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Bollywood's addicted to Sufi music

Bollywood's grooving to the beats of Sufi music with almost every film having a Sufi number.

Published on: Sep 15, 2006 01:10 PM IST
None | By , Mumbai
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Jiya dhadak (Kalyug), Ya Ali (Gangster), Chaand sifaarish (Fanaa) and Mitwa (KANK)... And if you thought that was all, Nagesh Kukunoor’s next, Dor, has a winner in the making with Allah hoo. Another musical, Zindaggi Rocks, has Sufi-meets-rock in one of the album’s racy and already popular songs Rabbi. Sufi music has entered mainstream.
Sufism is a mystic tradition of Islam and songs based on Sufi themes are perennial chart favourites, lingering on long after others have faded away. Remember Chaiyya Chaiyya (Dil Se)? Based on Bulleh Shah’s Tere ishq ne nachaya kar thaiyya thaiyya, the song is not merely remembered for Malaika Arora Khan and Shah Rukh Khan’s gyrations atop a moving train, but also made an overnight star of the singer, Sukhwinder.

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HT Image

And then there is Al lah ke bande (Waisa Bhi Hota Hai - II), that made Kailash Kher a household name. And the latest Sufi sensation, singer Rabbi Sher gill, is all set to debut as a music director with Delhi Heights later this year. So what makes the Sufi strain so sought-after in Bollywood?

Music director Anu Malik (who prefers to call himself Aanuu these days), the man behind Rabbi, pegs his

Mehboob Mere

track in

Fiza

as a take off point for experimentation of Sufi music in recent times. “I’ve again given Sufi a current connect by fusing rock essentials with the Sufiana

andaz

in Rabbi.” But Sufi music made inroads long before

Fiza

(2001), with the AR Rahman-composed

Dil Se

(1998) and

Taal

(1999). And it took off from the Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan-wave that ruled the charts in the mid-90s.

However, of late, songs with Sufi influences have become de rigueur in almost every film being released these days, irrespective of the genre, whether it is a romantic Gangster or a cerebral Corporate. “Sufi is in the DNA of the Indian sub-continent,” says producer Mukesh Bhatt, whose Vishesh Films has at least one Sufi number in most films since Rahat Fateh Ali Khan’s chartbuster, Mann ki lagan (Paap). “The essence of a Sufi song can be brought out only by a Sufi singer though good lyrics are essential,” he says.

 
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