mehdi hassan...
1996. It was a cassette shop inside the Palika Bazaar where
we first went together with a common idea, after we became friends ten years
ago: buy some good collections of ghazals. She knew Gulam Ali was my favorite. I
never knew who she liked. I bought a couple of Ali’s famous ghazals, including
‘chupke chupke’ after an hour’s search. In fact we were meeting after a long
time. At the bus-stop, when I was about to board a bus to R K Puram where I lived,
she hurriedly handed over a small box to me. Sitting on the bus, I slowly opened
the wrapper… there were two cassettes: both by Mehdi Hassan. “Ab ke hum
bichhade to shaayad kabhii khwabon mein milen” was the first ghazal I played immediately
after reaching home. I must have played this ghazal one thousand times. Interestingly,
we have never met after that.
In 2009, when I went to Kozhikode
to meet Ahmad Bhai, a music-lover and friend of Mohammad Rafi, he told me how
the town was graced with the presence of Mehdi Hassan in 2000. “When Mehdi Hassan came to Kerala in 2000,
the Pakistani Ghazal singer was suffering from a severe paralytic stroke.
Naturally, his visit to the south Indian state was not to perform but to get
treatment for his ailments — from a famous Ayurvedic hospital near Kozhikode. Soon, the Malabar town’s Islamic tradition and
love for Hindustani music wooed him, and within weeks the celebrated vocalist
paid a visit to the place. He was hardly mobile, yet was able to sing, which he
did superbly well. Poignantly enough, that was his last live performance:
Hassan leads a completely bedridden life today in his hometown of Karachi. Music-lovers
back in Kozhikode still cherish that blissful evening, and hope the maestro,
now 82, will recover and even revisit their city” (http://newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/article127931.ece).
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