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S.D. Batish

Born
December 14, 1914
in Patalia, India 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by Jason Ankeny
Punjabi master S.d. Batish was a pivotal figure behind the western world's embrace of Indian music, most notably via his memorable contributions to The Beatles' film Help! Born December 14, 1914, in Patiala, India, Shiv Dayal Batish abandoned a career in the nascent telephone industry to study devotional song, folk drama, and Indian classical music under his guru Hakim Chandan Ram Charan. In 1934, he relocated to Bombay to try his hand at acting, but roles proved scarce and he returned to Patiala two years later, renewing his focus on music. By 1936 Batish was regularly appearing on All India Radio and recording his first sessions for His Master's Voice. The film industry nevertheless retained its allure for him, and in 1939 he returned to Bombay, working for a spell under broadcasting legend Z.A. Bokhari. After earning his first film work as an assistant musical director in 1942, Batish later graduated to full-fledged Bollywood musical director, in the years to follow working with playback singer greats including Asha Bhosle, Lata Mangeshkar, and Mohammed Rafi as well as writing now-classic songs like the smash "Manmohan Mana Men," from the 1945 film Kaise Kahoon.

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