Play it again…BLAM!

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Ok. Now before you smack your lips and say “Finally! Another 3000-word blogpost full of mindless drivel and pointless trivialities from daily life put in short sentences with excessive adverbs by a handsome and humorous malayali boy with minor weight issues that are easily overlooked due to an ebullient personality and a secret stash of “god mode” codes for PS2 wargames in order to get a false sense of bravado!”, I must warn you that this is not.
Instead, it is a brief retelling of something that happened a few days ago to the missus. An event that only serves to reinforce the slow but steady sliding of the author and close associates deeper down the slope of Afteryouth.

Afteryouth, regulars will know, is that period between graduating from a Master’s program and becoming 30 when one’s youth ebbs away slowly, when kids playing at Five Gardens kicks a football into the road and ask “uncle” to get it back for them, and when one watches contemporary TV (except House MD) and realizes all over again the timeless greatness of Chandler Bing and Niles Crane.

And when one continues to recommend “Crimson Tide” and “The Rock” as great timepass movies to friends at the office. (Also one is actually quite bothered by inflation and potential US depression but one tries to not talk about it loudly.)

And by one…I mean me.

So the missus is out with people from her office for a do at a club called Indus in South Mumbai. The night progresses well. The missus is not one for too many alcoholic drinks. But she does not mind the odd vodka lemon shot or caipiroshka. Also the misses likes to shake that leg a little if there is an enthu crowd she can dissappear into.

The night progresses peacefully. But the music simply does not rise to the occassion. So the missus makes a trip to the DJ in the corner, a young tshirt and cap clad boy who, no doubt, had a piercing somewhere below his waist by the look of those double sideburns.

“Could you play some Punjabi please?” missus inquired gently. The DJ shrugged and said ok, as is the way of all DJs except that old sweet fellow at Sports Bar at Phoenix Mills.

“What do you want to listen to?”

There are many Punjabi numbers very close to the missus and your truly’s hearts: Punjabi 5-0, Backstabber, Chandigarh Kare Ashiqui, Snap vs. Motivo, Mundian To Bach Ke, Takre and, of course, Sukhbir when he was still low budget.

But few can beat Nachna Onda Nei by Tigerstyle and Kaka Bhania. Who hadn’t heard of that eponymous number? The missus found out soon enough.

“Never heard of it! Nachna… what?”

The missus raised an eyebrow. DJ Jackass had no idea that, at best, he had another four minutes or so to live. (The missus is marginally slower than usual when wearing traditional attire due to the chunni, which creates drag when moving through air at Mach 2.)

“Nachna Onda Nei. Kaka Bhania. It’s a popular Bhangra number…”

“No idea miss. Is it from some movie? I can play Kawa Kawa if you want.”

“It’s not from a movie you fool! Khasmanu Khaanee…” She moved towards him her fingers tightening around a little paper umbrella that is a cocktail decoration for most but a weapon of mass destruction for some.

She was about to slit his throat via papercut when seventeen of her colleagues pulled her back. The DJ had the presence of mind to play Sajnaa Jee Vaari Vaari, which cooled her somewhat. Her colleagues informed her that perhaps th DJ was simply too young to remember that old classic that inspired many a young MBA to bend Ahmedabad prohibition legislation.

Later that night she came back home and told me what had happened. The anger quickly changed to contemplation and we sat in the living room feeling our youth dwindling. When I could handle it no more, I slipped in a Friends DVD.

When Chandler said “Chanberries…” in that episode with the Thanksgiving Dinner, we laughed out loud and our lives momentarily felt better. But not by much.

Addendum: I am stunned by the musical ignorance of today’s youth. (And yes, I am referring to you Ideasmith! Tut tut. No Wii/eeepc/web 2.0/twitter or some such young thing for you!)

This video will perhaps help to jog memory and shake those hips! Call all your friends, crank up speakers and crack open some beers… (Knockout is best.) Periodically shout: “Oy hoy!”

(Can’t embed the video whatever I do. Sigh.)

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39 Comments

  • Funnily enough, I was watching an episode of Friends just before I checked my feed reader and found this post. Hope that doesn’t mean I’ve entered the “slopes of afteryouth” myself. 😉

  • I bet you guys fall into formation (a circle i.e.) as soon as the Punjabi number starts and then start doing the same step over and over and over…Ah nostalgia 😉

    • No way man. It was much more complicated than that… actually it wasn’t. it was exactly like that.
      Sigh.

  • “..perhaps th DJ was simply too young to remember that old classic ” Ouch! After that painful reminder of ebbing youth, let me add masala to the wound and say I don’t recognise the song either! Plizz to bring roshni on the matter.

  • Ohh well, i think i did find one turban wearing DJ was getting dangerously nervous whenever someone was coming upto him and asking him for a request. Maybe the “missus” effect is taking its toll!

  • Probably ‘Nachna Odne Nei’ is popular in Thrissur or Amdavad? Never heard abt it till now! Nor could connect to the Niles Crane is prob the things ppl watch in Abu Dhabi?
    the posts are getting un-relatable of late!

  • I do exactly the same thing- every time I go to a party, I invariably ask the DJ to play Punjabi!!(And no, I am not married to a Mallu but a Gult!!)

    • Rachna, once those fingers point up in a rhythmic fashion… there’s no turning back really…

  • Awww. thank you thank you thank you… For over a month now, this page did not forgive the readers for forgetting the Srinivasan (Poor likes of us who never knew of his existence in the first place suffered too, but lets not get there)
    And day after day after day after day, we did F5 F5 F5 on this page and nopes we were not still forgiven yet. In sheer desperation, we resorted to reading the “blogs”, or should they be called the bitching logs, by a star who is supposed to be the BIGGEST B on the face of this earth. While we were doing prateeksha with bathed breath, there was no reason for jalsa in our life. No complaints on that front too. In its own way, the rants and the counterrants and the rants countering the counterrants were amusing in their own depressing way. And tell us, YE great one, if you keep on ignoring this page we all love so much, driven to despondency, is it wrong for us, the ever hungry readers to gorge on mindless drivel that keep us occupied!?!??!!

    And today, when we finally landed in here… WHATAY relief it was. Doesnt matter that we have never heard of the song ever before, doesnt matter joking about one’s age especially when reader shivers in trepidation every year on whether the cost of the candles shall outdo the cost of the cake is a rude wake up call, doesnt matter that it hurts to be reminded time and again that FRIENDS is not the end of the world for the hep people today… Your post still made us very very glad. We return home with a heavy heart blessing, oops, not that afteryouth yet, we shall make that thanking, thanking the author deeply, greatly, profoundly, bing lee, chang lee….

  • Hi Sidin
    You can embed the video by adding the html provided by youtube. just add the code to your generated source code.

    Just right to the video in youtube, you will find a text box containing the code, titled Embed
    contains something like this

  • long time sir, had me hooked after the goaa chronicles.
    Chnandler Bong will forever be the voice of reason, no matter how old/after young we get..;)

  • What is with punjabis and music and dance?
    what i wrote on my blog when I graduated from my b school sums it up…

    “Punjabi music is something that never appealed to me.But my friends swear by it. And as for the huge Sardarjis, they spring to instant action. They wave their arms and legs in a frenzy, magically acquiring the wingspan of an albatross as they contrive to knock off your spectacles from impossible angles and distances. And they stamp on our fallen spectacles for good measure, as they try out a particularly interesting dance step”

  • HAHAHA! I’ve heard this song…but in my aunts car…no, i am not calling the missus aunty! 😀
    On a side note, you should go to a desi party in the US…hear ’em blast techno punjabi/hiphop & catch the antics of the wannabes…trust me, you would be scarred for life! 😛

    PS: first time here…loving it! 🙂

  • Well i must say that afteryouth is a pretty good term to use when we need to talk about slipping onto the older stage of generation gap. well to confess friends still strikes lots of chords , discovert travel and living shows are really appealing and yes Dr. Kranes’ humor is absolutely spot on.

  • 4. Nurture an attitude of superiority, competition, and condesension toward fellow seminary students. Secrectly speak ill of them with friends and with your spouse.

  • Why must you rub the age thing in so often??………We are even otherwise very troubled anyways !! 🙁

  • Hey Sidin,
    That altercation ur missus had with the DJ is the reason we always go to Toto’s at Bandra. That place has been playing the same music since the 80’s 😉

  • I don’t believe this… I do the SAME thing EVERY time I’m near a dance floor where the music is remotely non-techno-trance-hip-hop-blah-blah.
    Its always too loud to shout so I type out “Nachna Onda Nei by Tigerstyle” on my mobile and hand the same over to the DJ who always responds with a shake of the head to which I respond with a shorter shake of the head (the question mark that implies ‘you don’t?’) with eyebrows as furrowed as they can get.

    Anyway, I have YET to find a DJ who has the ears to have heard the song and kept it… or the ones who have kept it to have listened to it to fully appreciate the beauty in that song and for them to play it fully on the dance floor.

    FOUR years, and still counting…

    P.S. I guess no one from the 04 or 05 batches can ever forget that song, eh?

By sidin

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