Pancham hated composing cabaret numbers, says new memoir on R D Burman
A new book by Chaitanya Padukone shares some interesting anecdotes. R D Burman thought disco songs were a "passing fad'.

And when he first won the Filmfare Award for Best Music Director, an honour that came to him after two decades of hard work, excitement evaded him because it was not for any of his raga-based song, the ones he held dearer to him.
The revelations are made in 'R D Burmania: Panchamemoirs', published by notionpress.com and authored by Chaitanya Padukone, a veteran showbiz journalist who has compiled his works as a scribe and shared anecdotes from his meetings with the composer.
RD Burman, seen with his father SD Burman. (Image: BCCL)
Notably, several of Burman's songs, especially the foot-tapping numbers, have been recreated and reproduced in films, private albums and television serials after his death, while a film 'Dil Vil Pyar Vyar' was made as a tribute to his musical genius.
"When the thumri-based raga song 'Humein tumse pyar kitna' composed by RDB and sung by Begum Parveen Sultana merited a Filmfare Award, it was a loud testimony to all those who doubted his ability to conjure up classical numbers. This explains why RDB was not all that exhilarated when he won his first-ever Filmfare Award trophy for Best Music Score in 1983, which had eluded him for over two decades," he writes.
Image Courtesy: BCCL
"Off the record, he (Burman) mentioned to me that since the movie 'Sanam Teri Kasam' had only a jazzmatazz westernised score and no classical songs, he was disheartened.
"All these years, I expected award for movies like 'Parichay', 'Amar Prem', 'Aandhi', 'Kinaara', 'Khushboo', 'Mehbooba' and of course 'Kudrat', all of which had situation-based songs. But it was a series of 'miscarriages'," Padukone quotes Burman as telling him.
Read More: When RD Burman composed a song in mid-air
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