And when he first won the Filmfare Award for Best Music Director, an honour that came to him after two decades of hard work, excitement evaded him because it was not for any of his raga-based song, the ones he held dearer to him.
The revelations are made in 'R D Burmania : Panchamemoirs', published by notionpress.Com and authored by Chaitanya Padukone, a veteran showbiz journalist who has compiled his works as a scribe and shared anecdotes from his meetings with the composer.
"It's a fact that the masses get turned on, as the songs also have seductive glamour-repeat visual value. But, honestly, at times, I hate composing cabaret songs because there is no soulful melody or inspiring lyrics in it. Whenever I compose raga-based melodies, I derive total creative satisfaction. Classical music is my forte," Padukone quotes Burman.
"When the thumri-based raga song 'Humein tumse pyar kitna' composed by RDB and sung by Begum Parveen Sultana merited a Filmfare Award, it was a loud testimony to all those who doubted his ability to conjure up classical numbers. This explains why RDB was not all that exhilarated when he won his first-ever Filmfare Award trophy for Best Music Score in 1983, which had eluded him for over two decades," he writes.
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However, when Pancham-da won his second consecutive
Filmfare Award for producer Devi Dutt's 'Masoom' (1983), he was delighted.
"Because this time there were three soul-stirring classical songs, especially the RDB composition 'Do Naina aur Ek Kahani' which fetched the national award and the Filmfare award for mellifluous singer Arti Mukherjee," according to the book.
"Although RDB had composed disco-theme songs for movies like 'Sanam Teri Kasam', 'Rocky', and even 'Jawani Deewani', he was not particularly fascinated with that genre. When I quizzed him, he said, "It's only because the situation warranted a disco kind of rhythm metre that I am compelled to compose.
The book has a foreword by acclaimed filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali and epilogue penned by industry veteran Mahesh Bhatt.
The book also includes tributes and anecdotes shared by the likes of Amitabh Bachchan, Rishi Kapoor, late Rajesh Khanna, Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle, A R Rahman, among several others who were associated with Burman.