Composer Salil Chowdhury’s family to organise all India music festival
The family of composer Salil Chowdhury will hold an all-India music festival to promote the genres of music that Salil liked.
Singer Antara Chowdhury, daughter of the legendary music composer and lyricist Salil Chowdhury, has said that an all India music festival will be organized by 2018 to promote different genres of Indian music propagated by the composer.
“The Salil Chowwdhury Foundation of Music is actively working on a proposal to organise an all India music festival where leading musicians from Hindi playback to Indian classical, as well as instrumentalists, representing Indian classical and western, will participate and popularise the rich tapestry of Indian music among youngsters,” said Antara.
The foundation will also urge West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to organise a separate ‘Salil Utsav’ at the government level.
“This Salil Utsav, which can be held at the regional level, will bring under focus my father’s plays, writings, directorial works besides music and his association with Gananatya Sangha. I am hopeful our CM, who always patronises Bengal’s cultural heritage, will do something,” she said.
Antara pointed out it was difficult to confine Salil Chowdhury or assess his contribution in one field of art, as he effortlessly shifted from Hindi playback to Choir music, from non-film songs to other compositions in several languages and excelled in different fields.
“We have plans to move the Union I&B ministry to hold the conference show in Mumbai in 2-years time, by 2018,” she said.
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Chowdhury’s wife Sabita, herself a prominent singer, said popularising his works among the present generation can’t be individually done by the foundation which is doing its bit and will continue to do it like organising an exhibition on the singer’s death anniversary recently.
Salil Chowdhury passed away in 1995 at the age of 72.
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Regretting that the present generation is hooked to peppy numbers, Sabita said, “Why are beautiful songs like ‘O Sona Bang’ and ‘Aay Re Chhute Aay Pujor Gandho Esechhe’ not introduced to children in reality shows anymore and they are not made aware of Indian culture.
“Why are children forced to gyrate to numbers with jhatkas!! Is that our culture? “
The foundation will also do annual honours for ‘Living Legends’ and ‘Signature Contribution’ in the world of music,” Rupak Saha, one of the key foundation members, said.
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