Some time ago a bloke observed that my blogs and the words I
often use are so strong that they reek with venom. He suggested that by
touching on such topics as I do and venting my feelings in the way I do, will
corrode my mind. I agree partly. The topics I have blogged have been sometimes
negative because they were part of life’s experience and that was also because
one cannot be chasing butterflies all the while. That will be negation of a
kind. I blog what I muse, what I experience. If expressing strongly on a
subject is afflictive, corrosive and retrogressive, well what then is there to
individual freedom to be expressive in the first place? There is satisfaction
in being candid how so ever intense the unpleasantness that may evoke.
I was thinking in these lines and even the previous post I
have on this Blog is the product of anguish resulting in face impudence. It was then that I was invited to a birthday
party and a musical night yesterday. I have been to that musical event (which
is a monthly affair) a few times before as invitee. This time around it was at
the invitation of a gentleman with whom I chanced to have some time at the club
the past week. Though we have met often, nothing beyond a nod of
acknowledgement had transpired between us. In course of this chat which was for
more than an hour we spoke about few things. We spoke about his deceased
brother who was incidentally known to me. The agony he and his mother went
through, the marriage (providentially) of the girl who was betrothed to his
brother, so on and about life. He has enough wealth to not bother about earning
a living and he turned sixty that day.
While we were chatting his wife called him on the mobile and enquired if
he would be in time for dinner. He told her to go ahead with her food and that
he was with someone who knew his brother. His only child a girl was married and
settled elsewhere. He however expressed that he often feels that there is
something he his missing. I suggested he travel a bit, even if it is alone. “Solitude that you get in travel cannot be
matched”. I told what I have heard and read travelers say. He was not sure what
he might be missing. But he said something is half full.
Before we parted for the night he invited me to the musical
event on Saturday and that would also be the occasion for his birthday party.
That was how, I went there yesterday as guest. As I mentioned I was at the
event a few occasions before as guest of another friend and class mate who is also
one of the organisers. The group is called “Reminiscence”. A sizable group of
music lovers who are in their mid-thirties and all the way up to people who are
retired and septuagenarians too! They get together along with spouses at a
local hotel every last weekend Saturday. The three hour programme of songs with
live orchestra ends with a decent buffet dinner. Spirit is served along. The
songs can be from any Indian language and mostly film songs. Since the members
themselves are singers the amateur talent middle aged and old are conspicuous
by their presence. So are the golden numbers from as early as of the 1940’s and
1950’s from Hindi, Tamil & Malayalam.
It was heartening to see people in their sixties trod up and
sing melodious numbers of Mukesh, Mannadey or T.M Soundarajan and P.Susheela. I
was wondering the power music has to bring together people. Nobody seemed to be
talking about age or feeling old. The positive air was vivid and everyone
seemed to be standing on a plank of avidity. There is a retired pediatrician, septuagenarian
who had looked after both my son and daughter. I told him that. He played
admirably some old Hindi numbers on his mouth organ, besides a Mannadey number-
a duet with an elegant and pretty lady. He was a living proof that all doctors
are not boring, dreary dull headed, hot headed folks. Besides, the banter and
jokes that were passed along was I felt taking repose.
The eldest
in the group was a gentleman in his early eighties. He was attending the
session after a couple of months of illness. He said that the first act of his
when his doctor approved of him to leave home was to jump into the car and
attend the evening’s programme. He sang a few lines in admirably intense and
aged voice. "Badi dur se aaye hai pyaar ka tofa laaye hain
Apana lo ya thukara do, pyaar ka tofa laaye
hain
Badi dur se aaye hai, pyaar ka tofa laaye hain”.
He reminisced
about his attending a concert of Muhammed Raffi way back in the seventies in
Chicago. When Raffi began the concert with this wonderful ode of love, the
audience irrespective of race and that included many Pakistanis too, erupted
swaying deliriously in ubiquitous joy. It was rupture he said like a mammoth dam
breaking open. In passing he lamented, “Alas,
look how now music is being comparatmentalised and singers banned from singing”.
The power of
music is transcendental; it has healing and soothing powers that no parochial
ideology can resist. I came back as during the previous times without my
noticing a sprint in my step. There are always brighter ways to deal with life
in midstream or when you are bowing down into the horizon. That is certain.