Friday, November 11, 2011

Dr. Bhupen Hazarika: The Bard & Legend


It is an age-old idea that music is a form of creative art through which emotions and sentiments are expressed. When we look at it in terms of the myriad folk musicians in India our understanding of life gets a better comprehension. Most of these singers are unknown to the world owing to several factors. It is a known fact that these singers are a treasure, the value of which has never been gauzed. Dr. Bhupen Hazarika is one of such singer and composer who is rooted in the folk tradition of Assam and made it popular across the boundaries.

Dr. Bhupen Hazarika’s songs not only reflect the emotions and sentiments that we come across in our day-to-day life, but they also approach the realities, the social problems at the moments of depression of common men. Moreover, his music has proved to be an important agent for raising our social consciousness, and that is why every Movement and Revolution of North-east India is found to be associated in a number of inspiring and motivating songs.

As a young man, Dr. Hazarika was a friend of Paul Robeson, the Afro-American singer, actor and civil rights activist. Robeson’s passionate crusades for social justice and black pride have permeated Hazarika’s own worldview. As an outcome of this friendship, one of the greatest compositions of Dr. Hazarika, ‘Bristino Parore’ was born, which was inspired by Paul Robeson’s ‘Ol’ Man River’. Huddie Ledbetter, better known as Lead Belly, of ‘We Are in the Same Boat Brother’ fame gave rise to Dr. Bhupen Hazarika’s soul-stirring song on universal brotherhood ‘Ami Ekekhon Naore Jatri’. Dr. Hazarika was also greatly influenced by Pete Seeger, a prominent singer of protest music in support of international disarmament, civil rights, and environmental causes.

Allying himself with the Indian people’s theatre Association (IPTA) – the cultural branch of the Communist Party of India – Bhupen Hazarika started expressing his social and political consciousness through Assamese folk music. Thus came the famous song ‘Dola O Dola’ which musically is set to the rhythm of the barefoot run and quick breathing of the men carrying the palanquin of the king across the hilly areas of Assam. The text of this song is in the form of a monologue of the palanquin bearers. The best example of the humanitarian ideal that instills his works is the song ‘Manuhe Manuhor Babe’ composed in 1964.

Dr. Hazarika was without doubt one of the greatest living cultural communicators of South Asia. He has swayed the hearts of millions with the power and passion of his voice, and the call for universal brotherhood and humanism, which comes through his songs. He straddles both Assamese folk tradition and his lineages with the political and social issues in his songs and compositions. With this increased alertness towards the situations of the North-east Indian people and his constant engagement with the problems of the downtrodden, Hazarika is staking a claim at the helm of social criticism.

Dr. Bhupen Hazarika’s music has pronounced affinities with traditional language and methods with all its informal characteristics and remains as a purposeful activity rather than simplistic entertainment. His music is always political and is a medium to resist oppression.

Dr. Bhupen Hazarika—the true son of the mighty Brahmaputra—has gained immortality through his music not only among the people of North-east Indian but among all Indians.

You are a legend, a phenomenon. You are larger than life.

Long live Dr. Bhupen Hazarika!

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