Description
A contemporary of Rabindranath Tagore and one of the greatest Tamil poets of all time, Subramania Bharati belongs to the legion of artists whose works remain unrecognized during their lifetime but go on to gain enormous fame. In 1921, when Bharati died in poverty, his unlettered young widow, Chellamma, sold his works to his stepbrother. But in the wake of the freedom struggle, along with the music boom launched by gramophone records and the rise of the talkies, Bharatis songs became commercially valuable. A powerful movie mogul, A.V. Meiyappan of AVM studios, bought the rights to Bharatis works and when someone else used a Bharati song in his film, AVM sued him. A controversy followed, and for the first time in the history of literature, there was a popular agitation demanding the nationalization of a writers work. The newly independent state could ill afford to let an iconic poets writings be private property. After a series of legal wrangles, the poets writings were nationalized and put into the public domain in 1949.
In Who Owns That Song A.R. Venkatachalapathy tells the fascinating story of this unique and dramatic episode through the lives of the various colorful characters involved, drawing on a variety of historical sources, and tackling its most challenging question: who does an artist belong to
A contemporary of Rabindranath Tagore and one of the greatest Tamil poets of all time, Subramania Bharati belongs to the legion of artists whose works remain unrecognized during their lifetime but go on to gain enormous fame. In 1921, when Bharati died in poverty, his unlettered young widow, Chellamma, sold his works to his stepbrother. But in the wake of the freedom struggle, along with the music boom launched by gramophone records and the rise of the talkies, Bharatis songs became commercially valuable. A powerful movie mogul, A.V. Meiyappan of AVM studios, bought the rights to Bharatis works and when... Read More