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The Javed Akhtar  Interview

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If the truth be told it’s a  life well  verse living. On January 17, poet , screenwriter and lyricist Javed Akhtar turns 7​3​.The occasion triggered  off a  train of  thoughts on  the sorry state of music and cinema in these troubled times. Son of the renowned poet-lyricist Jan Nissar Akhtar, Javed  shares his troubled conscience with Subhash K Jha

How do you look back on the 40 years of your career as a  scriptwriter and lyricist?

There have been bruises and pleasures, achievements and failures…both are equally  integral to life.  But in totality life has been kind. Without trying to be over-modest, I’d like to say that I wasted about 10 of those 40 years. If I had worked in a more disciplined way I’d have done a lot more. That’s a lingering regret. I’m trying to compensate for that lost time. But I don’t think I can. Today  I’m in competition with only with myself. If I look at the mediocrity  all around me  I can only get depressed.

Javed Saab, you’ve made poetry  accessible  to the common man…

Isn’t that what  poetry is supposed to do?   If you can’t communicate your  lines to the common man  then why  are you  making your  art public?  Some artistes say they don’t care   if their art  is not understood.  There should be  some difference between  your  diary and shairi.

What do you feel about the falling standards of  music in our films?

It can be best expressed by what Lataji sang Silsila—my first film as a lyricist—Yeh kahan aa gaye hum. Jo  halaat hain ussmein kyakaren?  I think the songs are a  part of the narrative. If the narrative is of an inferior quality, the situations  are bound to be inferior. These in turn demand inferior songs. Songs for Kaagaz Ke Phool, Pyaasaor Baiju Bawra could only have been possible in those films.  Those songs couldn’t be a part of a film today. Also, there’s a kind of fear in filmmakers that audiences’ attention span has shortened. Hence there’s  a frenzied tempo in the narrative at the cost of depth. When  songs run at a frantic speed words are no longer important. And since words no longer register as poetry or anything near it, lyricists are allowed to get away with anything. The quality of music also is very unsympathetic towards poetic lyrics.  The people who are extracting work out of lyricists aren’t  trained to understand poetry. Earlier on  composers understood music and poetry. Sachin Dev Burman wasn’t fluent in  Hindi.  But  his  sense of poetry was still impeccable. Something is wrong with society  at large. In our educational system the Hindustani and Urdu languages are  being marginalized. We ‘re living in an era  of  a  cultural void.

How do you manage to keep your head above water?

It has taken me  a  lot of time  to  come to where I am. When initially my lyrics did well I was offered a  lot of films. I  declined all the films where I felt I’d have to write something I didn’t want to,and couldn’t. The film industry got the message loud and clear. Yeh agarlikhenge to iss terah se warna nahin. I cannot go beyond my inbuilt  sense of morality. Today I work one-fifth of other successful lyricists. And I don’t rgret it. You ask me how I seek out good projects. I think such projects seek me out. I admit there aren’t too many filmmakers and composers I’m comfortable with. Main to wohi karunga jo karta aaya hoon. No bad language, no grammatically incorrect metres for me. Poets can take liberties but within the given grammatical structures.

Who have been your idols as a lyric writer?

Shailendra  and Sahir Ludhianvi have written mindblowing songs.  Why just them?  Majrooh Sultanpuri, Jan Nissar Akhtar,  Raja MehndiAli Khan, Bharat Vyas, Pradeep, Kaifi Azmi, even today’s popular Sameer’s father Anjaan…they’ve  all written exceptional songs. I’ve set certain standards for myself. I believe  language is for communication.  What’s the point of writing a song  if it doesn’t communicate itself to the listeners? My father Jan Nissar Akhtar used to say, it’s very easy to write difficult songs and very difficult to write easy songs. A simple language possesses a kind of transparency which a lyricist can afford only when he’s sure of his ideas.You have to be very clear about your ideas to write simply. If you enter a dark room and you don’t know where the light switches, you keep groping in the dark. I’d like to believe I  know where the switches are. Ambiguity forbids simple expression. I shy away from ambiguity.

Why aren’t you writing screenplays any more?

At one stage I felt I was becoming a mechanical scriptwriter. I felt I was moving towards mediocrity. Before that happened I stopped and concentrated on what excited me, namely lyric writing. In recent times I was enthused to script my son’s film Lakshya.  I’ll not do commissioned screenwriting. I’ll write when I feel galvanized into the process.As for writing talent, Gulzar Saab is an exceptionally talented  dialogue writer. But yes, we need script writers.  There’s dearth of new ideas among them. The good screenplay writers are filmmakers themselves, for example  Karan Johar , AshutoshGowariker , Farhan Akhtar  and  Aditya Chopra .

Do you see hope among our contemporary filmmakers?

Even if we lose everything else we shouldn’t lose hope(laughs). Sanjay Leela Bhansali(whom I haven’t worked with so far), KaranJohar, Ashutosh Gowariker….they’re extremely talented. Technically our films have progressed. The same cannot be said about the content. And the problem is outside the film industry. Earlier  on we had ideals philosophies  and values upon which the heroes and villains of our films were based. But without sanskar it’s difficult to tell black from white. Film do not address themselves to social issues any longer. There’re no  Sujata or Paigham being made. Earlier the mill owner was the bad man and the farmer was good. We no longer know  who’s bad and good any longer!

To what do you attribute this aridity of moral values in art?

Somewhere our society’s collective morality is lost. There’s a kind of moral confusion in our society which reflects in our films. Filmmakers are hiding behind romance, ghost stories, murder mysteries and sex. No film is looking at social issues. Swades and Lakshya  were made .They flopped. We suffer from a lack of history and sanskar. When Lakshya which I wrote, flopped I felt the time wasn’t right for me to write screenplays right now. How can better socially relevant films be made if they don’t get the audiences’ support?But I intend to return to screenplay writing this year.

How do people like you intend to stop the desecration of aesthetics in Hindi cinema?

I’m not pessimistic   about the future. I feel things are  changing. If you listen to the film songs between 1985 and 1995 they were in extremely bad taste. I’d say comparatively things are better now. Gradually people  feel the need for an improvement  in lyrics and melodies. There’s a resistance to mediocrity. It may take another 5-6 years. But we’re moving towards a renaissance.

Your closing thoughts on the quality of lyrics today?

How I miss the masters!   Today only Lata Mangeshkar remains.  There’s no singer in this universe who can intone words the way she can.  Even if you don’t know the meaning of  a word you know by her expression. That’s what a lyricist craves for.

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