Tag: Zakir Hussain

  • Tabla maestro Zakir Hussain and his tryst with tea

    Tabla maestro Zakir Hussain and his tryst with tea

    MUMBAI: Our memory of Zakir Hussain is that while he was eloquent, he preferred to let his  tabla do the talking. Whenever he stepped on stage, sat down in front of his tabla, the audience would go silent, in awe of a maestro. His endearing smile before every performance, spoke of his humility, building his connect with those who had come to hear his tabla talk. Yes, they clung on to every word he spoke too.

    Sadly, we will not be able to hear him speak any more. Zakir Hussain passed away on 15 December in a hospital in San Francisco of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a condition that develops following a scarring of the lung tissue. He had been hospitalised for the past two weeks. He was only 73.

    Taj Mahal and Zakir Hussain

    What the advertising industry and lay consumers will remember him for is his  tabla playing skills during his mesmerising performances as well as for the Brooke Bond Taj Mahal  TV commercial which sprang him into the homes of all of India. And it is still etched in many of our minds from that era.

    Forbes, a few years ago gave us an insight into what went into the making of the TVC and how it chose the tabla magician to endorse the brand.

    Th tea  brand was launched in 1966 and was seen as catering to upmarket “western” consumers. Research had revealed the even the aspirational middle class had started to take to Taj Mahal tea. The company decided to relaunch it in the eighties and broad base its appeal.

    Connoisseurs of tea, research suggested, put colour, smell and taste as criteria  for choosing a tea brand. The tea leaves used in the Taj Mahal had a distinctive brown colour and an intoxicating aroma. They also had a flavour which could only come after the meticulous vetting process done by the tea master, a task that requireds immense effort and dedication.

    Taj Mahal and zakir hussein

    The relaunch therefore had to bring in Indianness into the communication. Added to the western perception of Taj Mahal tea, it would be the perfect blend to broad base the messaging and communication.

    HTA was the advertising agency and it hired film maker Sumantra Ghoshal to make the TVC. KS Chakravarthy, yes our very own Chax , and KV Pops Sridhar were at the agency then. Chaks was the  copywriter then and his love for musical instruments, especially the tabla, thought Zakir Hussain would be the perfect choice as he reflected both western and Indian values. He lived in the US, yet he played the tabla – an Indian instrument -the world over, and with the best of musicians globally. 

    It was decided that the backdrop would be the iconic Taj Mahal in Agra and the film would portray Zakir practising on his musical instrument with his long locks  of hair flying as he was immersed in his riyaaz. His dedication to riyaaz would be akin to the hours in the lab that a tea master would take to come up with the perfect blend.

    Zakir Hussain Taj Mahal Tea

    Taking a break, Zakir was seen sipping a cup of tea. And a female voice  stated “Wah Ustaad wah!” Zakir in turn replied: “Arre Huzoor, wah Taj boliye” in his inimitable style. The voice over for the commercial was given by the famed Harish Bhimani.  

    The TVC ran on state-owned broadcaster Doordarshan and it struck a chord with the masses. Not only did Zakir’s tabla playing equate the idea of perfection, the Taj Mahal monument was also rated as amongst the wonders of the world. And the rest, as they say, is history.

    The brand later used other musicians like Niladri Kumar on the sitar and Rahul Sharma on the santoor in its TVCs and Zakir, himself appeared with other celebs like Ruby Bhatia and Alisha Chinai, but what we recall even to this day is the first TVC which featured him. Such was the power of the first ad.

    Zakir would also be involved in Hollywood either making an appearance or composing music for films like Apocalypse Now, The Second Best exotic Marigold Hotel, and Monkey Man, according to ImDb.

    The son of tabla legend, Ustad Allahrakha Khan,   Zakir Hussain Allaraka Qureshi is survived by his wife Antonia Minnecola and two daughters Anisa and Isabella Querishi. He will be sorely missed by them and his two brothers Taufique and Fazal Querishi – both tabla players of renown. And of course he will be missed by millions of fans of classical Indian music and the art and style of the tabla as performed by Zakir Hussain. 
     

  • Coffee With D….Funny man fails to garner TRPs!

    Coffee With D….Funny man fails to garner TRPs!

    MUMBAI: Making films on fugitives and terrorists from across the border has been attempted a few times but such films have never been able to convince the moviegoer because this is some fiction that seems totally implausible. 

    D Day, one of the better efforts at capturing the dreaded criminal Dawood, from across the border, despite its good script, face value and thrill failed to attract the audience. Coffee With D is meant to be a satire on the electronic media. This channel called Breaking News is losing TRPs and the management is on a two-month notice to either perform or perish.

    The channel’s star anchor is Arnab Ghosh (Sunil Grover), a take on a real-life anchor that falls flat. His prime time slot is losing sheen and he is being shifted to a cookery show unless he thinks up of a miracle to save his place.

    After much thinking and exchanging ideas with his wife played by Anjana Sukhani, herself a crime reporter, he gets this bright idea of interviewing D. But, it is not easy since nobody has seen his recent picture or knows his whereabouts. Grover’s ploy is to let D approach him rather than the other way round. The plan is to provoke D. Grover interviews various people from his old area, Dongri, in Mumbai, who all have only bad things to say about the don.

    The vegetable vendor claims D (Zakir Hussain) never paid his dues while a gun vendor has the same thing to say. Also, a constable from the local police station has interesting stories to tell about how every time D was brought into the police station, he was clobbered black and blue! These interviews on daily basis are enough to provoke D who invites Grover to interview him.

    Accompanying Grover are the channel’s news writer, played by Dipannita Sharma, as well as Vinod Ramani and Guru Singh, both of who posed as vegetable vendors, constable etc during the interviews earlier.

    Once in Karachi, the interview with D proceeds on predictable lines till Grover gets a reminder from his boss, Rajesh Sharma, that the interview so far is not good enough. So, comes the last segment of rapid fire. Grover becomes aggressive and rather than ask questioning, calls D names, which unnerves him to the extent that he drops dead of a heart failure!

    Coffee With D, to say the least, is scripted poorly, with no substance. The goings-on are insipid and lack humour. The last twist in the tale fails to make an impact. Mainly, because D is made to look and act like a buffoon!

    Performances are routine even from talented artistes like Zakir Hussain and Rajesh Sharma. Sunil Grover sans his funny lines has no impact. Dipannita and Anjana are okay.

    Coffee With D faces poor prospects.

    Producer: VinodRamani.
    Director: Vishal Mishra.
    Cast: Sunil Grover, Zakir Hussain, Pankaj Tripathi, Rajesh Sharma, Dipannita Sharma, Anjana Sukhani, Vinod Ramani, Guru Singh. 

  • Coffee With D….Funny man fails to garner TRPs!

    Coffee With D….Funny man fails to garner TRPs!

    MUMBAI: Making films on fugitives and terrorists from across the border has been attempted a few times but such films have never been able to convince the moviegoer because this is some fiction that seems totally implausible. 

    D Day, one of the better efforts at capturing the dreaded criminal Dawood, from across the border, despite its good script, face value and thrill failed to attract the audience. Coffee With D is meant to be a satire on the electronic media. This channel called Breaking News is losing TRPs and the management is on a two-month notice to either perform or perish.

    The channel’s star anchor is Arnab Ghosh (Sunil Grover), a take on a real-life anchor that falls flat. His prime time slot is losing sheen and he is being shifted to a cookery show unless he thinks up of a miracle to save his place.

    After much thinking and exchanging ideas with his wife played by Anjana Sukhani, herself a crime reporter, he gets this bright idea of interviewing D. But, it is not easy since nobody has seen his recent picture or knows his whereabouts. Grover’s ploy is to let D approach him rather than the other way round. The plan is to provoke D. Grover interviews various people from his old area, Dongri, in Mumbai, who all have only bad things to say about the don.

    The vegetable vendor claims D (Zakir Hussain) never paid his dues while a gun vendor has the same thing to say. Also, a constable from the local police station has interesting stories to tell about how every time D was brought into the police station, he was clobbered black and blue! These interviews on daily basis are enough to provoke D who invites Grover to interview him.

    Accompanying Grover are the channel’s news writer, played by Dipannita Sharma, as well as Vinod Ramani and Guru Singh, both of who posed as vegetable vendors, constable etc during the interviews earlier.

    Once in Karachi, the interview with D proceeds on predictable lines till Grover gets a reminder from his boss, Rajesh Sharma, that the interview so far is not good enough. So, comes the last segment of rapid fire. Grover becomes aggressive and rather than ask questioning, calls D names, which unnerves him to the extent that he drops dead of a heart failure!

    Coffee With D, to say the least, is scripted poorly, with no substance. The goings-on are insipid and lack humour. The last twist in the tale fails to make an impact. Mainly, because D is made to look and act like a buffoon!

    Performances are routine even from talented artistes like Zakir Hussain and Rajesh Sharma. Sunil Grover sans his funny lines has no impact. Dipannita and Anjana are okay.

    Coffee With D faces poor prospects.

    Producer: VinodRamani.
    Director: Vishal Mishra.
    Cast: Sunil Grover, Zakir Hussain, Pankaj Tripathi, Rajesh Sharma, Dipannita Sharma, Anjana Sukhani, Vinod Ramani, Guru Singh. 

  • Friday Cine Entertainment to release ‘Ishq Forever’ on 15 January, 2016

    Friday Cine Entertainment to release ‘Ishq Forever’ on 15 January, 2016

     MUMBAI: Friday Cine Entertainment’s romantic comedy Ishq Forever starring an ensemble cast is all set to release on 15 January, 2016.

     

    Produced by Ajay Shah, Himanshu Gandhi & Shabeer Boxwala, Ishq Forever is directed by Sameer Sippy.

     

    The movie will be introducing Krishna. It will also star Ruhi Singh, Lisa Ray, Zakir Hussain, Chetan Pandit, Sonal Jha, Arif Zakaria, Gurpreet Singh, Kuljeet Kaur, Sachin Parikh, Denzil Smith, Mahesh Balraj and Javed Jafferi. Raza Murad and Sharat Saxena will have special appearances in the movie.

     

    Written by Shabeer Boxwala, Ishq Forever has music by Nadeem Saifi and lyrics by Sameer.

  • ‘Revolver Rani’… Of Bullets and Boredom

    ‘Revolver Rani’… Of Bullets and Boredom

    MUMBAI: The title of the film, Revolver Rani, sounds like Hunterwali and various others mid 20th century woman-oriented films. These films commanded their own audience; a class of moviegoers who remained loyal to the brand.  Some makers like to find such local subjects which either fail to find buyers or, when they do, don’t work with the audience at all. Despite a couple of woman dacoit films like Putlibai and Bandit Queen, Revolver Rani seems quite outlandish as the story of a woman bahubali from the dacoit belt of Chambal.

    Kangana Ranaut has just lost an election to a creepy politician, Zakir Hussain, who had lost to her in an earlier election. Zakir, it seems, got a bribe to the tune of 200 crore from a mining giant to get them a concession on a mining belt. Wonder which corporate would invest that kind of money in a loser politician expecting him to win because they gave him 200 crore. But this is nothing compared to what follows.

    The film is actually about the plight of a woman who has never had anything work in her favour. She is unattractive to start with. She sees her mother being raped by the very man who killed her father. One day she empties all six bullets into him. After that, she is taken away by her mama, Piyush Mishra, with ambitions to turn her into a terror in his area and make her a political heavyweight. Her marriage has also been disaster with her husband branding her as a banjh and torturing her and also ending up with bullets with Kangna emptying an entire magazine in his body.

    Piyush is a master manipulator and uses Kangna’s angst for her political rise. Her opponent, Zakir, as well as the local police are  equally scared of her. She is the gun-wielding terror though it is another matter that when she and her rivals shower each other with bullets, no bullet hits anybody! While their battles continue, Kangna finds or she thinks she has found true love she always craved for in a small time actor, Vir Das. Vir actually has a girlfriend waiting in Mumbai but he decides to exploit Kangna’s weakness and talk her into financing his films. Since Kangna really loves him and is overtly possessive about him, Vir is now trapped. He is virtually a prisoner not allowed to step out without her.

    Producers: Raju Chadha, Nitin Tej Ahuja, Rahul Mittra.

    Director: Sai Kabir.

    Cast: Kangna Ranaut, Piyush Mishra, Zakir Hussain, Vir Das.

    Piyush, meanwhile, does a sting on Zakir through a TV journalist making him confess to accepting 200 crore. He loses his ministry. In the by-election, Kangna is sure to win. The enmity is now at its peak and ways are being sought to eliminate her. That is when Kangna finds out that she is pregnant. She was not a banjh after all. The woman in her comes alive and she wants to keep the child and marry Vir, collect all the party funds and move to Venice with Vir. While Vir wants nothing to do with this idea, mama Piyush sees all his plans going awry. Both Vir and Piyush, now turn into Kangna’s enemies and are ready to join her enemies and betray her.

    Kangna is ambushed at a night halt by an army of her enemies. She fights, killing many and heavily injured herself is given up for dead. But, she has survived and threatening you with a sequel!

    But before a sequel, the makers could at least have made the first version a bit tolerable. The film is shoddily written; it wavers from one thing to another and, let alone convincing episodes, they are not even plausible. If this kind of politics and political rivalries still exist in parts of India, what about the audience in general finding identification with them? If the script is bad, direction is pointless. The film has a couple of good songs, including one from Asha Bhosle, but they don’t fit in the scenario. Neither the film nor Kangna’s plight touch you. Why has the director gone out of his way to make Kangna look unattractive? As for performances, Kangna excels despite her character offering little variation. Piyush is impressive with fair support coming from Zakir. Vir refuses to change his expressions.

    Revolver Rani was expected to cash in on the recent Kangna hit, Queen. But it is a letdown on that count and otherwise too.

    Samrat & Co… Bankrupt

    A detective thriller is still a genre the big screen can share with small one even as many genres are now monopolised by the television. A decent Hindi detective whodunit has not been seen in a long time on the screen and the idea is sound enough to try one. Kavita K Barjatya of the Rajshri banner attempts one here. The inspiration comes from various original sources such as Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christie novels and even Satyajit Ray’s famous Bengali character, Feluda, among others. The film pays homage to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and his best known character, Holmes. Since the sources are from past, so is the story of Samrat & Co.

    Producer: Kavita K Barjatya.

    Director: Kaushik Ghatak.

    Cast: Rajeev Khandelwal, Madalsa Sharma, Gopal Datt, Girish Karnad, Priyanshu Chatterjee.

    Rajeev Khandelwal plays a private investigator that has been called in by Madalsa Sharma, daughter of a rich patriarch from Shimla, Girish Karnad, to check on a series of mysterious events taking place at his mansion. The lush green garden in the mansion is going dry, her father’s horse dies and Karnad himself suffers from indifferent health and dies soon as Rajeev arrives on the scene.

    It is a typical old-fashioned investigation as read and seen in various books and films earlier. Rajeev talks to himself as he works on various clues and red herrings. As Madalsa visits Rajeev to seek his help, he decides to impress her by telling things about her observed from her presence. Not all his explanations are convincing. He says she has had an eye correction surgery to get rid of her spectacles because she is still in the habit of adjusting her nonexistent specs but it could easily have been her migration to use of contact lenses. Much more is in the offing on this account as the film proceeds. 

    The film neither has anything new to offer nor does it present the old story in a manner worth watching. The writing is poor and so is the direction. The film lacks finesse having been made on a small budget. While Rajeev is a misfit for the role and his fuzzy hair look not going well either, Madalsa is around only to fantasise about romancing Rajeev.

    Samrat & Co has had a poor opening with ‘No audience, No show’ tags at many halls.

  • A love story not worth telling on screen

    A love story not worth telling on screen








    Producer: Sunil Bohra, Shailesh R Singh, Kiran Kumar Koneru
    Director: Ram GopalVarma
    Cast: Mahi Gill, Deepak Dobriyal, Ajay Gehi, Prableen Sandhu, Zakir Hussain, Darshan Jariwala


    Mumbai: Love, adultery, jealousy and the resultant crime are factors as old as the puranas. Then why wait for a real life incident that created a major scandal and grabbed headlines in all the media?


    May be the idea was exactly to cash in on all that publicity the said scandal generated and also to avail of a ready story. Unfortunately, that is the major drawback of Not A Love Story.


    Not A Love Story is a cinematic narrative of the infamous Neeraj Grover murder, the media judgements and the court case that followed on a Kannada actor wanting to make it big in Hindi films and her boyfriend.


    Mahi Gill, aspiring to be a film actress, descends in Mumbai after convincing her overzealous boyfriend, Deepak Dobriyal, that if she fails to make it, she will return in a few months. And if she succeeds, he could also join her in Mumbai.


    After some mandatory struggle, she bags a lead role, thanks to the production company‘s head, Ajay Gehi, who roots for her. The two with other friends hit a pub to celebrate her break, after which Gehi lands up at her house for ‘one for the road‘. Intoxicated, he has a personal sob story to tell Gill, and, as a drunk and emotional woman would do, she lends him a shoulder, eventually both ending up in bed.


    Next morning, before they could gather themselves, her boyfriend, Dobriyal, is at her door and sees a naked man on her bed. To absolve herself she cries rape and, on an impulse, Dobriyal kills Gehi. The law catches up and the film ends sans final court verdict.
     
    So what is so inspiring about this story, real or otherwise, to base a film on? Are people interested still in that beaten to death story? Does not seem so looking at the attendance at cinema halls on day one, show one. In that case, should one conclude that Ram Gopal Varma may have felt that his ‘treatment‘ backed with a powerful background score would elevate the story to dramatic heights? On the first count, that of treatment, the answer is no, it is still a documentary on a real life event; as for the powerful background score, it has been wasted on this film. Performance wise, Deepak Dobriyal and Zakir Hussain are the only ones to make an impact; rest are okay.


    Not A Love Story is a love story which was not worth telling on a screen by any name. There is nothing or no one you empathise with in this film.


    Chatur Singh Two Star is poor in all respects









    Producer: Mohamad Aslam
    Director: Ajay Chandhok.
    Cast: Sanjay Dutt, Ameesha Patel, Anupam Kher, Gulshan Grover, Shakti Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Rati
    Agnihotri,Mushtaq Khan,Vishwajeet Pradhan.


    Mumbai: It must have seemed like a bright idea adapting the bumbling French police detective Jacques Clouseau of the famous Pink Panther series. The makers may even have wondered why no one thought of it when they decided to model Chatur Singh Two Star on this popular theme which went on for 11 film or TV versions.


    Sanjay Dutt is a two star police detective inspector with bumbling ways and foolish notions; in short he is anything but Chatur (smart) a la detective Clouseau. His sidekick, Suresh Menon, is Clouseau‘s Chinese major domo.


    Sanjay Dutt earns a two-week suspension for his detection abilities leading to putting a tycoon‘s son behind bars. However, when an ailing politician, Gulshan Grover, opts for hospital instead of jail after faking a heart attack, his boss, Anupam Kher, recalls Sanjay Dutt for the simple task of guarding him in hospital. But Dutt continues his foolhardy ways sniffing around like a spy he has read about in cheap paperback fictions.


    The writer and director feel the need to bring in some sort of story at this juncture. The politician, Gulshan Grover, is shot dead by a sniper from across the hospital room. His secretary, Ameesha Patel, is suspected of being the killer and escapes to South Africa thanks to Sanjay Dutt‘s help, and on him falls the job to trace her and bring her to book.


     
    The scene moves to South Africa locales where some more funny characters are introduced in the form of Satish Kaushik, an ex-don gone bananas, his side kick, Shakti Kapoor, who has now taken over as the new don and speech impaired cabbie, Mushtaque Khan. The idea is to trace Rs 5 billion worth of diamonds Gulshan Grover has placed in the custody of Satish Kaushik. What follows is utterly predictable with climax being the kind seen in half a dozen films in recent times.


    Having chosen a totally performance-based subject requiring an actor of immense talent who can make people laugh without making any conscious effort, the makers add to their blunder by casting Sanjay Dutt who is expressionless rather than deadpan. He resorts to ineffective buffoonery.


    Ameesha Patel has no contribution to make. As for other capable actors, Anupam Kher, Satish Kaushik, Shakti Kapoor, Mushtaque Khan and Suresh Memon, who have carried off comic roles ably earlier, are unable to do
    much in the absence of funny scenes or dialogue. In fact, the writing is banal and juvenile. Direction is below par. Musical score is a liability and adds to the tedium.


    Chatur Singh Two Star is poor in all respects.

  • Aashish Khan and Zakir Hussain bag Grammy nominations

    Aashish Khan and Zakir Hussain bag Grammy nominations

    MUMBAI: Nominations for the 49th Grammy Awards have been declared and Mary J. Blige has continued her winning streak, having garnered eight Grammy nominations.

    Musician duo from India Aashish Khan and Zakir Hussain have been nominated for the ilk of Best Traditional World Music for their album, Golden strings of the Sarode.

    Keeping it nip and tuck Red Hot Chili Peppers tracks closely while securing six nominations followed by James Blunt, the Dixie Chicks, John Mayer, Danger Mouse, Prince, Rick Rubin, William and John Williams each earning five nods and Beyonce, Bryan-Michael Cox, Gnarls Barkley, Israel Houghton, T.I, and Justin Timberlake with four each.

    The 49th Annual Grammy Awards will take place in Los Angeles at the Staples Center on Sunday 11 February 2007 and will be hosted by Stephen Colbert and broadcast nationwide on CBS at 8 pm ET.

    2007 Grammy Nominees for the Top five categories are as follows:

    Record of the year

    – Be Without You, Mary J. Blige
    – You’re Beautiful, James Blunt
    – Not Ready To Make Nice, Dixie Chicks
    – Crazy, Gnarls Barkley
    – Put Your Records On, Corinne Bailey Rae

    Album of the year

    – Taking The Long Way, Dixie Chicks
    – St. Elsewhere, Gnarls Barkley
    – Continuum, John Mayer
    – Stadium Arcadium, Red Hot Chili Peppers
    – FutureSex/LoveSounds, Justin Timberlake

    Song of the year (nominated songwriters)

    – Be Without You- Johnta Austin, Mary J. Blige, Bryan-Michael Cox and Jason Perry
    – Jesus Take the Wheel- Brett James, Hillary Lindsey and Gordie Sampson
    – Not Ready to Make Nice- Martie Maguire, Natalie Maines, Emily Robison and Dan Wilson
    – Put Your Records On- John Beck, Steve Chrisanthou and Corinne Bailey Rae
    – You’re Beautiful- James Blunt, Amanda Ghost and Sacha Skarbek

    Best new Artist

    – James Blunt
    – Chris Brown
    – Imogen Heap
    – Corinne Bailey Rae
    – Carrie Underwood

    Best Pop performance by a duo or group with vocal

    – The Black Eyed Peas for My Humps
    – Death Cab For Cutie for I Will Follow You Into The Dark
    – The Fray for Over My Head (Cable Car)
    – Keane for Is It Any Wonder
    – Pussycat Dolls for Stickwitu