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bachpan's geet heaven,Thanks Ameen&Radio ceylon{when A.I.R.banned film songs}

 



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When All India Radio banned film music ...

In 1952, B.V. Keskar, the Minister of Information and Broadcasting and head of All India Radio (AIR), banned Hindi film songs because he believed they were vulgar, cheap, and Westernized, and threatened Indian classical music traditionsHe thought that film music was corrupting the younger generation and hindering the cultural growth of a young nation. He also believed that appreciation of classical music had fallen and was on the point of extinction. 
Mint Lounge
In 1952, Hindi film songs were banned on All India Radio
13 Jul 2018 — By Radhika Iyengar. LAST PUBLISHED 13.07.2018 | 03:35 PM IST. It was in 1952 that the minister of information and broadcasting (I&B) of newly independent India, B.V. Keskar, decided that All India Radio (AIR)—the information and entertainment lifeline of the nation—would not air film songs as they were degenerate and far too “Westernized". He believed they would hinder the cultural growth of a young nation on the cusp of a bright future. Instead, he proposed, the country could lend its ears to highbrow classical music. advertisement.
Wikipedia
B. V. Keskar - Wikipedia
Keskar deemed film songs vulgar, cheap and Westernised. This led him to initially impose a 10 percent quota on airtime for film music and subsequently to ban the broadcasting of film music on All India Radio. Film music had a growing audience in India and Keskar's decision to ban it on All India Radio allowed Radio Ceylon to capitalise on the opportunity. Radio Ceylon, which had launched its Hindi Service in 1950, attained great popularity throughout India with its programs like the Binaca Geetmala, Purani Filmo Ke Geet and Aap Hi Ke Geet. It even set up a Radio Advertising Services in Bombay to rake in advertising revenue.
The Indian Express
When All India Radio banned Bollywood songs in 1952 for ...
13 Apr 2023 — But why did AIR ban Hindi film music in the first place? BV Keskar, who was then the Minister of Information and Broadcasting, believed that film music was “westernized” and Indians needed a dose of homegrown classical music. He was quoted by The Hindu saying, “We must make (ourselves) familiar with our traditional music.” He believed that the appreciation of classical music had “fallen” and was “on the point of extinction,” and the popularity of film music was ruining the younger generation as they were being influenced by non-Indian elements.
Moneycontrol
Ameen Sayani's Geetmala: How the British and a ban birthed ...
21 Feb 2024 — Keskar, who was a Hindustani classical music connoisseur, filled airtime hours with Hindustani and Carnatic classical music. In his most divisive move, Keskar ordered that AIR stations stop broadcasting Hindi film songs because he believed that these songs' growing popularity posed a threat to Indian classical music traditions,” writes Huacuja Alonso.
De Gruyter
In October 1952, BV Keskar, the newly appointed minister of ...
CHAPTER 3. THE “SOUND STANDARDS” OF. A NEW INDIA. In October 1952, B. V. Keskar, the newly appointed minister of infor- mation and broadcasting and de facto head of the national radio. network, All India Radio (AIR), took to the airwaves to address the. public's disconcerting taste for Hindi film songs. These songs, he remarked, are. “becoming more and more vulgar and their tunes are concocted [of] irrational. cocktails of western dance tunes.” 1 At the time, AIR's various radio stations. dedicated a few peak hours daily to film-song broadcasts. The “predominance. ... 86 MUSIC AND POSTINDEPENDENCE RADIO.
Keskar initially imposed a 10% quota on airtime for film music, and then banned it altogether. This allowed Radio Ceylon to capitalize on the opportunity, and its Hindi Service became very popular with programs like Binaca Geetmala, Purani Filmo Ke Geet, and Aap Hi Ke Geet. 
Why are Hindi songs popular?
Why did Radio Ceylon play Hindi songs?
Who replaced Keskar as Minister of Information?

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In 1952, India's Information and Broadcasting Minister B.V. Keskar banned Hindi film music from All India Radio (AIR)He believed that film songs were vulgar, cheap, and Westernized, and that they would hinder the cultural growth of a young nation. Instead, he proposed that the country listen to highbrow classical music. 

1952
There was a time in 1952 when All India Radio (AIR) imposed a ban on film music and it was in these years that Radio Ceylon and their popular show Binaca Geetmala, hosted by Ameen Sayani, became the saviour for Hindi film music lovers.13 Apr 2023

WE MUSIC AFICIONADOS WERE FORCED TO DEPEND ON CEYLON RADIO(LATER BECAME SRI LANKA ) AND GOA RADIO (UNDER PORTUGUESE RULE THEN)FOR BEAUTIFUL SONGS😭😭

Golden Era of Hindi Films


22 Feb 2024 — All India Radio banned Hindi film music in the 1950s, as it tried to orchestrate a new national culture around traditional classical music.

29 May 2022 — Radio Ceylon — the Sri Lankan channel India turned to when AIR banned film music in 1952.

30 Nov 2012 — FOR SEVERAL YEARS BEGINNING IN 1952All India Radio (AIR) stopped broadcasting film music because the then minister for information and .
13 Aug 2018 — In this essay, I look at the practice of writing requests for Hindi film songs to the radio, particularly during the first two decades after ...

24 May 2010 — Emissora de Goa , Pangim - the old radio ... songs on the radio. Jim Reeves, Cliff ... Film epics like Guns of Navarone, Lawrence of Arabia, 


Lotus Film Goa•24K views · 21:47 · Go to channel ... 'I fought the Portuguese by starting a radio station' | I remember how Goa ... Japan 4K - ...

18 Oct 2015 — The audio library at All India Radio, once the Emissora de Goa, hosts some rare treasures of years bygone — from jazz, the blues, pop, ...



When All India Radio banned film music from its broadcasts
Posted on July 14th, 2018

By Radhika Iyengar/Livemint Courtesy NewsIn.Asia

New Delhi, July 14: It was in 1952 that the Minister of Information and Broadcasting (I&B) of newly independent India, B.V. Keskar, decided that All India Radio (AIR)—the information and entertainment lifeline of the nation—would not air film songs as they were degenerate and far too Westernized”. He believed they would hinder the cultural growth of a young nation on the cusp of a bright future. Instead, he proposed, the country could lend its ears to highbrow classical music.

In an article in The Hindu (19 July 1953), Keskar argued that the country’s appreciation for classical music had fallen” and was on the point of extinction”—particularly in north India. The onus of making his countrymen intimate with (classical music)”, therefore, was bestowed on AIR. We must make (ourselves) familiar with our traditional music,” he declared.

When All India Radio banned film music from its broadcasts

(Dr.B.V.Keskar, the then Information Broadcasting Minister is in the middle wearing the Indian achkan) 

In 1952, the Indian National Congress party had just had a landslide victory in the first general election and Keskar—a staunch Brahmin and a classical Indian music purist—was given charge of the I&B ministry. To his mind, Indian film songs were straying from their responsibility of instilling national pride in people. The lyrics, aside from being in Urdu, were generally ‘erotic’,”writes radio historian David Lelyveld in Upon The Subdominant: Administering Music On All-India Radio. In addition, there was a steady rise in the use of Western instruments and Western melodies in the songs, which Keskar identified with a lower stage of human evolution”.

David Lelyveld, South Asian historian who wrote on the ban on film music.

Songs like Tadbeer Se Bigdi Hui Taqdeer Bana Le, ghazal which S.D. Burman turned into an upbeat, guitar-sporting number for Baazi (1951), and Mur Mur Ke Na Dekh for Shree 420, 1955, which featured an orchestra of Western instruments and had flamenco-style tunes, would not have passed Keskar’s test. He wanted songs that were infused with the sound of the flute, tanpura or sitar instead. And so it was chiefly through radio, he thought, that the country’s musical heritage could be rescued. Keskar would go on to become the longest-serving I&B minister from 1952-62.

To begin with, he mandated that all songs aired on AIR would be screened, and, according to Lelyveld, he imposed a quota of 10 percent of all program time”. In addition, Keskar ensured that if a film song was played, the film’s title would not be announced, since he considered that advertising. Only the singer’s name would be mentioned.

Amin Sayani speaking in the Binaca Geetmala program on Radio Ceylon

The film industry was up in arms, of course. Filmfare magazine characterized Keskar as a devious man whose decision was a calculated blow at the reputation of the Indian film industry, as much as one aimed at ousting film music from the market” (August 1952 issue). In response, film producers who owned the rights to the songs decided to rescind the broadcast licences given to AIR. And, as Keskar anticipated, film music completely disappeared from radio within a mere three months. The void was filled by AIR broadcasting classical music.

Across the shore, Radio Ceylon rose to the occasion—and the opportunity. It created the legendary musical countdown Binaca Geetmala—a show entirely dedicated to Indian film songs. Every Wednesday, Indian listeners would tune into Radio Ceylon and listen to their favourite songs with their favourite show host—the iconic and charming Ameen Sayani, who would engage them with complementary film trivia.

Legendary announcers of Radio Ceylon in the 1950s

A former editor of Femina, Sathya Saran, who was a young girl growing up in Guwahati at the time, recalls what the show meant to her. Every Wednesday, I would go and sit near the radio from 8-9pm to listen to Binaca Geetmala,” she reminisces over the phone. I had this little black diary in which I wrote down every song that played, how many times it was featured, whether it had gone up or down—I would keep tabs, and always sing along, because I knew all the lyrics. And Ameen Sayani was like god to me. I would hang on to every word he said.” Geetmala ran from 1952 to 1988.

In 2010, Sayani, in an interview with Aswin Punathambekar (professor of communication studies at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor), recounted how his team would record the show on tapes every single day. And every week’s quota used to fly by Swiss Air, Air Ceylon or Air India to Colombo. Sometimes, we did get into trouble, especially with Geet Mala, because with Geet Mala we were not supposed to record too much in advance. The popularity poll had to reflect a current mood…(Binaca Geetmala) became an absolute rage… Just like how the streets would be empty when B. R. Chopra’s Mahabharat (1988) or Ramanand Sagar’s Ramayan (1986) would be on television, the same thing happened to Geet Mala... Wednesdays came to be known as Geet Mala day.”

As Radio Ceylon’s popularity grew in India, Keskar’s influence waned and the government was forced to lift the ban. In 1957, Vividh Bharati was conceptualized as a service on AIR that offered non-stop film music broadcast. Vividh Bharati had a tremendous blend of heritage and modernity, parampara and pragati, let’s say. And this soon became quite popular,” noted Sayani in the 2010 interview. By 1967, Vividh Bharati had turned commercial and began accepting advertisements. By the late 1970s, it had become a cultural behemoth, functioning as the primary source of entertainment in Indian cities.

Keskar would be outraged if he heard the music the Indian film industry makes today, but it is ironic that some of the country’s most iconic and memorable songs, produced during the golden era of Hindi cinema”, were once considered objectionable and would have possibly been stifled by one man’s draconian policies if a radio channel from a neighboring country hadn’t stepped in.

 

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A TRUE LOVE STORY BETWEEN MY FRIEND AND RADIO CEYLON'S LADY ANNOUNCER :-

when there was no internet ,no t.v , my friend got in love with an announcer of Radio ceylon in 1960's,without ever seeing her,just because he got attracted to her sweet voice.

IT STARTED AS :-

13 Aug 2018 — In this essay, I look at the practice of writing requests for Hindi film songs to the radio, particularly during the first two decades after ...

Luckily she responded in positive .exchanged photos -may be because he was in a good professional job 
by the time we were both posted to a mid east country  under Gov: to GOV:treaty when i lost contact with him ,i think they got married thanks to minister keskar banning hindi film music on A.I.R from 1952 saying it is vulgar!!


When something good comes out of something bad, it can be called serendipity, which is the idea that a beneficial outcome comes from one or more chance events. The expression "every cloud has a silver lining" is also often used to describe this.









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