haunting image of a poor man pulling a pedal-rickshaw with his newborn daughter in a sling bag hanging from his neck in Rajasthan’s Bharatpur riveted the nation in 2012.

    Rajasthan Man Who Pulled Rickshaw With Infant Daughter In Sling Dies