Friday, September 22, 2017

Meet the Morning Melody Man

It was early last year when we moved to SFV. Occupants were few and far between, and scattered. We were the sole family, not just on our floor but probably in the two floors below too. Enough of sannata  - more pronounced at night.

We would hear someone playing flute, fortunately early morning. For sure it was not Chaurasia, because there were repeated attempts at perfection.  Maybe, somebody is trying to be one.

But when the sound began to emanate from different directions each day, scenes of the horror movie, Bees Saal Baad began to converge upon my mind. “Have we by chance selected a complex haunted by ghosts?” After all most of it was forest, and several trees must have been chopped off mercilessly before construction. And who knows how many of these trees gave shelter to ghosts to bemoan the loss of their beloved.

The residents being small in number, the info network in SFV was at its best. It came to light that the flutist was none other than Pulkit Yadav, the watchman who greets you with an unfailing smile, and a Namaste as bonus. Or, the one who rendered a solo flute performance at SFV’s Independence Day celebrations. And the reason for the sound from different directions was that sometimes he was posted in Alder, at other times in Cedar, Oak or Maple.

Hailing from Bhagalpur in Bihar, Pulkit is one of the younger ones in a large family that subsisted on land cultivation and rearing cattle. As a young lad he was assigned to tend the cows – graze them on the open meadows, take a short nap under a tree, hum a number or two till it is time to take them back home. “All this while I cherished I had a bansuri too to re-live literally Kishan Kanhaiya.”

He set foot in Bangalore in 2012 to join the agency responsible for SFV security.  Away from his wife and six children, Pulkit found time, enough and to spare, to pursue his passion – try his hand at bansuri. A dream come true.

Carpentry work was in full swing in SFV.  At his request, one of the carpenters made a bansuri for him – though it turned out to be an apology for one. Later Pulkit himself made one and started practising. Initially he and his flute could never see eye to eye, but with time the bansuri yielded to his commands and released sounds closer to what he had wished. Thus began his association with the instrument. On his next visit to Bhagalpur he bought one made of bamboo, the real one, which he still holds close to his heart.

Does he play flute for the family when he visits home? Yes he does. Children are not that enamoured, but his wife does enjoy it. In fact she has retained one of his notes as the ring tone for her mobile phone.

“Have you attempted any film song?” I asked him.  “Yes, I tried the Pardesi… song. “Which one, Pardesiyon se na ankhiya milaana… from Jab Jab Phool Khile?” “No, Sir, Pardesi, Pardesi, jana nahin… Raja Hindustani.“ That’s on the positive side. Good. ‘But Sir, I am nowhere close to getting the tune,” he seemed a bit disillusioned at yet to make a breakthrough.

To encourage him I thought I would share the success story of another watchman, and narrated to him what Salil Chowdhury, the famous music director, had disclosed in a Vividh Bharati programme in the 1960s.

Whenever Salil Da stepped out of the recording studio, he would hear the Nepali watchman hum a rural tune as he went about his chores. Salil Da once asked him to sing it in full. He did and the Maestro was inspired. The result?  He composed a nice and melodious number, Chhota sa ghar hoga baadlon ki chhaaon mein – for Bimal Roy productions, Naukri, 1954. Moral: Even an ordinary person can sometimes be a source of inspiration to a learned man.

Ab mein har haalat mein himmat nahin haarunga Sahib,” Pulkit said as he sipped the last drop of tea and departed from my apartment.

V V Sundaram
Maple 3195

22 Sep 2017

1 comment:

Ari A said...

Very nicely written Sir!

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