
Madhubanti Bagchi
'My general approach in life is 'Let's give it a shot',' says Madhubanti Bagchi. That attitude has served the playback and pop singer well. It's what led to her joining a wedding band while in engineering college in Kolkata; saying yes to an offer to sing for Bengali films—among her biggest hits is the Arijit Singh-duet 'Egiye De' from Shudhu Tomari Jonyo (2015)—and deciding to shift base to Mumbai in 2018 for 'better opportunities'.

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But all this was accompanied by struggle and loss of her dear ones, I resurrected myself in words which came to her putting balm on many sores and a lighting her eyes with a twinkle. She says: 'I turned to paper like one turns to God. Not for the sake of poetry but for self-preservation.' She dabbled in the poetic across languages, sometimes in Hindi, sometimes in Punjabi and English too. A book that influenced her was 'Women Who Run with the Wolves' by Caressa Pinkola Estes, an American psychiatrist. The role model before her was that of La Loba, the mythic folkloric woman, who gathers the bones of dead wolves and sings over the skeleton of dead wolves, raises her arms and starts singing until the wolf comes alive and runs into the canyons. Amy says the metaphor touched her deeply and thus we have a collection of poems across the three languages: Hindi, Punjabi and English all in the Roman script. So here is as teaser from one of her feisty poems: 'In our home, things often break/ vase from the side table/ my mother's jewellery, vermillion vows/ I pick up the wreckage after you/ but I leave my own pieces on the floor'. nirudutt@