Primary Country (Mandatory)

Other Country (Optional)

Set News Language for United States

Primary Language (Mandatory)
Other Language[s] (Optional)
No other language available

Set News Language for World

Primary Language (Mandatory)
Other Language(s) (Optional)

Set News Source for United States

Primary Source (Mandatory)
Other Source[s] (Optional)

Set News Source for World

Primary Source (Mandatory)
Other Source(s) (Optional)
  • Countries
    • India
    • United States
    • Qatar
    • Germany
    • China
    • Canada
    • Singapore
    • World
  • Categories
    • National
    • International
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Special
    • All Categories
  • Available Languages for United States
    • English
  • All Languages
    • English
    • Hindi
    • Arabic
    • German
    • Chinese
    • French
  • Sources
    • India
      • AajTak
      • NDTV India
      • The Hindu
      • India Today
      • Zee News
      • NDTV
      • BBC
      • The Wire
      • News18
      • News 24
      • The Quint
      • ABP News
      • Zee News
      • News 24
    • United States
      • CNN
      • Fox News
      • Al Jazeera
      • CBSN
      • NY Post
      • Voice of America
      • The New York Times
      • HuffPost
      • ABC News
      • Newsy
      • USA TODAY
      • NBC News
      • CNBC
    • Qatar
      • Al Jazeera
      • Al Arab
      • The Peninsula
      • Gulf Times
      • Al Sharq
      • Qatar Tribune
      • Al Raya
      • Lusail
    • Germany
      • DW
      • ZDF
      • ProSieben
      • RTL
      • n-tv
      • Die Welt
      • Süddeutsche Zeitung
      • Frankfurter Rundschau
    • China
      • China Daily
      • BBC
      • The New York Times
      • Voice of America
      • Beijing Daily
      • The Epoch Times
      • Ta Kung Pao
      • Xinmin Evening News
    • Canada
      • CBC
      • Radio-Canada
      • CTV
      • TVA Nouvelles
      • Le Journal de Montréal
      • Global News
      • BNN Bloomberg
      • Métro
    • Singapore
      • CNA
      • The Straits Times
      • Lianhe Zaobao
The Kumar Gandharva I knew
Premium

The Kumar Gandharva I knew Premium

The Hindu
Wednesday, April 05, 2023 02:30:35 PM UTC

What made the legendary musician Kumar Gandharva stand out?

I would sing all the time then, at the age of nine or ten. I didn’t feel like singing the classical music that I heard at home. I loved singing film songs. . In a vain attempt to tame my incessant humming, my father, musicologist Vamanrao Deshpande, sent me to Professor Deodhar’s school to study shastriya sangeet, and I did enjoy learning there. But the bandishes I would hear from Kumarji when he stayed at our house while visiting Bombay, or the Malvi lokgeet he would sometimes sing would embed themselves in my voice more easily, and my father, full of admiration for my skills, would ask me to sing for visitors. There were also other famous musicians visiting us at that time. They would come to discuss points of musical import with my father or to sing something for him, and I’d be a fly on the wall, taking it all in. But I remember thinking, every time I’d meet Kumarji, that there was something very different about this man. The first time this struck me was when I requested him to sign my little autograph book. In those days, I’d go around asking my father’s accomplished friends for a sahi and a sandesh — an autograph and a message. .

Hirabai Barodekar wrote ‘Maintain the sanctity of gharana-music’, and I was left wondering which gharana she meant. Someone else wrote ‘Practice for eighteen hours every day’. The poet Raja Badhe’s sandesh was the best: ‘Giving sandesh is so passé. But you must eat one everyday’. When I went to Kumarji however, he thought about it, pen in hand, for a good two hours, and then wrote: ‘The savouring of art depends upon the company one keeps. Even creating art is easy, but understanding the essence of it is very difficult.’ This is a sandesh I still haven’t been able to fully digest.

Gestures such as these made Kumarji stand out for me among other musicians. The freshness of his music and his e personality had begun to cast its spell on me. In 1963, when I was 12, he took me along on a concert tour. We travelled by first class to Nagpur, Amravati, Rewa , Jabalpur, Bhopal and finally Dewas. I’d hum unceasingly but Kumarji made me perform for 15 minutes before his audiences in each of these towns.

What fun it was to be in Dewas! In the month I spent there, Kumarji never brought out his tanpuras to give me or anyone else a formal lesson. Instead, what I heard there was Kumarji’s humming — while doing his gardening or travelling by tanga, and most often on the dining table. How beautiful his humming was! His tarana in Bhimpalas and the lokgeet ‘Suno sakhi sainya jogiya hoi gaya’ are etched in my memory. I already knew my father’s version of the Shuddha Kalyan bandish ‘Batiya dura’, but there, on Kumarji’s dining table, I learnt that the actual words were ‘Batiyā daurāvat aiso sughar banā’ [he repeats sweet nothings, my beautiful beau]. His manner of singing this bandish, and the lilt with which he spoke these words in song, still gives me goosebumps. From everything I saw and heard in Dewas, I realised that music was a way of life for Kumarji. . He did not believe in the idea that music was meant only for the stage, that it was something to put on display, and that one did one’s riyaz only to make it concert-worthy. I also realised, during this stay, that music is the process of revisiting a raag, of unpacking the dhun that lives inside it anew each time. It is not a fixed product that you formulate once and for all. You can memorise a bandish, but the music in it must keep flowing like the water from a spring. You cannot fill a pot with a spring. You can only fill it with water. A spring is an outburst in flow. All the musicians I had seen — the popular ones, who’d perform often, and the others who’d spend their days waiting for the opportunity — their riyaz was an effort to shape their music for the stage.

Kumarji was an exception to this. He once told me, ‘Beta, not all singers are blessed with the ability to hum!’ Many singers acquire voices suited only to the stage. Their speaking and singing voices are very different, and many cannot hum atl all. . But with Bade Ghulam Ali Khansaheb and Kumarji it was not so. They were both fond of humming and, could also bring their full, roaring voices to the concert stage. I believe that singers who can do both are able to inhabit a much wider field of sensitivity. Kumarji made me and his son, Mukul listen to 78 rpm records of the senior singers then, and developed in me a passion for listening that has stayed with me ever since. Faiyyaz Khan, Rahimat Khan, Roshan Ara Begum, Barkat Ali, Kesarbai — the unique flavour of each of these voices stamped themselves on our young minds. In a letter from Dewas to my father, Kumarji wrote, ‘Satyasheel and Mukul’s riyaz of listening to music is going very well’. During that month-long stay in Dewas, Kumarji’s music and childlike persona had me in thrall. His infallible aim when playing marbles, his clever moves during a game of chess, his affinity for language, and the inimitable way in which he used it, his unexpected and spontaneous responses to things people said.

In Bombay, the ceiling fan in our 58/B Walkeshwar Road flat was as steadfast and stoical as my father. Its speed hadn’t wavered for years. I grew up under this fan, and it was only in Dewas, in Kumarji’s company, that I woke up to the vicissitudes of day and night, and even to the seasons. I had, for the first time, come into the company of a man, who savoured so much and lived with such relish. I returned to Bombay overwhelmed not just by Kumarji’s music but by his entire personality, by the man himself.

The writer is a renowned Hindustani vocalist. Gaan Gunagaan, Rajhans Prakashan, 2023, edited and translated by Srijan Deshpande.

Read full story on The Hindu
Share this story on:-
More Related News
Artist Shivakumar Sunagar captures unknown landscapes in solo show

The Spirit of the Land, a solo show by artist Shivakumar Sunagar, is a vista of Nature-inspired emotions

Tal Fry’s ‘Rhythm Reimagined’ to premiere at NMACC, Mumbai

Tal Fry is all set for an exciting new performance season

Netflix to pay as much as $600 million for AI filmmaking firm InterPositive

Netflix is making a bold move by snagging InterPositive, the AI filmmaking company founded by Ben Affleck, in a deal that could hit $600 million

‘Hokum’ trailer: Adam Scott faces witch haunting in Damian McCarthy’s new horror

Watch the eerie trailer for 'Hokum,' where Adam Scott faces a witch haunting in a mysterious Irish inn.

Oscars 2026: Academy to increase security after FBI warns of possible Iran drone threat

Oscars 2026 security heightened amid FBI warnings of a potential Iranian drone threat ahead of the Hollywood ceremony.

‘Maamla Legal Hai’ season 2 trailer: Ravi Kishan becomes the judge in Netflix’s courtroom comedy

Directed by Rahul Pandey, the series also stars Naila Grewal, Nidhi Bisht, Anant Joshi, Anjum Batra and Kusha Kapila

V.K. Ramasamy: The actor who made comedy look effortless

A tribute to the versatile actor and comedian V.K. Ramasamy in his birth centenary year.

‘One Piece’ Season 2 review: Swashbuckling sophomore season is a Gum-Gum good time across the Grand Line

‘One Piece’ Season 2 review: As the Straw Hats enter the Grand Line, Netflix’s live-action adaptation finds its sea legs with bigger islands, stranger villains and the same stretch-happy sense of boundless adventure

Oscars 2026: Meet Geeta Gandbhir, the director with two separate Oscar-nominated films

Geeta Gandbhir, the Indian-origin American filmmaker is waves at this year’s Oscars with not one, but two nominations. Her documentaries, ‘The Perfect Neighbor’ and ‘The Devil is Busy’ are in the race for the Academy Award

Screenplay of Arundhati Roy's ‘In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones’ to release in revised edition

Directed by filmmaker and environmentalist Pradip Krishen, the film follows a group of "dope-smoking, bellbottom-wearing and vaguely idealistic" final-year students racing to complete their theses.

‘War Machine’ movie review: Alan Ritchson bulldozes through an efficient sci-fi thriller

Alan Ritchson powers through 'War Machine', a lean sci-fi action thriller on Netflix. A competent, Reacher-style chase adventure with nonstop tension and solid set pieces

Unshelving Memories art exhibition in Thiruvananthapuram showcases book art

Explore the Unshelving Memories exhibition in Thiruvananthapuram, showcasing diverse book art by 61 talented artists until March 15.

Oscars 2026: When and where to watch LIVE on TV and streaming platforms

Oscars 2026 date and timings: Watch the 98th Academy Awards live on March 15, 2026, at 4:30 a.m. IST in India on various platforms.

Pancharatna kritis presented in dance for Tyagaraja Aradhane this year

This year, Bharatnatyam artistes will present the Tyagaraja Aradhane as a dance performance

Divya Dutta interview: On ‘Chiraiya’ and her belief in unlearning as an actor

The actor, along with director Sushant Shah, speak about their upcoming series ‘Chiraiya’, Divya’s process of working on the dialect, Sushant’s approach to telling a story about women, and more

Viral song ignites global interest in modern Tamil literature

An independent video, ‘Feel the Spark’ by Raleigh Rajan with vocals by Ciera Dumas that celebrates Tamil literary giants, garnered 1.4 million views in less than 36 hours.

‘Jack Ryan: Ghost War’ trailer: John Krasinski embarks on a dangerous mission

In ‘Jack Ryan: Ghost War’, John Krasinski is back as the savvy CIA analyst, diving headfirst into a high-stakes mission that unravels a deadly conspiracy and pits him against a rogue black-ops unit

Launched in 1947, the Shankarlal Music Festival finds its formula for continuity

Shriram Bharatiya Kala Kendra’s Shankarlal festival showcased rare ragas, radiant artistry, and inclusive performances, from Pt Madhup Mudgal’s serene morning ragas to Ramana Balachandran’s Saraswati veena.

An exhibition in Delhi reimagines kantha as a language of repair and renewal

Explore "Threads that Bind: The Kantha Project," an exhibition in Delhi reimagining kantha as a medium of repair and renewal.

Oscars 2026: Sean Penn skips ceremony to meet Ukraine President Zelenskyy, who calls him a ‘true friend’

Sean Penn skips the Oscars to meet Ukraine's Zelenskyy, who praises him as a "true friend" amid the war.

‘Vishwanath and Sons’ teaser: Suriya, Mamitha Baiju promise a heartwarming tale on an unlikely romance

The teaser of Tamil star Suriya’s much-awaited film with director Venky Atluri, titled Vishwanath and Sons, was unveiled by the makers on Monday

K-pop song, ‘Golden’, makes history at the Oscars

A 'Golden' moment for a K-pop track at the Oscars.

Parvathi Nayar’s new exhibition, The Primordial, in Mumbai, traces oceans, pepper and climate change

Opened on March 12, the exhibition marks the artist’s first solo show in Mumbai in nearly two decades. Known for her intricate graphite drawings and multidisciplinary practice spanning installation, photography, video, and climate change, her artistic journey has long engaged with the themes of ecology, climate change and the natural world. In this ongoing exhibition, these strands converge through a series of works centred on water, salt, and pepper — materials that carry natural and historic weight across centuries. 

Oscars 2026: Full breakdown and highlights from the 98th Academy Awards

Explore the highlights and key winners of the 98th Academy Awards, featuring memorable moments and historic achievements from Oscars 2026.

Spring and its connect with the Indian classical music

Spring season celebrated at Ramakrishna Mission Institute, Kolkata, with ‘Evening of Basant’

© 2008 - 2026 Webjosh  |  News Archive  |  Privacy Policy  |  Contact Us