HomeEntertainmentMohammed Rafi Centenary: Man with a velvet voice & his golden pairing with composers

Mohammed Rafi Centenary: Man with a velvet voice & his golden pairing with composers

100th birth anniversary of Mohammed Rafi: How the legendary playback singer, who turned 100 on December 24, rose, shone and faded out in the Hindi film industry, where he alone possessed a singular & diverse voice & range, bringing success to heroes great and ordinary.

December 25, 2024 / 10:42 IST
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The late legendary singer Mohammed Rafi turned 100 years old on December 24, 2024. (Photo via X)
The late legendary singer Mohammed Rafi turned 100 years old on December 24, 2024. (Photo via X)

Dilip Kumar, in his memoir The Substance and the Shadow (2014), recalls an incident from 1962, soon after the conflict at the Indo-China border, where he and Mohd Rafi were present to entertain the beleaguered jawans of the Border Security Force. A day prior to their show, Rafi lost his voice owing to the severe cold causing throat infection. A teary-eyed Rafi was inconsolable at the thought of letting down the jawans who were sending song suggestions on chits of paper to them. Kumar served Rafi a concoction of ginger and honey drink, which seemed to work. The show did go on. In the years to come, Mohammed Rafi would go on to earn the moniker: Voice of God.

In his Foreword in Sujata Dev’s book Mohammed Rafi: Voice of a Nation (2013), the legendary actor wrote about the man with the angelic, velvet voice: “Mohammad Rafi was my voice in practically all my memorable films. He was also the voice of all the leading men of Hindi cinema who enjoyed great popularity with the masses in their time.” The “humble, unpretentious, and unaffected by adulation” Mohd Rafi, a “karmayogi”, had what Dilip Kumar calls a “God given ability to mould and adapt his rendering” to a number of factors, from the film’s setting, given situation and character’s mood. “…with Rafi Bhai it was a mystical bonding as if he was a part of me when he sang for me, knowing without being told how I would perform the song during the filming of the sequence.”

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Seventh among eight children, young Pheeko, who was born on December 24 in Kotla Sultan Singh village, 15 km from Amritsar, and who turned 100 today, came to be called Mohammad Rafi, literally The Exalted One. Aged 12, Pheeko (urf Rafi), along with his family, joined his father in Lahore in 1936. Instead of school, he joined his elder brother’s salon as a barber but music kept its pull on him. He followed and listened to a singing mendicant, with his ektara, who passed by the shop daily. Come March 1943, Rafi successfully appeared for an audition at the studios of All India Radio, Lahore.

In Lahore, Rafi obtained taleem (training) under Bade Ghulam Ali, Chhote Ghulam Ali, Barkat Ali Khan, Abdul Wahid Khan. He sang in mehfils and fairs. A new music composer Shyam Sunder was looking for a fresh voice for a then upcoming Punjabi film, Gul Baloch. He recorded his first playback song, a duet with Zeenat Begum, Goriye Ni Heeriye Ni. The film released in 1944, when Rafi was packing his bags for Bombay, where lay his future but where even findinf Rs 5 to pay the rent was difficult.