Muzaffar Ali on Asha Bhosle: ‘Our heart remains her true mehfil’ 

Ashaji’s demise is not merely a national loss. For me, it is a silence that echoes too closely. Each time she sang, something unseen was summoned — an alchemy of sur and soul that refused to belong to time. When I approached her for Umrao Jaan (1981), with Khayyam shaping the music and Shahryar giving it language, to inhabit the world of Rekha, she sensed immediately that this was not a recording — it was a reckoning.

She understood that she would have to travel beyond craft. That she would have to become the voice of a civilisation that once lived in tehzeeb, in restraint, in unspoken ache. She gave Lucknow a permanence that cinema had long denied it. In an industry often without place, she created one.

Muzaffar Ali. Pic/Instagram

To bring her into Awadh was not direction; it was invocation. The only distant echo was Begum Akhtar. What lay before us was a shared challenge. And she met it with something that cannot be rehearsed — surrender. She yielded to the character. Such truth is rare in the architecture of commercial Hindi cinema. It is rarer still to be recognised, as it was, at the 29th National Film Awards.

As told to  Upala KBR

 

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