Cricketers on song
Cricketers in the late 1970s carried portable 'two-in-ones' in addition to their cricket kit, in order to listen to film music and ghazals, inspired largely by B S Chandrasekhar's obsession with Mukesh's songs. Though we had few singers in our midst, there was always more than a passing interest in music in the dressing room.
Among the three or four stars I call the nawabs of Hyderabad cricket, I do not remember anything musical about the stylish Abbas Ali Baig, a man made famous by a scorcher of a kiss a young female fan planted on him when he reached fifty against Australia at the Brabourne Stadium. (The incident, in fact, led commentator Vijay Merchant to exclaim, "I wonder where all these enterprising young ladies were when I was scoring my hundreds and two hundreds.")
But the former Nawab of Pataudi had a keen ear for music. His preferences included Hindustani classical, but also music of a lighter variety, as his frequent and stentorian rendering of Mehdi Hassan's popular ghazal "Gulshan, gulshan" in the dressing room suggested. Abid Ali was no Harry Belafonte, but he belted out calypsos in the most uninhibited manner, especially one that started, "The great India bowler, Abid A-a-li."
The skipper, ML Jaisimha, had a superbly masculine voice, and he could do an impressive imitation of Frank Sinatra. On two occasions, I was to witness bravura performances by this most elegant of cricketers - once taking over nonchalantly from a live band in a fashionable Bangkok restaurant and, years later, at the V Sivaramakrishnan testimonial dinner at the Connemara, when he struck up an improbable duet with Sunil Gavaskar.
An accomplished singer in the Hyderabad team of the 70s was opener Maheshwar Singh, who specialised in the songs of Jagmohan, a crooner of KL Saigal's vintage. Maheshwar was a regular performer at cricketers' get-togethers, where many otherwise timid bathroom singers opened up because the spirit of the singer, rather than his virtuosity, mattered in these gatherings, and everyone was assured of hearty applause.
Bombay left-arm spinner Padmakar Shivalkar was a first-rate singer of Hindi film songs; so was Vijay Manjrekar in an earlier era, son Sanjay carrying on the tradition most admirably.
Decades ago, I played for Rajasthan Club in the Kolkata league. My partner in the slips was the late Ravi Kichlu, who played Ranji and Duleep Trophy cricket as an opening batsman. One half of the Hindustani classical vocalist duo known as the ‘Kichlu Brothers,’ Ravi was a gentle senior who put me, the baby of the team, at ease, and even entertained me to snatches of khayal singing in the slip cordon.
In Tamil Nadu - Chennai in particular - there has been a fairly close affinity between musicians and cricket, especially in the form of a fanatical following of the game among Carnatic musicians. Quite a few of the top young musicians of today have either played the game fairly competitively or have parents or close relatives who have done so. The best known among these is vocalist Unnikrishnan, who was a promising young batsman at the college and league levels before he decided to concentrate on his singing.
Left-arm spinner Bhargav Mehta, who took 14 wickets in a Rohinton Baria final against Bombay University, was an accomplished vocalist on the college circuit. SJ Kedarnath, a former State Bank of India opening batsman of considerable merit, is a trained "mridangam" player, but of much greater entertainment value is his wonderful talent for mimicry. Not only can he do some rip-roaring takeoffs on Tamil Nadu celebrities like VV Kumar or S Venkataraghavan, but he can also render perfectly acceptable imitations of past masters of Carnatic music like MD Ramanathan or even DK Pattammal.
(Adapted from Cricinfo, March 8, 2002)
Among the three or four stars I call the nawabs of Hyderabad cricket, I do not remember anything musical about the stylish Abbas Ali Baig, a man made famous by a scorcher of a kiss a young female fan planted on him when he reached fifty against Australia at the Brabourne Stadium. (The incident, in fact, led commentator Vijay Merchant to exclaim, "I wonder where all these enterprising young ladies were when I was scoring my hundreds and two hundreds.")
But the former Nawab of Pataudi had a keen ear for music. His preferences included Hindustani classical, but also music of a lighter variety, as his frequent and stentorian rendering of Mehdi Hassan's popular ghazal "Gulshan, gulshan" in the dressing room suggested. Abid Ali was no Harry Belafonte, but he belted out calypsos in the most uninhibited manner, especially one that started, "The great India bowler, Abid A-a-li."
The skipper, ML Jaisimha, had a superbly masculine voice, and he could do an impressive imitation of Frank Sinatra. On two occasions, I was to witness bravura performances by this most elegant of cricketers - once taking over nonchalantly from a live band in a fashionable Bangkok restaurant and, years later, at the V Sivaramakrishnan testimonial dinner at the Connemara, when he struck up an improbable duet with Sunil Gavaskar.
An accomplished singer in the Hyderabad team of the 70s was opener Maheshwar Singh, who specialised in the songs of Jagmohan, a crooner of KL Saigal's vintage. Maheshwar was a regular performer at cricketers' get-togethers, where many otherwise timid bathroom singers opened up because the spirit of the singer, rather than his virtuosity, mattered in these gatherings, and everyone was assured of hearty applause.
Bombay left-arm spinner Padmakar Shivalkar was a first-rate singer of Hindi film songs; so was Vijay Manjrekar in an earlier era, son Sanjay carrying on the tradition most admirably.
Decades ago, I played for Rajasthan Club in the Kolkata league. My partner in the slips was the late Ravi Kichlu, who played Ranji and Duleep Trophy cricket as an opening batsman. One half of the Hindustani classical vocalist duo known as the ‘Kichlu Brothers,’ Ravi was a gentle senior who put me, the baby of the team, at ease, and even entertained me to snatches of khayal singing in the slip cordon.
In Tamil Nadu - Chennai in particular - there has been a fairly close affinity between musicians and cricket, especially in the form of a fanatical following of the game among Carnatic musicians. Quite a few of the top young musicians of today have either played the game fairly competitively or have parents or close relatives who have done so. The best known among these is vocalist Unnikrishnan, who was a promising young batsman at the college and league levels before he decided to concentrate on his singing.
Left-arm spinner Bhargav Mehta, who took 14 wickets in a Rohinton Baria final against Bombay University, was an accomplished vocalist on the college circuit. SJ Kedarnath, a former State Bank of India opening batsman of considerable merit, is a trained "mridangam" player, but of much greater entertainment value is his wonderful talent for mimicry. Not only can he do some rip-roaring takeoffs on Tamil Nadu celebrities like VV Kumar or S Venkataraghavan, but he can also render perfectly acceptable imitations of past masters of Carnatic music like MD Ramanathan or even DK Pattammal.
(Adapted from Cricinfo, March 8, 2002)
2 Comments:
Dear Ram,
Actually got a link to your blog from my friends blog (http://terrywhatlee.blogspot.com).
Your piece on Tiger's innings in Chepauk was really good. I am reading it for the first time.
This post on music is something i thoroughly enjoyed. Have always imagined the non-specialists lifestyle of every person I meet. For e.g, used to wonder how my Ph.D thesis advisor would talk to his son or a grocer. You know what I mean. So when I saw the non-cricketing news it engaged me a lot.
Will read the remaining in the archive.
With Regards
Narasimhan
Narasimhan,
Thanks a lot. I hope to read your blog too, soon. What makes a sportsperson (or any other celebrity) tick has always fascinated me. Quite often you are disappointed to discover that the person concerned is nothing beyond his specific talent, but sometimes you do find other interesting attributes and that makes a difference, doesn't it?
ram
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