Anand Bakshi remains the most successful lyricist of Hindi cinema. He came to Hindi cinema in 1956 but found real success as a lyricist in 1965 with Jab Jab Phool Khile in which every song composed by Kalyanji-Anandji from ‘Yeh samaa samaa hai yeh pyar ka’ to ‘Pardesiyon se na aankhiya milana’ was a superhit.
It was composer Kalyanji-Anandji who introduced Bakshi to Lata Mangeshkar. She remembered him as a poet of many talents who composed many superhit songs credited to professional composers. When I had asked Lataji to name some of these songs ghost-composed by Anand Bakhi, she demurred. “When Bakshi Saab never spoke about the songs he had ghost-composed, why should I?”
Anand Bakshi had a storehouse of Punjabi numbers from his childhood. Many of the superhit Punjabi-styled songs he wrote were secretly composed by him. He had a vast knowledge of music and songs. In fact, he was keen to become a singer and had sung a duet ‘Baghon Mein Bahaar Ayee’ with Lata Mangeshkar for the film Mome Ki Gudiya.
Apparently, Bakshi was unhappy for his lyrics not being acknowledged for their poetic quality. Bakshi was a lyricist first, then a poet. He understood the requirement of film lyrics better than any other lyricist. The songs had to be integrated into the script. Filmmakers like Raj Kapoor, Raj Khosla and Subhash Ghai would narrate their screenplays to Bakshi who would immediately start writing out the songs into their screenplays.
While other great lyricists like Sahir Ludhianvi, Javed Akhtar, and Gulzar came into lyric-writing as poets, Anand Bakshi was a lyricist first, then a poet. And what poetry he wrote! People didn’t seem to realize that his simple words conveyed the most profound truth about existence. Take ’Bakshi Sari Duniya Ka Bojh Hum Uthatay Hain Log Aate Hain Log Jaate Hain Hum Wohi Pe Khade Reh Jaaate Hain’ in Manmohan Desai’s Coolie or ’Zindagi ke safar mein guzar jaate hain jo muqaam woh phir nahin aate’ from Aap Ki Kasam. These were songs which expressed a profound truth about life.
It was indeed remarkable how much Bakshi understood the film song. When he used the poetry of poets as a starting point to his lyric, he would acknowledge the source within the song, for example the song ’Beshaq mandir-masjid todo Bulleshah yeh kehta par pyar bhara dil kabhi na tdo iss dil mein dilbar rehta’ in Raj Kapoor’s Bobby, Bakshi acknowledged the contribution of Bulleshah.
In Aditya Chopra’s historic blockbuster Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge the opening two lines of the song ‘Mehndi lagake ke rakhna—Yeh kudiyan nashe di pudiya, yeh munde gali de gunde’ – was not only written by Bakshi but also composed by him in one sitting on Yashji’s request. Yash Chopra wanted Shah Rukh’s entry in the song to be done to the accompaniment of the special two lines. Anand Bakshi wrote and composed Shah Rukh’s opening. The rest of the song was composed by Jatin-Lalit.
Bakshi wrote a song for any situation in a jiffy. He would call the music composer to his home at say, 4.30 pm and have the words for the entire song ready by 5.30 pm when he went for his walk. For him writing the lyrics for a song was like having breakfast.
Anand Bakshi didn’t like to write in the lyrics to pre-composed tunes. While he would be conversing with people, his mind was constantly writing songs. He would often think of the words along with the tune, which he would share with the composer. He was constantly active creatively.
His quest for a language that jelled perfectly with the mood of Hindi cinema was endless. Anand Bakshi was not just omnipresent in cinema, his lyrics defined the Hindi film song neatly, honestly, and poetically without talking down to the public.