31032023-LSTL-01.qxd 3/30/2023 10:41 PM Page 1 c m y b BRAD PITT TO SELL HIS LA HOME Brad Pitt is officially saying adieu to his Los Angeles home. Pitt has found a buyer for the sprawling estate he’s owned for nearly 30 years in the neighbourhood of Los Feliz. Reportedly, he was trying to sell his property for $ 40 million in January. TRIBUNE Spotted Life Amid wedding rumours, Parineeti Chopra and Aam Aadmi Party leader Raghav Chadha were spotted together at the Delhi airport on Wednesday night. ANI LUDHIANA | FRIDAY | 31 MARCH 2023 ‘Punjab will rise again’ Mona W INNING music lovers for over two decades with soulful numbers like Tere Bin, Bulla Ki Jaana and Challa to name a few, Rabbi Shergill is waking up to the power of music only now. Also, the distinction between fame and leaving a cultural footprint has never been clearer. “Success for me is when your name is known but your face isn’t,” says the famed singer who enjoys his daily runs, auto rides every once a while and tea from roadside vendors. Rabbi Shergill, who is in Chandigarh to attend Speaking Allowed 2023, talks about what’s ailing Punjab and the solutions for it In Chandigarh for two-day Speaking Allowed 2023, he was a part of the session on Gazing at Punjab Through Art along with Daljit Ami and acclaimed artistes Jiten Thukral and Sumir Tagra. While acknowledging the issues Punjab is facing, Rabbi is positive about a change. “The constructive roles artistes played in the farmers’ protests, one hopes to see that in due time Punjab will rise to its potential.” Not that he is not in touch with reality. “In the dream of endless growth, Punjab’s mighty rivers have thinned down to a trickle, 80 per cent of groundwater is gone as is four inches of top soil. There is massive thrust on cash crops even though it’s not supported environmentally, simply because there is an MSP on it,” says Rabbi, who believes that if society sticks to values, it’s all reversible. “Each of us has to take onus for it. It’s ultimately the middle class who can raise its voice and bring the change.” Not that personally he is sold out to fame. “I have seen that phase, the times when I would be mobbed. Had I wanted I would done a Bulla every two years and made gazillions for self. Personal success means nothing if there is collective widespread decay,” says the singer who now divides time between Delhi and Kasuali. “Whenever Delhi becomes unbreathable, which is often now, we head to the HAD I WANTED I WOULD hills. How unforDONE A BULLA EVERY TWO tunate it is that in YEARS AND MADE GAZILLIONS Delhi we only FOR SELF. PERSONAL SUCCESS have scavenger MEANS NOTHING IF THERE IS COLLECTIVE WIDESPREAD birds – crows and DECAY. pigeons - and none of the numerous pollinating species that called it home.” He misses the Chandigarh of 90s too. “How sad is it that one struggles to spot a sparrow here now, and not long before right outside Chandigarh there were choes and one could spot an antelope crossing the streams.” It’s not just the wrongs that he harps on, but also points out how different voices in the Punjabi music industry make it hearty. “Diversity is a sign of healthy society.” He insists that one needs all kinds of music, also like that of ❝ c m y b Sidhu Moosewala. “It acts as a safety valve. The feelings of angst and uncertainty should be purged time to time.” In the hullabaloo of things when Punjab and Punjabis are spending more than they are making, he finds a solution in taking a pause. "Punjabis are sensitive souls. In the backdrop of low employment, consumerism and migration, the world in general, is in the middle of an agricultural and ecological crisis. It's time to stop this mindless game, take a pause" he says. Quiz him on his bond with music, he answers, “I realise music and real conversation aren’t very different. In music as in deep conversations lies revelation. It’s metaphysical and has a spiritual connection.” He agrees that there are more ways than one to approach life, science and analytical approach more accepted than others. “Music for me is to know the truth, an attempt at something mystical. My bond with music is that of a devotee’s to that of deity.” In the business of pop music, Rabbi listens to all genres. He has a jazz list, funk list, Punjabi list and a special section dedicated to the time he goes running. U2’s Get Out of Your Own Way is on the top of that list. Rabbi is quite fond of U2’s 13 too and Sting’s latest album The Bridge. Much in love with poetry, among others Sultan Bahu, Surjit Patar, Amarjit Chandan, Dr Harbhajan Singh, late Puran Singh and Lal Singh Dil top his favourites. Going for the kill The Chandigarh Kare Aashiqui actor Vaani Kapoor is foraying into the digital space with YRF Entertainment’s new series Mandala Murders, the makers said. Billed as a gritty crime thriller, the show is directed by Gopi Puthran (Mardaani 2). Mandala Murders also features VaibVaani hav Raj Gupta, known for SonyLIV Kapoor to series Gullak. make digital Rana Naidu actor Surveen debut with YRF Chawla and Gullak star Jameel Khan have also been cast in Entertainment prominent roles in the series series Mandala envisioned as a multi-season show. Murders Shooting on Mandala Murders will begin in Uttar Pradesh soon. The production will later head to Delhi and then Mumbai to finish the filming process. — PTI
The Tribune, now published from Chandigarh, started publication on February 2, 1881, in Lahore (now in Pakistan). It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, a public-spirited philanthropist, and is run by a trust comprising four eminent persons as trustees.
The Tribune, the largest selling daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind. Restraint and moderation, rather than agitational language and partisanship, are the hallmarks of the paper. It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.
The English edition apart, the 133-year-old Tribune has two sister publications, Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi).