Teri Mefil Mein Leikin …….
MAHTAB BASHIR
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Gulon mein rang bhare, baad-e-nau bahaar chale/ Chale bhi
aao ke gulshan ka karobaar chale. Legendary classical singer Mehdi Hassan (July
18, 1927 – June 13, 2012), who captivated the hearts of millions of music fans
across South Asia, died on Wednesday (June 13, 2012) after a decade-long
illness. He was 84.
Mehdi Hassan, known as Shahenshah-e-Ghazal, or the king of
classical singing among Urdu speakers across the world, died at Agha Khan
Hospital on Wednesday afternoon.
His son Asif told reporters outside the hospital that his
father had been suffering from multiple lung, chest and urinary tract
infections. Hundreds of fans gathered at the hospital on learning of his death,
while condolences poured in from across the world, including India, where the
ghazal maestro had a huge fan following.
Mehdi Hassan was bestowed with several awards, including
Tamgha-e-Imtiaz, Presidential Pride of Performance, Hilal-e-Imtiaz and the
Nigar Film and Graduate Awards from Pakistan, while India and Nepal awarded him
with the Saigol Award and Gorkha Dakshina Bahu Award, respectively, in
recognition of his services to music. He has left behind nine sons and five daughters.
He married twice, outliving both his wives. He will be buried in Karachi on
Friday.
He was born in Rajhistan, India and migrated to Pakistan
during the partition. Hassan struggled for a long time to establish himself as
a singer, which included a one-off performance on Radio Pakistan in 1957. The
year 1959 was his breakthrough year when he was introduced to a group of people
at the Art Council in Lahore by legendary poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz. And then, no
musical score was complete without Mehdi Hassan’s enchanting vibratos.
“His voice added so many colors to ghazal that at one of
the concerts, Faiz [Ahmed Faiz] sahab stood up and raised his hands in the air
and said that this ghazal belonged to Mehdi Hassan, that he had nothing to do
with it. Such was the impact of the man’s singing,” said Sufi singer Abida
Parveen. Poet Nida Fazli, a close friend of Hassan who penned most of late
Jagjit Singh’s ghazals, said Mehdi Hassan had been an institution for those in
India and Pakistan.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said he had “brought
the sub-continental Sufi sensibilities to life through his songs”.
Iconic Indian singer Lata Mangeshkar also tweeted about
King of Ghazal Mehdi Hasan’s passing away. She said she had been “deeply
grieved because today, Mehdi Hassan, a very big Ghazal Singer, is no longer
with us. He brought a major transformation in Ghazal singing” and it was highly
unlikely that such a singer would be born again.
“He was a great classical singer as well and his singing
had a fragrance of Rajasthan’s music. I pray to Ishwar to rest Mehdi Hassan’s
soul in peace,” she added.
Famous ghazal singer Ghulam Ali said: “I m completely
shocked to hear about his demise.”
He said it was as if he had lost his elder brother.
Indian singer Hariharan tweeted: “Nobody can replace Mehdi
Saab. He was a genius. He was a great thinker”.
Condolences also poured in from former president Pervez
Musharraf PTI chief Imran Khan and Indian singer Pankaj Udhas among several
others.
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