HT City

BOLLYWOOD

- Samarth Goyal

The Human Resources Developmen­t ministry’s latest diktat asking central universiti­es and IITs across India to host “patriotic music bands” as part of a government drive to mark the 70th year of India’s independen­ce and 75 years of the Quit India Movement, hasn’t gone down too well with musicians throughout the country. While some feel implementa­tion is going to be a problem, some see it as an attack on creative and artistic liberty.

DON’T SHOVE PATRIOTISM DOWN OUR THROATS

“Why would you want to shove it down someone’s throat, saying that they have to perform patriotic numbers? How many bands in India genuinely compose and play patriotic numbers?” says Mahesh Tinaikar, the guitarist for Mumbai-based rock band, Indus Creed, and compares the diktat to the SC ruling on playing the national anthem before movie screenings. Bollywood singer Jubin Nautiyal says music is supposed to be liberating. “When you perform, you are free from all social rules and you are just expressing what you feel. You can’t impose things on someone saying that you have to sing this way, or that,” he says. However, Subir Malik, keyboard player for the Delhibased band, Parikrama, welcomes the ruling and says, “Had they said that your entire gig has to be patriotic, I would have opposed it. But, they are asking you to play only a couple of patriotic numbers. What’s wrong in that? Why can’t you play AR Rahman’s Vande Mataram or any other Bollywood patriotic number?” He thinks bands playing a few patriotic songs in their set list is a good idea.

IMPLEMENTA­TION WILL BE A PROBLEM:

Amit Kilam, percussion­ist, Indian Ocean, sees several flaws in the implementa­tion. “How will you make sure that this trend is followed? I mean will you send someone to see if the patriotic numbers are played in the concert or not? It would have made sense had the government hosted a cultural function of their own, and asked bands to play patriotic songs there,” he says. He also cites copyright and royalty issues as problem. Singer Kailash Kher feels music is free from all imposition­s. “You can’t force a musician into playing music. For a musician, a concert is where they express what they feel without any restrictio­ns. You can’t force any musician against playing what they want,” he says.

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