Mumbai, Bollywood Nightingale Lata Mangeshkar says she is totally
with Javed Akhtar in his fight to secure royalty rights for singers and
lyricists.
“I’m a 110 percent with Javed
Saab. My only fear is, how will he cope with all the backlash coming his way
from producers and music companies who are very angry and upsetIJ I fought for
royalty for singers in the 1960s. I had even stopped recording songs at that
time while other singers who didn’t support my cause continued to record. My
mission collapsed. My colleagues didn’t get the point. If a songwriter like
Javed Saab had spoken up alongside me in the 1960s, a change in copyright rules
would have occurred long back. Javed Saab is fighting a much wider battle.
Singers and other musicians often die in penury,” lata said.
She feels she is being deprived
of her rightful royalties. “The music company Saregama HMV has nearly all my
songs. They are putting my songs in various compilations of Naushad, Salil
Chowdhary, Bappi lahiri,etc. What do I get from thisIJ I don’t get any royalty.
Now there is internet and the MP3 format. On top of that, the serials on
television play my songs. It’s the music company that gives them permission to
play my songs. Is that correctIJ There’s a popular serial ‘Bade Achche lagte
Hain’. Even the title of the serial is from a popular song by Amit Kumar.”
“Javed Saab is fighting a brave
battle. But the time to fight battles for film music is gone. Where are the
singers and song writers with durable contentIJ Today I see my songs being sung
on television by other singers. Even my face is used. But I am not singing. Is
there any way of stopping such practicesIJ However what Javed Saab is doing
fully justified. But even if the amendment becomes a law, how can the music
companies be controlled,” lata asked.
Said Javed: “What lataji fought
to achieve in the 1960s has now come to fruition. She feels she should have
spoken up in parliament about the issue. But I say, she is the queen and it up
to us, her followers, to ensure her dream is fulfilled. The singer has now been
given a moral right over the song. This has not happened anywhere else in the
world. What more could I wantIJ We’ve fulfilled what lataji had set out to do
for musicians 50 years ago. When she was gracious enough to come to release the
Marathi translation of my poems on Saturday I told lataji that we’re near
achieving what she had set out to achieve.”
“In recent times, the desecration
of songs has attained epidemic proportions. They take the songs of lataji and
add rap and jhankar sections to them. When I hear a new version of ‘Mera lal
dupatta mal-mal ka’, I feel like crying. If there are people who feel this kind
of remix invites youngsters to listen to the classics, then by the same logic
strobe lights should be added to the Taj Mahal during weekends so that
youngsters can go and dance in the moonlight. This is absurd logic. Now they
won’t be able to make these additions without the singer’s permission,” Javed
added.
May 21
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