Former Japanese PM Shinzo Abe, Late Singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam Awarded Padma Vibhushan

Former chief ministers Tarun Gogoi and Keshubhai Patel and former Union minister Ram Vilas Paswan have been awarded Padma Bhushan posthumously.

New Delhi: Former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe and late singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam have been honoured with India’s second-highest civilian award Padma Vibhushan this year, while former chief ministers Tarun Gogoi and Keshubhai Patel and former Union minister Ram Vilas Paswan have been awarded Padma Bhushan posthumously.

Former Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan is also among the 10 Padma Bhushan awardees announced on Monday, while no one has been named for the Bharat Ratna – India’s highest civilian award.

On the eve of the Republic Day, the Union home ministry said that President Ram Nath Kovind has approved the conferment of 119 Padma awards – seven Padma Vibhushan, 10 Padma Bhushan and 102 Padma Shri.

The awardees include 29 women and a transgender theatre artist, Matha B. Manjamma Jogati.

There are 10 persons from the category of foreigners, Non-Resident Indians (NRI), Persons of Indian Origin (PIO) PIO and Overseas Citizen of India (OCI), while 16 have been awarded posthumously.

Sand artist Sudarshan Sahoo has been honoured with Padma Vibhushan. Former Principal Secretary to the Prime Minister Nripendra Misra, religious leader Kalbe Sadiq (posthumous), and social worker Tarlochan Singh have been awarded Padma Bhushan.

Former governor late Mridula Sinha and former Union minister Bijoya Chakravarty are among Padma Shri winners.

The seven Padma Vibhushan awardees include Belle Monappa Hegde, an eminent cardiologist from Karnataka, Indian-American physicist Narinder Singh Kapany (posthumous), Islamic scholar Maulana Wahiduddin Khan and archaeologist B.B. Lal.

Balasubramaniam has been given the award posthumously.

The Padma Bhushan awardees include Carnatic musician Krishnan Nair Shantakumari Chithra, Kannada poet and playwright Chandrashekhar Kambara and industrialist Rajnikant Devidas Shroff.

The 102 Padma Shri awardees include Col Quazi Sajjad Ali Zahir, a veteran of the Bangladesh liberation war, artist Gulfam Ahmed from Uttar Pradesh, basketball player P Anitha from Tamil Nadu and litterateur Sujit Chattopadhyay from West Bengal.

Among the other awardees are table tennis player Mouma Das, physician from Punjab Rattan Lal Mittal, academician from Jammu and Kashmir Chaman Lal Sapru (posthumous) and social worker from Assam Birubala Rabha.

“Congratulations to all those who have been conferred the prestigious Padma Awards. Through People’s Padma, Modi govt is honouring the exceptional work of common people. May these awardees continue to serve the society and humanity with same passion,” home minister Amit Shah tweeted.

‘His Name Will Last for as Long as His Songs Do’: Cinematic Community Remembers SPB

“SPB is no more.” The text message I received as the news broke left me frozen.

Last evening MGM Healthcare, the Chennai hospital where legendary playback singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam was being treated, issued a statement that his condition had deteriorated in the preceding 24 hours, warranting maximal life support. He had tested positive for COVID-19 and been admitted to hospital on August 5, then tested negative on September 4, but had required continued medical care. He was 74.

All this considered, one would assume each of us grieving him would have been at least prepared for the echoing sense of loss we feel at his passing. As disbelief jostles with sadness and many of us turn to his song list (a formidable 40,000 in 16 Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Hindi), I tried to grasp how those in the cine-music field remember SPB or Balu – two nicknames by which he was fondly known.

Playback singer Chinmayi Sripada told me, “His life was a celebration. He celebrated everything, and he was celebrated. He was never restrained by the mould that a singer should only sing. He did everything. Shone. Thrived. He’s probably dancing away and singing in the heavens, entertaining the gods.” Sripada was referring to his screen appearances from as early as 1969 in Telugu, Tamil and Kananda films and TV programmes, his attempts at film production, music direction and even voice acting. She added that he “would live on through his music” and that “his music is not connected to his mortal body”.

Life, more than death, seems to be on the minds of those I spoke to. Film and indie music director and also band leader of The Casteless Collective, Tenma said, “Maybe some part of every SPB fan died today, but not his spirit. He occupies a historic space in the transition from theatre to cinema in Tamil Nadu. Like T.M. Soundarajan, he was the partial voice of the ‘Raja-part’ [a Tamil theatre term from the 1930s, for the lead-protagonist or hero]. He came in during the modern time when cinema became a popular medium, but even think of the intro songs he did for Rajini later on. When he sang, he exhibited all the characteristics the hero must demonstrate.”

On a personal note, he added, “Every music director has a checklist. For several, SPB would have been on that list, as he was on mine. It’ll never happen now…”

Also read: S.P. Balasubrahmanyam – the Inimitable Impressionist

Another young music director, Anirudh Ravichander who composed the music for Rajinikanth’s last two releases Petta and Darbar, both of which SPB sings in, tweeted about his time in the recording studio with SPB.

For most Rajinikanth fans, SPB is an alternate voice for the Superstar, having sung, as Tenma pointed out, many of his intro-songs (the track that introduces the hero in each film). It became a long lasting Tamil cinema tradition, broken only rarely. In memory of this, Rajini posted a two-minute video to his social media handle in Tamil, saying, “Today is a sorrowful day. There cannot be anyone in the country who has not enjoyed SPB’s voice. Yet, those who knew him personally, loved him more than they did his music. His humanity, the way he treated everyone fairly and without prejudice, were the reasons for that. He was a loving man. A hundred years from now his voice will still reverberate in our ears, but it saddens me deeply that the possessor of that voice is gone.” He also extended his condolences to the family.

But there is a duo, iconic and unforgettable in cine music: the era of Raja-Balu. As ‘Isaignani’ Ilaiyaraja swept to irrefutable popularity by the early 1980s, upstaging the hold of predecessors like MSV with his unabashed mixing of western music including even funk notes with Tamil folk music, SPB, his friend even before Raja entered the industry, would become a steadfast presence in his compositions. In those years Raja’s eclecticism shone, as did SPB’s versatility in delivering what was required of him.

They have had over 2,000 songs together. Though the two have had intermittent bitterness in the time that has passed, going by their public appearances and mentions of each other, their friendship has endured for five decades. In the early days of SPB’s illness, Raja released a video for him. His words “ezhunthu va, Balu” – that I translate here inadequately as “Get up. Come back to us Balu” – became a catchphrase for those who love the music the two of them created.

Condolence messages from cinema personal have poured in. Kamal Hassan, for whom too SPB has sung, said in his video statement, “Few receive the acclaim due to them in their lifetimes. My annan SPB was one of them. Of the fans who bid him farewell in a downpour of praise – I am one of them…I say my thanks to this brother who allowed me a small share in this praise showered upon him…he reigned as the voice of four generations of heroes, for seven generations to come, may his name last.”

I reserve the last memorial statement for someone who must be feeling SPB’s loss the keenest, his son and film producer S.P. Charan. In an emotional address to the press in both Tamil and Telugu (SPB was from Konetammapeta in present-day Andhra Pradesh) he thanked fans and the staff of MGM Healthcare. He said, “SPB belongs to all of us. His name will last for as long as his songs do. As long as each of you are remain, we still have our father.”

To single out one SPB song from his life’s work is hard. For those still processing his death, I leave you here with ‘Madai Thirandu’ from Nizhalgal, 1980 – a Raja-Balu number and a personal favourite – so we may remember him in defiant celebration.

Bharathy Singaravel is a culture reporter and interested in the overlaps between Tamil cinema, protest music and politics.

S.P. Balasubrahmanyam – the Inimitable Impressionist

A polyglot, a polymath, a socialite and a contemporary artist across generations – SPB is a unique cultural treasure who transcends comparison.

He came into the music industry so long ago that the only record of his Tamil debut (Hotel Ramba, 1969, never released) is his own memory, recounted in a conversation for Doordarshan Podhigai, decades later. Sripathi Panditharadhyula Balasubrahmanyam, or SPB, as millions of his fans across generations know him, is no more. He did not pass away at the end of a long career trajectory that rose and waned; it only rose. He is among those unique artists who has left behind a body of work rich enough to eulogise, and still possessed a magical voice that could traverse emotions and octaves with ease, and evoked wonder without a filter of nostalgia.

Born to Harikatha exponent S.P. Sambamurthy in 1946 in erstwhile North Arcot (present day Tiruvallur, Tamil Nadu), SPB’s career ambition was to be an engineer. While he was unable to complete his studies at the JNTU College of Engineering, he did develop an interest in singing competitively. It was during one such competition that he was spotted by the composer S.P. Kothandapani, who gave him his first opportunity as a playback singer in Telugu. He was musically inclined as a child but did not receive extensive formal instruction. Though he often expressed regret over not being a ‘trained’ singer, it is interesting to imagine what formal training might have done to his vocal adventurism, which often flirted with the limits of a raga, and was a perfect fit for film music. Not unlike Kishore Kumar.

He burst into the scene fully formed in 1966. There was no learning curve or tentative beginnings. The virtuosity was undeniable. And the emotional intelligence – the part of the voice that clicks with the words and not just the music – was precocious. What was peculiar in this debut in the Telugu fantasy ‘Sri Sri Sri Maryada Ramanna’ (1967) was how much his voice resembled that of a legend of those times. Those who realised that this singer was not Ghantasala could not shake the feeling that he was doing an impression of Ghantasala in his prime and in a decidedly adventurous mood.

When the ‘Jane Eyre’-inspired ‘Shanti Nilayam’ came out in Tamil in 1969, his rendition of ‘Iyarkai ennum’ was a burst of fresh air – a voice that could carry an A-list star’s shenanigans and share the load that T.M. Soundararajan and P.B. Srinivas carried almost exclusively. The same year, he sang playback for former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.G. Ramachandran (MGR). And in 1971, he did the impossible – singing ‘Pottu vaitha mugamo’ with enough gusto to feed the signature, over-the-top expressionism of Sivaji Ganesan. The voice, though, was still very Ghantasala. It hit consonants hard and favoured a sharpness and reediness in the lower octave.

To be fair, the movies he sang in and the stars he sang for belonged front and centre in a particular era – an era that was on the cusp of major change. Cinematic forces like K. Balachander were only a few years away from making movies that would shift industry tectonics. And a troubadour from Theni was about to be christened Ilaiyaraja, and go on to redefine film music. Did SPB have more than a younger Ghantasala in his vocal cords? If so, how long would that transition take?

Not long, apparently. This was the case not just the first time around, but with every transition in movies and music over the next four decades.

Brilliance, at scale

By lending his voice prodigiously and with a boggling range of expression to music directors large and small, SPB became one of the most coveted voices in the country.

That Sivaji Ganesan song was such a hit that there was no real need to change anything. But SPB did, for the song ‘Ninaithaal naan vanam’ in the Balachander-directed ‘Naangu Suvargal’ (1971). And in 1973, with the release of ‘Arangetram’, which literally means ‘debut’ (starring Kamal Haasan in his first role as an adult), a transition was complete. SPB’s rendition of ‘Kadavul amaithu vaitha medai’ – a song of desperate cheer masking heartbreak – broke any invisible gates holding back SPB’s range of singing. An exciting era had begun, with a voice large enough to carry it across.

This virtuosity over time embraced classical music as well. ‘Shankarabharanam’, an international-award winning 1980 film directed by K. Vishwanath, had SPB sing for the protagonist, a Carnatic classical vocalist. The music, by K.V. Mahadevan, was necessarily raga-based and pushed SPB into an interesting zone. He won a national award and a Nandi award for the vocals. ‘Dorakuna’, the final track, is a fine example of how SPB infuses theatrics in a classical setting.

Playlist: 15 Songs for Which S.P. Balasubrahmanyam Won Awards

One of the most striking aspects of SPB’s career was his sheer output: over 40,000 songs in 16 languages. Admittedly, most of his work was in Telugu, Tamil and Kannada, but his forays into Malayalam or Hindi are not the afterthoughts that one might imagine. His debut in Tamil, Telugu, and Kannada all occurred within three years of the release of his first song. His work in Hindi won a national award, in the film ‘Ek Duuje Ke Liye’, as well as Filmfare awards for ‘Maine Pyaar Kiya’, ‘Hum Aapke Hain Kaun’; through the 1990s, he was the voice of Salman Khan.

There is a note worth making here on SPB’s work in Bollywood: voicing Kamal Haasan in ‘Ek Duuje Ke Liye’ turned out to be a stroke of serendipity. While Kamal broke the decidedly racist cliché of a ‘Madrasi’ with his charisma, SPB made the accent, until then the butt of jokes in conversation, acceptable in song. For a native Hindi speaker, ‘Tere mere beech mein’ is a hard pill to swallow. The cadence of the words is just a little off, but the emotion comes through so effectively that it is no longer an aberration. It is simply an original voice, a new form of expression.

It can be argued that SPB’s popularity in Hindi influenced an important cross-pollination of talent in the next generation. The south celebrated Udit Narayan, Sukhwinder Singh, Sonu Nigam, Daler Mehndi, Adnan Sami, Vishal Dadlani and an impeccable Sunidhi Chauhan across Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam and – in Sonu Nigam’s case – a whole lot of Kannada.

And South Indian singers in the north are no longer the exception. Shankar Mahadevan, Hariharan, Mahalakshmi Iyer, K.K, Benny Dayal and Rahman himself are mainstays and occasionally, intentionally or otherwise, tend to add a little garnish of the south when singing in Hindi.

The social butterfly

SPB has been generous with his time and a charming on-screen presence on TV. In sponsored mega-events, in numerous interviews and as a benevolent, indulgent judge in talent shows. He built a reputation of universal likability, which was broken briefly with a very public disagreement with Ilaiyaraja.

The SPB-Ilaiyaraja combo is one for the ages. It began in the 1980s. The Bharathiraja-directed ‘Nizhalgal’ (1980) launched Vairamuthu as a poet for a new generation of Tamils. The song ‘Idhu oru ponmalai pozhudhu’ was a landmark in music, voice and lyrics. This was followed by a stream of hits in Telugu and Tamil. Another inflection point for these artists is ‘Mouna Ragam’, the brilliant Mani Ratnam drama that released in 1986. The song ‘Manram vandha’ is a study in vocal restraint.

The string of hits did raise a recurring question: is this an Ilaiyaraja song or is it an SPB song? In later years, both would work less with each other. Seemingly out of the blue, in 2017, Ilaiyaraja sent a legal notice to SPB when he was in the middle of a tour entitled ‘SPB50’, over copyright infringement. SPB did not sing Ilaiyaraja’s songs on stage for the next year or so, when they made up and came together to perform in a fundraiser.

The polymath

Despite a ubiquitous and very identifiable voice, SPB was a prolific dubbing artist and voice actor. He has been the de facto voice of Kamal Haasan in the Telugu versions of the actor’s films. He has lent his voice to stars in various languages. He brings great gusto to voice acting, as an avid mimicry artist and occasional actor himself.

His forays into acting are charming and his on-screen ease is indicative of a proclivity for performance. One of his most popular roles is in the Shankar blockbuster ‘Kadhalan’ (1994). He played the protagonist Prabhu Deva’s empathetic father, even featuring in one dance video (below).

His role as a single father struggling to connect with his daughter in ‘Keladi Kanmani’ was poignant and understated. The movie, a commercial success, also featured a ‘breathless’ song in which SPB seems to sing impossible stretches of the track in a single breath. As a music director, his most popular album was the movie ‘Sigaram’ from 1991, in which he also played the lead. The song ‘Idho idho’ is a good reflection of his 1990s melodic sensibilities.

In that decade, Telugu cinema underwent a resurgence. The output was immense and, if one went by the numbers, so was the quality. A-listers worked more and were less insecure about release dates. It was a golden era for comedy. Non-A-listers had big hits, too – Rajasekhar, Jagapathi Babu, even an up-and-coming J.D. Chakravarthy. And a common thread in all of these was the SPB song – incredibly varied for every genre but effective all the same.

Some examples off the cuff are his songs in Nagarjuna-starrers ‘Shiva’ and ‘Nirnayam’, the Venkatesh blockbusters ‘Bobbili Raja’ and ‘Kshanakshanam’, a string of Rajendra Prasad hits including ‘April 1 Vidudhala’ and ‘Mister Pellam’. His voice – both for romance and the mandatory ‘item numbers’ in Chiranjeevi’s films – bolstered the superstar’s appeal.

Speaking of superstars, SPB has been the voice of Rajinikanth’s ‘entry song’ in all the latter’s biggest hits. From ‘Annamalai’ through ‘Baasha’, ‘Arunachalam’ and beyond. The most recognisable of these is his ‘Oruvan oruvan mudhalali’ in Muthu (1995). This song is also one of his early collaborations with A.R. Rahman, who was terraforming film music not just with sound engineering but also by breaking down the dependence on a small handful of singers. Ilaiyaraja tried this in the 1980s, without much success. Even in some of his blockbuster hits, like ‘Madura marikozhunthu’, it was clear that the song was intended for someone with a more flamboyant vocal range.

Before Rahman’s transition into a new sound, SPB delivered some timeless melodies for him in ‘Kadhal Desam’ and in ‘Duet’; ‘Anjali Anjali’ comes to mind. Three years later, he proved that he could lend voice to more than melody. The song ‘Thanga thamarai magale’ in ‘Minsara Kanavu’ (1997) was unique. As Balachander’s cinema did for SPB in the mid- to late-1970s, this song broke another sound barrier for SPB and won him a national award.x

A polyglot, a polymath, a socialite and a contemporary artist across generations – SPB is a unique cultural treasure who transcends comparison. This impressionist, who could imbibe the spirit of changing times, with a voice that refused to age is and forever will be inimitable.

Anand Venkateswaran is a former journalist. He now heads communications for Lendroid and writes about FinTech, film and books.

Playlist: 15 Songs for Which S.P. Balasubrahmanyam Won Awards

The legendary singer passed away on Friday at the age of 74.

New Delhi: Legendary playback singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam passed away on Friday at the age of 74 after a long battle with COVID-19. The singer recorded over 40,000 songs in 16 Indian languages, winning numerous awards and honours during his 50-year career.

Considering the range and variety of songs recorded by SPB, as he was popularly known, it is practically impossible to list his ‘best songs’. The Wire is compiling a list of 15 songs in Telugu, Tamil, Kannada and Hindi for which the singer won national, state and industry awards.

1. ‘Aayiram Nilave Vaa’ from Adimai Penn (1969, Tamil)

2. ‘Omkara Nadanu’ from Sankarabharanam (1979, Telugu)

3. ‘Ithu Oru Pon Malai’ from Nizhalgal (1980, Tamil)

4. ‘Tere Mere Beech Mein’ from Ek Duuje Ke Liye (1981, Hindi)

5. ‘Vedam Anuvanuvuna’ from Saagara Sangamam (1983, Telugu)

6. ‘Cheppaalani Undi’ from Rudraveena (1988, Telugu)

7. ‘Ade Neevu Ade Nenu’ from Abhinandana (1987, Telugu)

8. ‘Dil Deewana’ from Maine Pyar Kiya (1989, Hindi)

9. ‘Mannil Indha’ from Keladi Kanmani (1990, Tamil)

10. ‘Kanna En Selai’ from Jai Hind (1994, Tamil)

11. ‘Umandu Ghumandu Ghana Gar Je Badara’ from Sangeetha Sagara Ganayogi Panchakshara Gavai (1995, Kannada)

12. ‘Thanga Thamarai’ from Minsaara Kanavu (1996, Tamil)

13. ‘Giri Siri Nela Hola’ from O Mallige (1997, Kannada)

14. ‘Nenapu Nenapu’ from Savi Savi Nenapu (2007, Kannada)

15. ‘Thala Ethi’ from Mahatma (2009, Telugu)

Singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam Passes Away

The popular playback singer contracted COVID-19 in early August and was put on life support on September 24.

Chennai: Popular playback singer S.P. Balasubrahmanyam died on Friday. He was admitted to a hospital after contracting COVID-19 more than a month ago. His health took a turn for the worse on Thursday and he was placed on life support at a hospital in Chennai.

The 74-year-old Balasubrahmanyam, popularly known as SPB and Balu, was admitted to the MGM Healthcare hospital on August 5. Over a career spanning five decades, he sang more than 40,000 songs in Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam and Hindi among other languages.

“His condition in the last 24 hours has deteriorated further warranting maximal life support and he is extremely critical,” a statement issued by MGM Healthcare said on Thursday.

Long fight with COVID-19

The singer was admitted to the hospital with mild COVID-19 symptoms, but his health deteriorated for the first time on August 13 and he was put on life support and moved to the Intensive Care Unit.

On August 19, he was put on ECMO besides ventilator and a day after, when he remained critical, people from all walks of life, including celebrities and the general public, came together to pray for his early recovery and his condition stabilised soon.

Towards the end of last month, he underwent passive physiotherapy and later “actively participated in physiotherapy” and he was fully awake and responsive during that phase.

A multi-disciplinary team, comprising specialists from internal medicine, pulmonology and infectious diseases among others, took care of him. Also, the team actively collaborated with international experts from reputed centres in the US and the UK that saw a slew of COVID-19 patients requiring ECMO support.

On September 3, the hospital had said that he was stable, conscious, responsive and continued to show clinical progress and days later it said his condition warranted an extended stay in the ICU requiring ECMO and ventilator support.

Legendary career

Born in Nellore to a Telugu family on June 4, 1946, Balasubrahmanyam developed an early interest towards music. According to The News Minute, he had no formal training in any kind of music:

“His entry into playback singing was an accident which played out both ways for him in the industry – people admired his pitch-perfect rendition but then he would also not remember the impulsive improvisations (Sangathis) if the composer told him to re-sing it the next time since he didn’t know to mark notations.”

Over the next several decades, he would record over 40,000 songs in 16 Indian languages. He holds the Guinness World Record for the highest number of songs by a singer. He also acted in various movies and dubbed for actors such as Kamal Haasan.

He received numerous honours, including the Padma Bhushan, India’s third highest civilian award, in 2011. Balasubrahmanyam is survived by his Savitri, daughter Pallavi and son Charan.

Tributes and condolences poured in for the legendary singer from many quarters.

(With PTI inputs)