Son inherits father's pioneering streak- Bishnu Rabha's progeny
to start first audio magazine of eastern India     OUR SPECIAL
CORRESPONDENT                 A portrait of Bishnu Rabha   Guwahati,
Jan. 30: History does repeat itself, after all.   Seventy-two years
after Bishnu Rabha produced the first Assamese film, Joymoti, with
Jyotiprasad Agarwalla, his son Hemraj is ready to launch the first audio
monthly magazine of eastern India. And what better day  to launch it
than on Bishnu Rabha's birth anniversary tomorrow.  Hemraj, in fact,
has revived the defunct Argo Picture Corporation — it produced
Joymati in 1939 — for his audio magazine Shruti.
The company is now called Argo Audio Productions.  "We thought it
would be a fitting tribute to the man who inspired us all," Hemraj
said over phone from Tezpur today.
The first issue of Shruti — the magazine will be available on CDs
— will be released at the end of February.

"The first chapter of the magazine will be recorded tomorrow at our
own studio. The chapter will be a short story by Bishnu Rabha, Mamir
Har," Hemraj said.   Loosely translated, Mamir Har means "my
aunt's necklace".

Shruti will be  like any other conventional monthly literary magazine,
containing excerpts from novels, short stories, poems and literary
reviews — only the format will be an audio one.

The launch, in Tezpur, will be a "brief affair," Hemraj said.

"Nowadays, almost every household has a CD player. As CD players are
quite inexpensive these days, even people in rural areas can afford
them. Our magazine will be priced at Rs 35 per CD, so we hope it will
not be a burden on buyers," he added.

Shruti is inspired by a web portal, www. librivox.org, which stores
literary masterpieces in audio format and is accessible to all.

Each issue of the magazine will be of 80-minute duration.  The idea of
using "voice" as a medium was to "give listeners the exact
emotions a writer wants to convey", Hemraj said.

"A writer narrating his own story has a different flavour
altogether. He or she can bring out the emotions and sentiments exactly
as he or she has put it in the story."   Writers, both established
and new, will be asked to narrate their stories for the magazine.
"We will also use our own narrators in case any writer is not in a
position to come for recording," Hemraj said.

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