Songs of Bollywood
Like many senior artists in the Indian film industry, I also despise the name Bollywood. I think the name, straight lift from Hollywood, trivialises the industry.
To the west, Bollywood only means a colourful cluttered screen with 100 dancers scampering for space. If I ask anyone here what do you like about Indian films, they can’t go beyond couple of words and the most common ones are: colour, dance, music, vibrant ambience etc.
HEEEEEEEEELLLLLLLLLLOOOO
There are storylines, acting, cinematography, editing, sound, narration as well…look at them. Apart from a few of my professors, I couldn’t find anyone who would go beyond colour-dance cliché.
And the problem is, if you try to make them see something different like Black, most of them would say no to it, saying they want to see a regular Bollywood flick. It’s a double edged sword. So if a film offers a run-of-the-mill song-and-dance drama, the film fails to break colour-dance shackles. And if it tries something different, it is no more Bollywood!
I tried to find a parallel of Bollywood songs in Hollywood/western films. And I think it is “love making scene”. I think both forms have the similar frequency in respective industries.
If you want to understand Indian film industry, you have to understand the Indian culture as well. Songs and dance are part of Indian life. Everyone sings in India—good or bad. Every occasion has special songs for it.
Every traditional occupation had their songs. So every time a shepard, farmer, or a bullock-cart driver enters celluloid screen, most common occupation, apart from his job, would be singing.
Moreover, every occasion in India has its own song. So we have songs for harvesting, sowing, birth, marriage, morning, evening, night, sleeping, waking-up. You name it, we have it.
Plus, when there are festivals, what else can someone think of apart from singing and dancing. And above all we have Love. The eternal theme of cinema across the world. And love expresses itself most effectively through songs.
So what else do you expect from such country’s film industry…it has to be musical.
In the next entries I’ll talk about why colours are important to Bollywood and why it makes huge business sense to have songs in Cinema.
