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Rapper Naezy sets the record straight about Bollywood film Gully Boy

Rapper Naezy, on whom the hit movie was based, says the film was more fiction than fact

- By Marwa Hamad Senior Reporter

Earlier this year, Zoya Akhtar’s musical drama Gully Boy (Street Boy) became one of the top five highest grossing Bollywood films of the year and received a 100 per cent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

The acclaimed film tracks the ragsto-riches journey of Murad Ahmad (Ranveer Singh), a college student who lives in the slums of Mumbai and deals with hardships by writing lyrics and performing rap.

But real-life gully boy Naezy (Naved Shaikh), who roughly inspired the film’s story, now tells tabloid! the film doesn’t completely depict his reality.

“I quite knew what was happening, but it was out of my control because they are the ones who are producing it, so I can’t do anything above a certain extent,” said the 26-year-old rapper, speaking over the phone during a Dubai visit.

“I tried to control it, but some- how it became fictionali­sed and it slipped away from my hands.

We can’t do anything about it, we had to keep quiet, because it was doing good for us, career-wise,” he added.

In particular, the storylines that related to “my girlfriend and my dad marrying twice, all these things are not true,” said Naezy, who adds that he has been trying to set the record straight in interviews.

“Overall, if you see the whole story of Gully Boy coming from the gully and how hip hop helped him… that story was conveyed properly to educate all the masses of Indian cinema. Now they know everything — they got educated about hip hop, they know what is real hip hop, what is fake hip hop, what is hip hop for bling and hip hop for story and awareness and consciousn­ess. They know everything because of Bollywood, so I’m glad that it helped people. But in my personal life, it has not helped me,” he said.

THE ORIGINAL STORY

The rapper, who recently returned from a half-year hiatus from music, still heaped praise onto Singh’s lead performanc­e, which was well-received by film critics.

“The way he adapted all the characters inside him, the way he practised rap and hip hop and became himself the ‘gully boy’ is not easy. What he has done is quite impressive. I liked the way he acted, I liked the way he rapped about his personal issues just like the way we used to do it,” said Naezy.

But if he could convey something about the rap scene in India that wasn’t shown in the film, what would it be?

“I would have portrayed the original story, which is very different from the fictionali­sed story. I would have portrayed the things that I faced in my life,” said Naezy.

“I was coming from the gully, but

I was privileged enough, this is not shown in the movie, I was having the privilege of having an iPad with me and I was having the privilege of doing whatever I used to do in my life. Hip hop fascinated me towards itself and it became the medium for me to come out from the circumstan­ces that I used to be in in my college days,” he said.

HIP HOP HUSTLE

Naezy recalled his humble beginnings and how, when he was 11 years old, he spontaneou­sly heard a rap song that changed his path.

“I used to be a hustler. I used to hustle for money and goods, but one day I heard this rap song at a function in a chawl, in the gully. Someone played [Temperatur­e by Sean Paul] and I got fascinated and pulled towards hip hop, because there was a message conveyed through lyrics. They’re saying something on the rhythm, with the beat, they have a flow,” said Naezy.

“But this was a bit commercial. Later I realised that undergroun­d hip hop has more heavy lyrics that I could relate to, about the neighbourh­oods of New York and Los Angeles and all the western states.

“They used to have a struggle in their lives. They used to rap about the same issues that I was facing in my life in Bombay, so I could relate to rappers from the UK and the USA. When I grew up, I started realising that this is the space I should go into and this is what I’ve been sent for,” he said.

This culminated in a musical partnershi­p with fellow undergroun­d rapper Divine (Vivian Fernandes) and the two found massive success with their hit song Mere Gully Mein in 2015.

The song, which currently boasts more than 26 million views on YouTube, was re-released as part of the soundtrack to Gully Boy this year.

But for Naezy, it all began when he released his debut song five years ago.

“Aafat! was my first song ever, in 2014 when my journey began. I never waited for any resources. I launched myself by my own with a piece of electronic resource, which was my iPad and my first song was Aafat! — that song is too much close to my heart,” said Naezy.

“I’M UNSTOPPABL­E”

Now, after a six-month hiatus from music, he is working on his first studio album with a newfound sense of self, but the same old love from his followers.

“I realised I had to stay away from social networks and from my family, and I realised that I’ve got this talent that could change the whole course of rap and hip hop in India,” said Naezy.

“I needed to come back because of the pressure of my fans. The fans, they’re getting mad, they’re getting crazy, they want me back, they love me so much and the love has brought me back,” said Naezy.

So far, the rapper has written two songs from his upcoming record, but said he’s still collecting “all the resources for it to become a huge album.”

“It’s about my life — it’s about the city Bombay, Mumbai, and the role of the city in my personal life. It’s about love and passion and the dream that I’m following. It’s about opening the eyes of the Indian masses. It’s about consciousn­ess,” said Naezy.

The rapper released his latest single

Rukta Nah on August 10, to coincide with his birthday, and the track has nearly one million views on YouTube at time of writing.

“It’s about not stopping in your life and being unstoppabl­e, whatever the circumstan­ces would be. I’m not going to stop,” said Naezy.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photos by IANS and courtesy of instagram.com/naezytheba­a ?? Ranveer Singh and Naezy perform during Gully Gen’s show at Lakme Fashion Week 2019 in Mumbai, on February 3. Naezy with Madhuri Dixit-Nene on dance reality show ‘Dance Deewane 2’.
Photos by IANS and courtesy of instagram.com/naezytheba­a Ranveer Singh and Naezy perform during Gully Gen’s show at Lakme Fashion Week 2019 in Mumbai, on February 3. Naezy with Madhuri Dixit-Nene on dance reality show ‘Dance Deewane 2’.
 ??  ?? Ranveer Singh and Siddhanth Chaturvedi in ‘Gully Boy’.
Ranveer Singh and Siddhanth Chaturvedi in ‘Gully Boy’.
 ??  ?? Singh (centre) with rappers Naezy (Naved Shaikh) and Divine (Vivian Fernandes).
Singh (centre) with rappers Naezy (Naved Shaikh) and Divine (Vivian Fernandes).
 ??  ?? Singh and Alia Bhatt in ‘Gully Boy’.
Singh and Alia Bhatt in ‘Gully Boy’.

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