The story is that Mohammed Rafi used to spend many of his childhood days at his brother Mohammed Deen's barbershop in Punjab. It was some of the patrons of the shop that first listened to this golden voice. Young Rafi used to sing the songs of a `fakir' with perfect `sur.' The elders who used to frequent the shop used to ask Rafi to sit in the shop and sing for them. The barbershop was Rafi's first stage, the customers his first audience.
"Almost everyone who frequent my shop don't really mind waiting and listening to Rafi Saab's songs."
After his schooling, at the Haji Isa Haji Moosa School, Azad slipped into his father's profession.
"I was just average in studies. In 1977, I migrated to Bahrain and assisted my brother in his salon there. For nearly 23 years I stuck on there."
The Gulf was really where Azad's musical talent blossomed. And very soon this unassuming singer became a hot favourite. He was featured on television and even had a ghazal album recorded there.
What makes Azad's singing so special is his accent, diction and pronunciation that matches Rafi's closely.
"By now I know more than 300 of Rafi Saab's songs by heart. But I always rely on my notes when on stage, just to be safe." Recently Azad sang a song in the Malayalam album `Dik Dik' and is now hoping to make a career in this field. "It is not yet very late, I think. I'm now trying to make up for lost time. Inshah Allah, I think I'll be able to do it."
K. PRADEEP
Printer friendly
page
Send this article to Friends by
E-Mail
Metro Plus
Bangalore
Chennai
Coimbatore
Delhi
Hyderabad
Kochi
Madurai
Mangalore
Pondicherry
Tiruchirapalli
Thiruvananthapuram
Vijayawada
Visakhapatnam