Bollywood means nothing to me: Lucky Ali (Interview)
November 19th, 2009 - 2:18 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )New Delhi, Nov 19 (IANS) He is the son of the legendary Mehmood, grew up in Bollywood, sung several chartbusters like “Ek pal ka jeena” and even acted in movies like “Kaante” and “Sur”, but Lucky Ali says the world of Hindi cinema means nothing to him.
“There is nothing to talk about Bollywood. It means nothing important to me and I don’t even consider it an industry. I feel anyone can go there and work,” Lucky Ali told IANS in an interview.
“At this moment, I am not looking at that (Bollywood) at all. Maybe when I want to direct a film, then I will think about it,” added the singer-actor who has returned to the non-film segment with his new album “Xsuie”.
He has not indulged in physical distribution of the music as he released it online. When asked for the reason, Ali said times are changing rapidly and one should not lag behind.
“Things are changing and trends are altering. People are more digitally literate now. As it is when you put out your music digitally, the quality of sound is high. But when you put it on a CD, the sound starts deteriorating. I didn’t want that to happen.
“It is time for us to realise that the world is on a different platform altogether and we need to change too,” he said.
“Another reason was that, releasing songs online reduces the carbon footprint. Getting so many CDs out is not good for the environment. Since I attach myself with the initiative (to save the planet), I take care of it,” he added.
The songs of his new album are available on sites like www.nimbit.com/luckyali and www.bluefrogsounds.com.
Lucky Ali is known for his simple ballad-style singing and melodious voice. He made his pop debut with the album “Sunoh” that made him a singing star. Later he came out with reasonably successful albums “Sifar”, “Aks” and “Kabhi Aisa Lagta Hai”.
Explaining his absence from the pop scene for five years, he said: “I like working on my own pace, that’s why my album’s name is also ‘Xsuie’ that means at your own pace.”
“In the last five years, I felt that it was not the right time for me to express myself. I was looking for my anchor. I was doing various things - I was involved in farming at my own farm, meeting farmers, horse breeding. Travelling was high on agenda and at the same time I was making music too.”
- Lucky Ali wows Assam crowd, to promote district - Oct 30, 2010
- Digital music finds a place in Bollywood (Flashback 2009) - Dec 18, 2009
- Lucky Ali ready to hit the road with new album - Jul 12, 2011
- Fans crazy about Metallica, queue up for concert - Oct 28, 2011
- Balle balle! Punjabi music is flavour of Bollywood - Mar 09, 2011
- Oye Lucky, Lucky Oye! - Nov 09, 2009
- Pakistani singer set for four-city India tour - Aug 20, 2010
- Romantic comedy, music with soul on Ali Zafar's mind - Feb 16, 2011
- New album about thirst for love: Sarosh Sami - Jan 23, 2011
- Ali Zafar hunts for new face for music video (With Images) - Jul 27, 2011
- In Ram Sampat, I predict that a star is born: Aamir Khan - May 29, 2011
- Bollywood has no taste for ghazals: Jagjit Singh - Mar 29, 2011
- Robbie Williams writing solo album - Aug 04, 2011
- Sur, saaz and rockstar: When music is Bollywood's muse - Oct 19, 2011
- Happy at popularity of Punjabi music: Daler Mehndi - Oct 02, 2011
Tags: aks, ballad style, carbon footprint, chartbusters, debut, film segment, jeena, kaante, lucky ali, luckyali, mea, mehmood, melodious voice, new album, New Delhi, nimbit, own pace, physical distribution, pop scene, quality of sound