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Surinder Kaur

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Surinder Kaur
Birth nameSurinder Kaur
Also known asNightingale of Punjab
Born(1929-11-25)25 November 1929
OriginLahore, British India
Died15 June 2006(2006-06-15) (aged 76)
New Jersey, United States
GenresFolk, Filmi
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, Playback singing
Years active1943–2006

Surinder Kaur was a Punjabi singer-songwriter. She sang mainly Punjabi folk songs, where she is credited for pioneering and popularising the genre and later was known as the 'Nightingale of Punjab'. She also sang songs in some Hindi movies as playback singer, between 1948 and 1952.[1][2][3]

In an illustrious career spanning nearly six decades, her repertoire included Punjabi Sufi Kafis of Bulleh Shah and verses by contemporary poets like Nand Lal Noorpuri, Amrita Pritam, Mohan Singh and Shiv Kumar Batalvi giving memorable songs like, maavan 'te dheean, jutti kasuri paireen na poori, madhaniyan, ehna akhiyan 'ch pavan kiven kalra and ghaman di raat lammi hai jan mere geet lamme ne. In time her wedding songs, most notably lathe di chadar, suhe ve cheere waleya and kaala doria, became an indelible part of Punjabi culture.[4]

Early life

Surinder Kaur was born in 1929 in Lahore, back then part of British India, in a Punjabi-Sikh family. She was the sister of Parkash Kaur and the mother of Dolly Guleria, both noted Punjabi singers. She had three daughters of which Dolly is the eldest.[5]

Career

Surinder Kaur made her professional debut with a live performance on Lahore Radio in August 1943, and the following year on 31 August 1943, she and her elder sister, Parkash Kaur cut their first duet, "maavan 'te dheean ral baithian", for the HMV label, emerging as superstars across the Indian subcontinent.[1][4]

Following the Partition of India in 1947, Kaur and her parents relocated to Ghaziabad, Delhi. In 1948, she married Professor Joginder Singh Sodhi, a lecturer in Punjabi literature at Delhi University.[5] Recognising her talent, Kaur's husband became her support system, and soon she started a career as a playback singer in Hindi film industry in Bombay, introduced by music director, Ghulam Haider. Under him she sang three songs in the 1948 film Shaheed, including Badnam Na Ho Jaye Mohabbat Ka Fasaana, Aanaa hai tho aajaao and Taqdeer ki aandhi…hum kahaan aur thum kahaan. Her true interest however lay in stage performances and reviving Punjabi folk songs, and she eventually moved back to Delhi in 1952.[4]

In the decades to follow, she got married, after the 1947 partition of old British Punjab, in 1948.[5] Her husband continued to guide her singing career. "He was the one who made me a star," she later recalled. "He chose all the lyrics I sang and we both collaborated on compositions." Together Kaur and Sodhi arranged for her to sing such Punjabi folk classics as Chan Kithe Guzari Aai Raat, Lathe Di Chadar, Shonkan Mele Di, and Gori Diyan Jhanjran and Sarke-Sarke Jandiye Mutiare. These songs were written by various well-known Punjabi poets but made popular by the singer Surinder Kaur. The couple also served as the public face of the Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA), an arm of the Indian Communist party in Punjab, spreading messages of peace and love to the most remote villages of East Punjab. She also travelled to many parts of the world performing Punjabi folk songs, gaining rapid popularity.

In all, Kaur recorded more than 2,000 songs, including duets with Asa Singh Mastana, Karnail Gill, Harcharan Grewal, Rangila Jatt, and Didar Sandhu. Although her life and collaboration with Sodhi was cut short upon the educator's death in 1976, she continued the family's creative tradition via duets with their daughter and other disciples. Her daughter, Rupinder Kaur Guleria, better known as Dolly Guleria and granddaughter Sunaini, culminating in the 1995 LP, 'Surinder Kaur – The Three Generations'.[6]

Awards and recognition

She was conferred the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for Punjabi Folk Music in 1984, by the Sangeet Natak Academi, India's National Academy of Music, Dance and Theatre,[7] the Millennium Punjabi Singer award,[8] and Padma Shri award in 2006 for her contribution in Arts.[9] The Guru Nanak Dev University conferred on her a doctorate degree in the year 2002.[4]

Illness and death

Towards the later part of her life, wanting to get close to her mitti (her soil), Surinder Kaur settled in Panchkula in 2004, with an aim to construct a house in Zirakpur, near Chandigarh. Subsequently, on 22 December 2005, she suffered a heart attack and was admitted to General Hospital, Panchkula.[4] Later, however, she recovered and personally went to Delhi to receive the coveted Padma Shri Award in January 2006. It is another matter that she was painfully aware of the events that delayed the honour for so long, despite her unparalleled contribution to Punjabi music. But even when she received the award, she was regretful that the nomination for the same had come from Haryana and not Punjab, India for which she worked tirelessly for over five decades.[8]

In 2006, a prolonged illness prompted her to seek treatment in the United States. She died in a New Jersey hospital on 15 June 2006 at the age of 77. She was survived by three daughters, the eldest, singer Dolly Guleria who lives in Panchkula, followed by Nandini Singh and Pramodini Jaggi, both settled in New Jersey.[1] Upon her death, the Prime minister of India, Dr. Manmohan Singh described her as "the nightingale of Punjab", and "a legend in Punjabi folk music and popular music and a trend-setter in Punjabi melody." and added, "I hope that her immortal voice will motivate other artists to practice the right Punjabi folk music tradition".

Legacy

A 2006 Doordarshan documentary titled, Punjab Di Koyal (Nightingale of Punjab), on the life and works of Surinder Kaur, received the Doordarshan National Awards – 2006.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Punjab's Nightingale is no more". The Tribune newspaper. 16 June 2006., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  2. ^ "Surinder Kaur's profile". LastFM., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  3. ^ "Tributes paid to melody queen". The Tribune newspaper. 26 June 2006., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  4. ^ a b c d e "Surinder Kaur leaves Delhi to settle in Punjab". The Tribune newspaper. 24 April 2004., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  5. ^ a b c "The Sunday Tribune– Books". The Tribune newspaper. 12 June 2011. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
  6. ^ "Her mother's daughter". The Tribune. 31 July 1998., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  7. ^ http://www.sangeetnatak.gov.in/sna/SNA-Awards.php, Sangeet Natak Academy website, Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  8. ^ a b "Surinder Kaur gets Padma Shri". The Tribunenewspaper. 28 January 2006., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  9. ^ "Padma Shri Official listings". Govt. of India Portal., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016
  10. ^ "DD's honourable men". The Tribune. 22 November 2006., Retrieved 18 Aug 2016