Retaining the soul of the song is important: Vaibhavi Merchant
Vijay Ganguly, Vaibhavi Merchant
What we miss now is the performance of the actor, the expression, the tehrav and ada of actors: Vijay Ganguly
Ganguly expresses, “Earlier, people would watch Bollywood songs and whatever appeared on TV. Now, because there’s so much exposure, people are watching reality shows and dance reels on their phones all the time. For us to keep up with that and entertain the audience through dance is a challenge.” He continues, “The only way I can do that is by telling the story authentically through my songs. We find bits of the story that can be included in the song.”
Chinni Prakash: People don’t have the time and patience to watch long songs
Chinni Prakash, who won the National Film Award for the song Azeem-O-Shaan Shahenshah (Jodhaa Akbar, 2008), says, “People don’t have the time and patience to watch long songs these days. When I was actively working in the ’80s and ’90s, we would have a new dance form every 10 years, while now we have 10 new dance forms to work with each year. It’s confusing for any choreographer and dancer. By the time you learn one dance form, the trend has changed.”
The veteran choreographer shares, “Even in a four-hour film like Dhurandhar 2, you can barely see any dance moves.” Prakash continues, “Back in our days, I had choreographed songs for Prem Loka (1987) featuring Juhi Chawla; the film had 10 songs shot in two languages. Today you have the opportunity, but which platform do you show on, because dance has vanished from films, the songs that people performed at weddings, where are they? I’m afraid that in the coming times there won’t be any dance in films, it will only be limited to reels.”




