“A song by the famous Kishore Kumar”, she said with a smile.
“Isn’t it beautiful?” she asked, not really looking for an answer. I nodded in
amazement.
I had never heard the name or the song before, I was all of
five. In fact, that was the first time I ever heard music or the first time I
can remember at least. I walked towards the machine that was emitting this
magnificent sound and moved towards one of the buttons.
“Don’t touch that”, she warned. I asked no questions and
obeyed. Five years of experience had taught me not to disobey my mother. Not
even Achan did that. So I kept looking at it in amazement. Sensing my
curiousity, Amma stopped this incredible machine and pressed a button. And out
it came.
A rectangle-shaped plastic object with two holes.
I looked at Amma for approval. She nodded. I took it in my
hand and examined it like a doctor examining his patient. “It’s called a Tape”,
she said, reading my thought. “This is what was playing”, she said.
Wow, I thought. There began my love for the Tape/Cassette. I
would play any tape I could get my hands on. Achan’s Mozart, Amma’s Kishore
Kumar, Gow’s mix tape, anything. I would play it on Sunday afternoons, before I
went to sleep, before dinner. It made me smile and helped me sleep when Achan
would force me to because I was too young to watch Baywatch or The X-Files.
Then came, the big day. My first cassette. My sister had
grown tired of a cassette of a Tamil movie Thiruda
Thiruda and she gave it to me because she found no use for it. I took it
and there it was. All mine. Rewind. Fast-forward, Play, Pause, Record. I used every
button just to check if it worked and hoping it would do something new each
time.
Then came Backstreet
Boys, Now That’s What I Call Music, Code Red, Minassaru Kannavu etc. I
borrowed tapes, stole tapes, recorded tapes but made sure I listened to all of
them.
My Amma always told me (nope, not that life is like a box of
chocolates) that it was important to read to get to know the world and learn
about different places. For me it was music and the Tape was my window to the
world outside my tiny little room in Vellore. It exposed me to different sorts
of music, taught me how to sing and made me happy all the time.
But now the Tape is almost dead, taken over by the mighty CD
(even he is dead), and the iPod. As I listen to the music on my uber cool
smartphone, I’m grateful for the memories.
Tape, thank you for the music.
Song for the day, this is the first song I think I heard http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YAs2cQAiE8