Hemanta Kumar Mukhopadhyay (Hemanta
Mukherjee), was born in 16 June 1920 in the
city of Varanasi, India. He sang in Hindi films under the name Hemant Kumar. His family originated from Baharu village in West Bengal. They migrated to Kolkatain the early 1900s. Hemanta
grew up there and attended Mitra Institution school of Bhawanipore area. Hemanta
had three brothers and a sister, Nilima. His elder brother, Tarajyoti, was a
short-story writer in Bengali. The youngest brother, Amal Mukhopadhyay,
composed music for some Bengali movies, most notably Hospital and Abak Prithibi. He
also recorded a few Bengali songs in the 1960s. In 1945, Hemanta married Bela Mukherjee (died 25 June 2009), a singer from Bengal. Although
Bela (maiden name also Bela Mukhopadhyay) had sung some popular songs in a Bengali
movie, Kashinath (1943), with music by Pankaj Mullick – she did not actively pursue her musical
career after marriage. They had two children: a son, Jayant, and a daughter,
Ranu. Ranu as Ranu Mukhopadhyay pursued a music career in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
with somewhat limited success. Jayant is married to Moushmi
Chatterjee, an Indian
film actress who was popular in the 1970s.
Hemanta grew up there and
attended Mitra Institution School
of Bhawanipore area.
There he met his longtime friend, Subhas Mukhopadhyay who
later became a Bengali poet.
During this time, he developed a friendship with the noted writerSantosh
Kumar Ghosh. In fact, at that time, Hemanta used to write short stories,
Santosh Kumar wrote poems and Subhash Mukhopadhyay sang songs. After
passing the intermediate examinations (12th grade), Hemanta joined Bengal Technical Institute at Jadavpur to pursue Engineering. However, he quit academics to
pursue a career in music, despite parental objection. He briefly tried his hand
at literature and also published a short story in a prestigious Bengali
magazine called Desh, but by the late-1930s he was committed entirely to the music.
Under the influence of his friend Subhas
Mukhopadhyay, Hemanta recorded his first song for All
India Radio in 1935. The
first line of the song was Amar Ganete Ele Nabarupi Chirantanii. Hemanta's music career was primarily
mentored by the Bengali musician, Sailesh Duttagupta. In an interview on television in the early
1980s, Hemanta had mentioned that he had also received classical music training
from Ustad Faiyaz Khan's student Fanibhusan Ganguly, but his tutelage was cut short by Ustad's
untimely death.
In 1937,
Hemanta cut his First Gramophone Disc
under the Columbia label. The songs
(non-film) on this disc were Janite Jadi GoTumi and Balo Go Balo More whose lyrics were by Naresh Bhattacharya and music was composed by Sailesh Duttagupta. Thereafter, every year Hemanta continued to
record non-film discs for the Gramophone
Company of India (GCI) till 1984. His First
Hindi songs were Kitana Dukh Bhulaya Tumne and O Preet Nibhanewali, released in 1940 under GCI's Columbia
label. Music for these songs were composed by Kamal
Dasgupta, lyrics
were by Faiyaz Hashmi.
Hemanta's First Film song was in the Bengali film Nimai Sanyasi released in 1941. Music for this film was
scored by Hariprasanna Das.
Hemanta's first compositions for himself were the Bengali non-film songs Katha Kayonako Shudhu Shono and Amar Biraha Akashe Priya in 1944. Lyrics of these two songs were by
Amiya Bagchi.
His First
Hindi Film Songs were in Irada in 1944
under Pt. Amarnath's music
direction. Lyrics were by Aziz Kashmiri.
Hemanta is considered a foremost exponent of Rabindrasangeet. His First
recorded Rabindra Sangeet was in the Bengali
film Priya Bandhabi (1944). The song was Pather Sesh Kothaye. He recorded his First Non-Film Rabindra Sangeet Disc in 1944 under the Columbia
label. The songs were Aamar Aar Habe Na Deri and Keno Pantha E Chanchalata.
His First
Movie as a Music Director was the Bengali
film Abhiyatri in 1947.
Although many of the songs Hemanta recorded during this time received critical
acclaim, major commercial success eluded him until 1947. Some contemporary male
singers of Hemanta in Bengali around that period were Jaganmay Mitra, Robin Majumdar, Satya Chowdhury, Dhananjay Bhattacharya, Sudhirlal Chakraborty, Bechu Dutta and Talat
Mahmood.
In the mid-1940s, Hemanta became an active
member of the Indian People's Theatre
Association (IPTA) and started an association with another
active IPTA member — songwriter and composer Salil
Chowdhury. One of the
main driving forces behind the establishment of IPTA was the Bengal
famine of 1943 and the inaction of the British administration and
wealthy Indians to prevent it from happening. In 1947, Hemanta recorded a
non-film song called 'Ganyer badhu' (literally translates to 'The rural bride')
that had music and lyrics by Salil Chowdhury. The six-minute song recorded on
two sides of a 78 rpm disc was sung at a varying pace and lacked the
conventional structure and romantic theme of a Bengali song. It depicted an
idyllic, prosperous and caring rural woman's life and family and how it gets
ravaged by the demons of famine and ensuing poverty. This song generated an
unforeseen popularity for Hemanta and Salil in eastern India and, in a way,
established Hemanta ahead of his male contemporaries. Hemanta and Salil paired
again in several songs over the next few years. Almost all these songs proved
to be very popular.
Around the same period, Hemanta started
receiving more assignments for music composition for Bengali films. Some were
for a director named Hemen Gupta. When Hemen moved to Mumbai a few years later, he called upon Hemanta to compose
music for his first directorial venture in Hindi titled Anandmath under the Filmistan banner. Responding to this call, Hemanta
migrated to Mumbai in 1951 and joined the Filmistan Studios. The music of Anand Math (1952) was a moderate success. Perhaps, the
most notable songs from this movie is 'Vande mataram' sung by Lata Mangeshkar, which Hemanta set to a marching tune.
Following Anandamath, Hemanta scored music for a few Filmistan
movies like Shart in subsequent years, the songs of which
received moderate popularity. Simultaneously, Hemanta gained popularity in
Mumbai as a playback singer. His songs playbacked for actor Dev Anand under music director Sachin Dev Burman in movies like Jaal, House No. 44, Solva Saal and 'Baat ek raat ki' became quite popular.
By the mid-1950s, Hemanta had consolidated
his position as a prominent singer and composer. In Bengal, he was one of the
foremost exponents of Rabindrasangeet and perhaps the most sought after male
singer. In a ceremony organised by Hemanta Mukhopadhyay to honour Debabrata Biswas (1911–1980), the
legendary Rabindra Sangeet exponent, in Calcutta in March, 1980, Debabrata
Biswas unhesitatingly mentioned Hemanta as "the second hero" to
popularise Rabindra Sangeet, the first being none other than the legendary Pankaj Kumar Mallick. In Mumbai, along
with playback singing, Hemanta also carved a niche as a composer. He composed
music for a Hindi film called Nagin(1954) which became a major success owing largely to its
music. Songs of Nagin remained chart-toppers continuously for two years and
culminated in Hemant receiving the prestigious Filmfare Best Music Director Award in 1955. The very same year, he scored music
for a Bengali movie called Shapmochan in which he also played back four songs for
the Bengali actor Uttam
Kumar. This
started a long partnership between Hemant and Uttam as a playback singer-actor
pair. They were the most popular singer-actor duo inBengali
Cinema over
the next decade.
In the latter part of the 1950s, Hemanta
composed music and sang for several Bengali and Hindi films, recorded several
Rabindrasangeets and Bengali non-film songs. Almost all of these, especially
his Bengali songs became very popular. This period can be termed as the zenith
of his career and lasted for almost a decade. He sang songs composed by the
major music directors in Bengal such as Nachiketa
Ghosh, Robin
Chatterjee and Salil
Chowdhury. Some of
the notable films Hemanta himself composed music for during this period include Harano Sur, Marutirtha Hinglaj, Neel
Akasher Neechey, Lukochuri, Swaralipi, Deep Jwele Jaai, Shesh Parjanta, Kuhak, Dui Bhai, and Saptapadi in Bengali, and,Jagriti and Ek Hi
Raasta in
Hindi.
In the late 1950s, Hemanta ventured into Movie Production under his own banner Hemanta-Bela Productions. The First
Movie under this banner was a Bengali film directed by Mrinal
Sen, titled Neel
Akasher Neechey (1959). The story of this film was based on the travails
of a Chinese street hawker in Calcutta in the backdrop of India's
freedom struggle. The
movie went onto win the President's Gold Medal – the highest honour for a movie from Government
of India. In the
next decade, Hemanta's production company was renamed Geetanjali productions
and it produced several Hindi movies such as Bees
Saal Baad, Kohraa, Biwi Aur Makaan, Faraar, Rahgir and Khamoshi – all of which had music by Hemanta. Almost
all of these, except Bees Saal Baad and Khamoshi, weren't major commercial successes. Back in Bengal,
Hemanta scored music for a movie titledPalatak in 1963 where he experimented with merging Bengal Folk Music and light music. This proved to be a major success and
Hemanta's composition style changed noticeably for many of his future films in
Bengal such as Baghini, and Balika
Badhu. In Bengali
films Manihar and Adwitiya, both of which were major musical as well as commercial
successes, his compositions had a light classical tinge. In 1961, for
commemorating Rabindranath
Tagore's birth
centenary, Gramophone company of India featured Rabindrasangeet by Hemanta in a
large portion of its commemorative output. This too proved to be a major
commercial success. Hemanta also went on several overseas concert tours in this
period including his trip to the West Indies. Overall, in the 1960s decade he retained his position
as the major male singer in Bengal, and, as a composer and singer to be
reckoned with in Hindi films.
It was in the 1960s that he was the
predominant and lead male voice in many of Tagore's musical dramas like
"Valmiki Pratibha", "Shyama",
"Sapmochan","Chitrangada" and "Chandalika".
Together with Kanika Bandopadhyay (1924–2000) and Suchitra Mitra (1924–2010)who
were the lead female voices in these, he was part of the Rabindrasangeet
triumvirate that was both popular and respected and was referred as
'Hemanta-Kanika-Suchitra' and along with Debabrata Biswas, this quartet was and
still continues to be most heard exponents of Tagore compositions.
In the 1970s, Hemanta's contribution in Hindi
films was nominal. He scored music for a handful of his home productions, but
none of these movies were successful nor the music of them. In Bengal, however,
he remained the foremost exponent of Rabindrasangeet, film and non film songs.
His film and non-film output continued to be popular for most of the decade.
Some of them are: jodi jante chao tumi (1972), Sedin tomay dekhechilam (1974),
Khirki theke singho duar (stree 1971), Ke jane ko ghonta (1974), Chorono
dhorite diyogo amare (1980). In 1971, Hemanta debuted as a film director in for his self-produced Bengali movie titled Anindita. The movie didn't fare exceedingly well at the box
office. However his rendition 'Diner seshe ghumer deshe' was one of his best
Rabindrasangeet. In the same year Hemanta went to Hollywood by responding
famous Hollywood film director Conrad Rooks and score the music of Conrad's
film Siddhartha and also played back in that film.He made himself as the first
ever Indian singer to played back in Hollywood.The US Government honoured
Hemanta by giving him the citizenship of Baltimore city in Maryland
State.Hemanta is also the first ever singer of India to get USA citizenship. In
the early to mid-1970s, two major music composers in Bengal, Nachiketa Ghosh and Robin Chatterjee, who had worked closely with Hemanta since
the early 1950s, died. Simultaneously, music composed by Hemanta for Bengali
films like Fuleswari, Raag Anurag and Dadar Kirti established Hemanta as the major film music
composer in the Bengal movie scene. In 1979, Hemanta re-recorded some of his
earlier works with composer Salil Chowdhury from the 1940s and 1950s. This album, titled
'Legend of Glory, vol. 2' was a major commercial success, despite Hemanta's
aged and slightly tired voice.
In 1980, Hemanta suffered a heart attack (myocardial infarction) that severely
affected his vocal capabilities, especially his breath control. He continued to
record songs in the early eighties, but his voice was a shade of its rich baritone past. In 1984, Hemanta was felicitated by
different organizations, most notably by the Gramophone Company of India, for
completing 50 years in music. Ironically, that very year Hemanta released his
last album with Gramophone Company of India – a 45 rpm extended play disc with
four non-film songs. Over the next few years, Hemanta released non-film songs
under various small-time labels that had cropped up in the nascent
cassette-based music industry. Only a few of these were commercially
successful. He composed music for a handful of Bengali movies and one Bengali
and one Hindi tele-series. However, by this time he had become an institution,
a beloved personality, and a courteous and friendly gentleman. His
philanthropic activities included running a homeopathic hospital in memory of
his late Father in their native village in Baharu, in South 24 Parganas
district of West Bengal. In a television interview to noted elocutionist Gauri
Ghosh, his wife Bela Mukhopadhyaya recalled that she never knew during his
lifetime the number of families and persons he helped to put up financially or
otherwise; only after he passed away that this truth gradually unveiled. He
continued to feature regularly on All India Radio, Doordarshan (TV) and live programmes/concerts during this
period.
In 1987, he was nominated for Padmabhushan
which he refused politely, having already turned down the offer to receive
Padmashree in the 1970s. In this year, he was publicly felicitated in Netaji
Indoor Stadium in Calcutta for completing 50 years in musical journey, where,
Lata Mangeshkar presented him with the memento on behalf of his fans and
admirers.Despite his ageing voice, he became the Best Male Singer in 1988 for
his rendition in the film "Lalan Fakir".
In September 1989 he travelled to Dhaka, Bangladesh to receive the Michael Madhusudan Award, as well as to perform a concert. Immediately after
returning from this trip he suffered another heart attack on 26 September, 1989
and died at 11:15 pm in a nursing home in South Calcutta.
Nearly two decades after his
death the Gramophone Company of India releases at least one album by Hemanta
Mukhopadhyay every year, repackaging his older songs, because of the commercial
viability of his songs. His legacy still lives on through the numerous songs he
has recorded, music he has composed, and through many male singers in Bengal
and the rest of India who continue to imitate his singing style.
Source : wikipedia
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