One of the great monpliths in music industry has just passed away , and this loss will leave a vaccum in music endeavour in our country.We will miss you Naushad Saheb.
The last and the greatest monarch of pure and un-diluted hindi film music is finally gone. His music could easily transport one to the finest feels of truely Indian culture in no time.Sitting in a rather westernised environment one could smell and feel the fragrance of Indian soil and relationships through the relevant ragas and fine improvised compositions of the great master. Thanks God his music is immortal and it will keep him and a vital part of our culture alive for a long-long time to come.
on the death of Naushadjee,Mother India lost her most beautiful and priceless heritage of Indian Music .He represents the best,the beautiful and the unforgetable age of classical music .Mother India,Mogul Azam and Anmol Ghadi have made Naushadjee immortal .May god bless this great son of India in His heavenly abode
on the death of Naushadjee,Mother India lost her most beautiful and priceless heritage of Indian Music .He represents the best,the beautiful and the unforgetable age of classical music .Mother India,Mogul Azam and Anmol Ghadi have made Naushadjee immortal .May god bless this great son of India in His heavenly abode
It is a monumental loss to music industry, no music composer ever could reach the height achieved by him. He made compositions for legendary Saigal, and upto Hariharan. It is a shame for Hindi film industry who could not utilize the skills of this legendary composer since last twenty or more years. Whatever he has created carries the true essence of Indian music and a perfect blending of classical ragas into film songs. A classic always remains classic, it does not wither with time. Sadly, in the noise of todays songs the warmth, affection and serenity of his numbers hardly find any space. Unfortunately, generation X might not comprehend the gravity of this loss.
Perhaps the most melodious composer in Indian cinema tell date! Who can forget those catchy themes from "The Sword of Tipu Sultan" and "Great Marathas" ...