Madam Noor Jehan, actress Nighat Sultana, maestro Rasheed Attre and director Hassan Tariq at the recording of a song for Neend in 1959 - Photos provided by the writer
The legacy began inauspiciously in 1942, in Calcutta, now Kolkata. A young musician from Amritsar, A.R. (Abdul Rasheed) Attra, scored music for two films in quick succession — Mamta and Parda Nasheen. Attra was the son of Khushi Mohammad, who used to accompany legendary singer K.L. Saigal on the harmonium, and who had also assisted renowned composer R.C. Boral at the production company New Theatres. Unfortunately for him, neither of the films nor their music created any ripples at the box office. This frustrating experience compelled the young music director to look for greener pastures.
Attra boarded a train bound for Lahore, a city he was familiar with, being just a few miles away from his native Amritsar. Having acquired a new identity — Rasheed Attre — he signed his first Lahore film Pagli (1943), in which he shared the composing honours with Ustad Jhande Khan, Pandit Govind Ram and Ameer Ali. In his next film, Sheereen Farhad (1945), there was another contributing composer as well, Pandit Amarnath. However, at least one out of the two songs Attre scored for this film — a duet, ‘Armaanon ki basti mein hum aag lagadeinge’, that he had rendered himself along with Shamshad Begum — gaining a fair amount of popularity.
THE PATRIARCH
What Rasheed Attre gained in Lahore was far short of his expectations. By now he had a family to feed, and circumstances in Lahore were hardly encouraging for him. As a result, Attre decided to migrate once again and, this time, his destination was Bombay (now Mumbai), the tinsel town of India where fortunes are made or lost. Things took an upward turn for Attre upon reaching Bombay.
The first film Rasheed Attre scored music for in Bombay, in 1945, was Room No. 9, which was fairly well-received at the box office. His three subsequent films were Nateeja (1945), Paaro (1947) and Shikaayat (1948). The first and third were well-liked by cinegoers, and some of their songs became reasonably popular.
The Attres can rightfully be considered Pakistani music royalty. While patriarch Rasheed and his son Wajahat have have influenced the subcontinent’s film music, the family’s third generation of composers is now poised to leave its mark as well ...
The last movie for which Rasheed Attre scored music in Bombay was writer Ismat Chughtai’s, and her director husband Shahid Latif’s, Shikaayat. It was actually released after he, like so many other Muslim artists, had left for Lahore as a result of communal riots having engulfed Bombay after Partition.
Lahore, the third major film making centre in India, after Bombay and Calcutta, was in complete turmoil. The bloodshed preceding the birth of Pakistan had brought all sorts of business activities, including film production, to a standstill.
Out of the six film studios that existed in the city, till a few weeks before 14th August 1947, five had been burnt to ashes by rioters. Only one, Pancholi, was saved by its employees. The artists and technicians already in Lahore, and the ones who had migrated from Bombay, pooled their efforts and somehow managed to commence film production against the most adverse of circumstances.
The release — and failure — of Pakistan’s first movie, Diwan Sardari Lal’s Teri Yaad, was followed by another half-a-dozen films which met the same fate (barring Phere, Punjabi, 1949), but burning their fingers didn’t dissuade the filmmakers from continuing to take risks. One such daring soul was Masud Parvez, the nephew of renowned short story writer Saadat Hasan Manto, who was earlier associated with W.Z. Ahmed’s Shalimar Studios in Poona (now Pune, Maharashtra), and who had even played lead roles in two of their productions, Ghulami and MeeraBai.
Masud Parvez signed Rasheed Attre for his maiden Pakistani production Beli, based on one of Manto’s stories. The film, starring Santosh Kumar, Sabiha and Shaheena (’80s’ actress and singer Salma Agha’s aunt) turned out to be a dismal flop, and so was its music. So disappointed was the composer by the fate of its music that he decided to quit the film industry altogether, and took up a job as a music producer at the Rawalpindi station of Radio Pakistan.