The Melody Queen P.Susheela has entered the Guinness
book world records and Asia Book of records as one who has sung more number of
songs in Indian languages.
Her voice and the subtle intonation she did depending
upon the meaning of the lyrics have made most of her songs hits and super hits.
There would be at least one song by her which could have touched the imagination
or feelings or life of any listener. To that extent the lyrics played a big
role in the success of her songs. Those lyrics got life in her voice and the emotions
she effortlessly portrayed through her voice.
This award seems to have come very late though she
could have reached the top long ago and would retain the slot never to be surpassed. I could not avoid thinking of Ilayaraja in
this context as it was rumoured that he shunned P.Susheela saying that her
voice lacks emotion. What a mistaken view from a music maestro! But later he patched up with her and made her
sing in his compositions. But with his arrival in Tamil cinema, the down trend
in the career of P.Susheela had started. If not for him, P.Susheela would have
crossed even the current mark of 17,000 plus songs.
As far as I am concerned, her song “Oru naal iravu
pagal pol nilavu” worked like medicine for me as it made me overcome the loss
of my mother at a young age by consoling myself that my mother indeed was
singing from heavens for me.... Even today, this song is in my lips and in my
heart. The last stanza had all the emotions that make me cherish a hope
reserved for my next birth....
This one, “Maalai pozhuthin mayakkatthilE” is
something which Susheela herself would find difficult to surpass...
Beautiful and simple romantic song...”naan pesa
ninaippathellaam”
A soul-stirring song enacted by a beautiful
Jayalalithaa.
From my choice of songs I am moving to my choice of an article among the various articles on P.Susheela that we are reading nowadays about her Guinness record. This article is from Times of India.
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From
Eternally on song – Susheela: Singing
voice that made beauty permanent
April 4, 2016, 3:11 PM IST Vamanan
The Guinness Book Of World Records
recognises her prolific career, but her USP is quality.
P Susheela has never lost her position among lovers
of Tamil films. Her glorious days may have been over but for them Susheela was
and still is the archetypal female singing voice. Ask a Tamil who sang “Gangai
Karai Thottam”, and he would say, P Susheela, even if he didn’t know for sure.
It must have been Susheela. Who else could it have been?
So when the announcement about the Guinness Book of
World Records came, it was only a reminder that she indeed is among the most
prolific singers in this part of the country. The news has warmed the cockles
of the hearts of her myriad admirers, including yesteryear heroines, who have
flocked to her residence to express their joy .
Though she is a Telugu, and her film songs in her
mother tongue handsomely outnumber her Tamil songs, she was the key female
voice of the golden age of Tamil film music. The prolific lyric writer Vali
made his debut writing for her “Nilavum thaarai yum” in Azhagar Malaikalvan
while SPB of a thousand duets sang his first with her in “Aayiram Nilave Vaa”.
But it’s more the quality of her numbers than the
quantity that earned her the love of music lovers.The sheer melody, lyrical
significance, musical excellence and popularity of many of her songs have made
her an iconic singer. Many of the jewels of Kannadasan, Tamil cinema’s lyricist
par excellence, are immortalised in Susheela’s inimitable voice. A winner of
many national and regional awards, she is also the recipient of the Padma
Bhushan.
Hailing from a musically inclined family in the
princely state of Vizianagaram, Susheela acquired a diploma in music in a
college in her town and came to Chennai for further studies. Her first singing
offer came easily enough with Pendyala Nageswara Rao choosing her for a duet
with A M Raja in ‘Petrathaai’ (Kannathalli). Starting out as a staff singer for
AVM studios, Susheela honed her Tamil diction and imbibed professionalism.
Though she speaks Tamil with a strong Telugu accent, despite her 63 years in
Chennai, her songs set a benchmark for excellence in Tamil pronunciation.
That’s why Susheela was chosen along with T M Sounderarajan to render the state
song “Neeraarum Kadaluduthu” by the Tamil Nadu government in 1970.
The 1950s were competitive times with many female
singers in the field, and Susheela had to struggle her way up. That she progressed
steadily can be seen from the fact that a musical genius like G Ramanathan
trusted her with great numbers like “Mullai Malar Mele” and “Inbam Pongum
Vennila”. She was often fancied for dulcet duets with A M Raja with the latter
himself opting to sing with her in the enormously successful ‘Kalyana Parisu’
(Vaadikkai Marandhadhu Yeno, Aasaiyinaale Manam).
‘Paava Mannippu’ set the stage for a new musical
phase that crowned Susheela as the queen of Tamil film songs. There was an
upsurge of innovation, melody , meaning and orchestral colour. As Susheela’s
voice shone in melodious songs like “Paalirukkum Pazhamirukkum”, master
composers like Viswanathan Ramamurthy and K V Mahadevan tried new tunes to
exploit her voice to the hilt.
It’s significant that chief minister J Jayalalithaa
recalled Susheela singing for her mother Sandhya. The classic images of some of
the most charismatic heroines like Devika (“Sonnadhu Nee Dhaana“), Saroja Devi
(“Unnai Ondru Kaetpaen“), Savithri (“Malarndhu Malaraadha“), Sowcar Janaki
(“Maalai Pozhudhin Mayakkathile“), Padmini (“Mannavan Vandhaanadi“), and
Jayalalithaa (“Unnai naan sandhithaen“) mirror a greater charisma because of
Susheela’s song. The actresses knew that their fleeting beauty would be
remembered especially when paired with the evergreen melodies sung by Susheela.
Musical instruments too acquired their signature
passages in her songs. Mangalamurthy’s superb accordion accompaniment in
Susheela’s entrancing melody “Athaan En Athaan” drew attention to the instrument.
Satyam’s soaring notes on the shehnai in “Aalayamaniyin Osaiyai” masterfully
underscored the serene atmosphere of the song. Hanumatha Rao’s consummate tabla
playing lent “Maalai soodum mananaal” an ineffable grace. Nanjappa’s honeyed
phrases on the bamboo flute rang out memorably along with Susheela’s vocals in
“Kannukku Kulamedhu”.
Susheela was extremely receptive to musical ideas
and fast in grasping them. She was also uncannily sensitive to microphone
positions and the needs of sound engineers to get a recording right. The latter
decades of her career saw a great deal of competition emerging and singer-music
composer politics leading to her being sidelined, but she was not to be
disheartened. She wisely patched up with Ilaiyaraja after some initial misunderstanding.
She is a woman of much poise and reserve but can be scorchingly sarcastic in
private. She has a piquant sense of humour too.She once remarked about ragas in
the general run of film songs -“One can say they represent an all-India raga.
Even if you search all over India, you won’t be able to find the raga!” At
eighty , Susheela still rocks.