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Ustad Baba Allaudin Khan
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[
Posted on RMIC by Rajan Parrikar as part of Great Masters Series
]
In this,
the tenth episode of the Great Masters saga, we present a biographical
sketch of Ustad Allaudin Khan- an extraordinary musician and an
outstanding teacher. A devout Hindu. A devout Muslim. His legacy
still lives on in the form of his distinguished disciples - Ravi
Shankar, Khansaheb's son Ali Akbar Khan and daughter
Annapurna
Devi(Ravi Shankar's wife, who, incidentally, taught the flautist,
Hariprasad Chaurasia). The Khansaheb, known affectionately as Baba,
was a musical marvel; A few recordings of his sit in the dusty archives
of All India Radio and I'm not sure if any have been confined to
vinyl as yet. The following sketch is taken from Ravi Shankar's
book, 'My Music My Life'. Hope you like it.
Rajan
[
From: My Music My Life by Ravi Shankar (1968), pps 51-58 ]
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Baba
at his home in Maihar.
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MY REVERED GURU
A famous disciple of Wazir Khan and an extraor- dinary teacher and
performer himself is Ustad Allaud- din Khan of Maihar in Central India.
This saintly and learned man became my revered guru, and it is to
him that I owe my devotion and love for my musical training.
I saw him for the first
time at the All-Bengal Music Conference in December, 1934. In contrast
to the other musicians, who were wearing colorful costumes, turbans,
and jewels, and were bedecked with medals, he seemed very plain
and ordinary, not at all impres- sive. But even in my immaturity,
it did not take me long to realize that he had qualities that far
outshone the gaudiness of his colleagues. He seemed to shine with
a fire that came from within him.
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Although I did not know enough about music then to discern his musical
greatness, I found myself completely over- whelmed by everything
about him. Baba has always been a strict disciplinarian with his
students, but he had imposed upon himself an even stricter code
of conduct when he was a young man, often practicing sixteen to
twenty hours a day, doing with very little sleep, and getting along
with a minimum of material things. Sometimes, when he practiced,
he tied up his long hair with heavy cord and attached an end of
the cord to a ring in the ceiling. Then, if he happened to doze
while he practiced, as soon as his head nodded, a jerk on the cord
would pull his hair and awaken him. From early childhood, Baba was
ready and de- termined to make any sacrifice for music. Indeed,
his entire life has been devoted to music.
Allauddin Khan was one of
the sons of a quite well-to-do peasant family in Bengal. They did
not have a great deal of money, but were very rich in the land they
owned and the animals they kept. His fam- ily were Bengali Muslims,
converted to Islam only three or four generations before. The village
they lived in was predominantly Hindu, and they all spoke Bengali.
And so, even though his family were Muslim, Baba knew all the ways
of Hindus and was well ac- quainted with their customs and ceremonies.
Later, he was to follow a way of life that was a beautiful fusion
of the best of both Hinduism and Islam.
His father used to play
the sitar for the family and for his own pleasure. And Baba's older
brother, Afta- buddin, was a very talented and versatile musician
who, too, did not perform professionally but played solely to express
the music he felt within himself. In his later years, he became
a very religious man and was revered equally by the Hindus and the
Mus- lims who knew him. So it was natural that the mu- sical inclinations
of little Alam, as my guru was called by his family, were intensified
by listening to his father with the sitar and his brother playing
a variety of instruments, including the flute, harmonium (a small,
boxlike keyboard instrument), tabla, pakhawaj, and dotara (a plucked-string
instrument with two strings). Young Alam used to steal into the
little music room at home to try to play some of his older brother's
musical instruments - and was frequently punished for it. When his
family realized that Alam had this burning love for music, they
became worried that he might decide to be a professional musician
and did not encourage him, for music was not thought of as a respectable
profession for a young man. When young Alam wanted to leave his
home and devote all his life to music, his brother, the influential
one in the family, refused to let him go. The family much preferred
that he take up regular studies in a school.
Baba has told us that by
the time he was eight he could no longer take the strict discipline
and enforced study of books. He hated studying and was constantly
being punished for pursuing the thing he loved most - music. So,
he left his family without saying a word and traveled to a nearby
village, where he joined a party of traveling musicians led by a
very famous player of the dhol. (Though the drums known as dhol
or dholak are found all over India in different sizes and shapes,
the dhol mentioned here is indige- nous to Bengal. It is a one-piece
drum with two faces and is played with the hand on the right side
and with a stick on the left.) Baba told the musicians he was an
orphan, and they accepted him into their group, feeling sorry for
the lonely little boy. Then he traveled with the musicians as they
toured, and they reached the city of Dacca, the capital of the present
East Pakistan. While he was a member of this mu- sical group, Baba
had the opportunity to learn to play quite proficiently many varieties
of drums-the dhol, tabla, and pakhawaj-and he also took up the shahnai
and some other wind instruments-clarinet, cornet, and trumpet. During
all the time Baba toured with this troupe of musicians and later
stayed in Dacca, he did not communicate with his family. They were
of course distraught when they realized he had left. They searched
and searched for him, but finally had to give up.
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An
inspiring portrait of Baba by
Prof. Amiya Dasgupta.
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BABA'S EARLY ADVENTURES
The first forty years of
Baba's life were full of adventure, and he underwent many unusual,
almost unbelievable, experiences through his intense love of music.
Baba was never clear about how long he was with these musicians
or how much time he spent in Dacca, but he says that he arrived
in Calcutta when he was about fourteen or fifteen. I remember his
tell- ing me about the hardships he suffered there.
He went to one of the most
famous Bengali singers of the day, Nulo Gopal, a very devout and
orthodox Hindu. Baba instinctively thought it might be better if
he said he was a Hindu himself when he approached this teacher,
so he took a Hindu name. Nulo Gopal saw the tremendous ardor and
talent for singing this boy had, but he warned Baba that he himself
had learned music in a very old, traditional style and said that
he would teach Baba only if Baba had the pa- tience to learn in
the same way. That is, Baba would have to learn and practice nothing
other than the sargams, palta, and murchhana (solfeggio, scales,
and exercises) for twelve full years.
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Only then would Nulo Gopal start teaching all the traditional compo-
sitions. This, he said, would not take a very long time, because Baba
would already have a firm background! Baba did agree to the arrangement,
and arduously de- voted himself to his study, but unfortunately, after
only seven years or so, Nulo Gopal died.
Baba was so grieved by his
death that, out of respect to his teacher, he took an oath never
to take up singing as his profession. According to Baba, the excellent
training he received from this guru in those seven years caused
his musical sensitivity to grow to such a degree that he could notate
in his mind as well as on paper any music he heard. This ability
was to prove very helpful to him later.
During the seven years Baba
was learning with Nulo Gopal, he took a job at the Star Theatre
(run by Girish Ghosh, the father of Bengali drama) as a tabla player
in the orchestra to make a little money, and he had some training
in the playing of the violin from an outstanding Indian Christian
teacher. Baba also participated in the frequent orchestral parties
held by a prominent composer, Habu Dutt, who was the brother of
the famed Swami Vivekananda. Habu Dutt had studied both Eastern
and Western music and maintained an orchestra for which he composed
in raga and tala framework; he used all the Western instruments
as well as a few Indian ones. This later inspired Baba to create
his own ensemble, the Maihar Band, which was quite famous for many
years.
It was often frightening
just to hear Baba talk about the hardships he suffered as a young
man in Calcutta. The little pay he received at the Star Thea- tre
and occasional extra income he got by playing a recital here or
there all went to pay for gifts or offer- ings he brought to his
teachers-fruits or sweets-in gratitude for their giving him lessons.
Most of the time he had his one meal a day at some anna chhatra,
a food dispensary provided for the poor by some rich families. (Until
very recently, these existed in all the large cities as a common
form of charity.) The rest of the day Baba either went hungry or
nibbled at a handful of chick peas and drank the water of the river
Ganges. He had no one particular place to stay. Sometimes he took
a room in a cheap boarding- house, and other times he stayed in
the stable of a wealthy family.
When he was in his twenties,
Baba went to a city called Muktagacha, then in eastern Bengal, now
in East Pakistan. It was here, at the court of Raja Jagat Kishore,
that he heard the celebrated sarod player of the time, Ustad Ahmad
Ali, and for the first time, he experienced the full effect of the
musician and the beauty of the music. In his studies under Nulo
Gopal, Baba had felt he was approaching the field of strict classical
music, but when his guru died, he thought he had reached only the
threshold of the musical sanctuary. He realized he needed another
good teacher to elevate him to a higher level in his playing and
understanding. So, he decided just then, in the Raja's court, that
he must take this musician as his guru and learn to play the sarod.
Baba's burning desire to learn and a recommendation from the Raja
per- suaded Ahmad Ali to accept the boy as his disciple. When Baba
began learning from Ahmad Ali, he gave up all his old dilettante
musical interests and devoted himself solely to the sarod. The next
four years or so were spent living and traveling with his ustad,
serving him in every way, even cooking, and learning and practicing
music as much as he could.
After some time, Ahmad Ali
left the court and traveled to his home, the city of Rampur, taking
Baba with him. By this time, Baba had learned a great deal of the
art and technique of the sarod and had ab- sorbed most of the knowledge
of his ustad. Some- how, he felt that Ahmad Ali was a bit apprehensive
about Baba's proficiency and was afraid that Baba might outdo him
as a musician. One day, it happened that his guru called Baba and
said that he had given him enough taleem (training) and praised
him for achieving a fine standard of musicianship. Now, he said,
it is time for you to go out and perform, and establish your own
reputation, following the tradi- tion of sikkha, dikkha, and parikkha
(derivations from the original Sanskrit of shiksha, diksha, and
pariksha, which mean training, initiation, and evalua- tion).
Since Rampur was the most
important seat of Hin- dustani classical music, Baba was overjoyed
when he learned there were almost five hundred musicians who belonged
to the court of His Highness the Nawab of Rampur. Out of these,
at least fifty ranked among the foremost artists and were famed
throughout India. They included singers of dhrupad, dhamar, khyal,
tappa, and thumri, as well as players of been, sursringar, rabab,
surbahar, sitar, sarangi, shahnai, tabla, pakhawaj, and many other
instruments. At the head of all these musicians was the truly great
Wazir Khan himself, a member of the Beenkar gharana, and thus of
the family of Tan Sen. He was the guru of the Nawab and, in his
seat next to the Nawab's throne, enjoyed a position that was unique
at that time. After taking leave of Ustad Ahmad Ali, Baba went on
a kind of musical "binge," and he met all the ustads and studied
a little with a great many of them for a year or so. He was completely
intoxicated with the ecstasy of meeting all these great musicians.
After Baba settled down a bit, he decided he must finally go to
learn from the greatest musician of them all, and the one about
whom he had heard so many stories - Wazir Khan.
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A GESTURE IN DESPERATION
Ustad Wazir Khan, a direct
descendant of Tan Sen, was the greatest living been player of the
time. Filled with enthusiasm and bubbling with hope, Baba went off
to meet him, but the sentries who guarded Ustad Wazir Khan's gates,
frowning at the young man's shabby dress and poor appearance, denied
him entrance. In despair, young Allauddin Khan rather melodramatically
decided that he would either learn from this great master or give
up his life. Nour- ishing these severe thoughts, he bought two tola
weight of opium with which to kill himself if neces- sary. But fortunately,
he met a mullah (Muslim priest), who dissuaded him from such extreme
meas- ures and suggested another plan.
The mullah composed a letter
in Urdu on behalf of the young aspirant, explaining how he had come
all the way from Bengal especially to learn from Ustad Wazir Khan,
and if that were to prove impos- sible, he would swallow a lump
of opium and end his life. But there remained the problem of present-
ing the letter to the Nawab. While the spirit of des- peration was
mounting, young Allauddin happened to hear that the Nawab would
soon be on his way to the theater, so he stationed himself on the
road, hours ahead, and as the Nawab's vehicle finally ap- proached,
he threw himself down in front of it.
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The police dragged young Allauddin Khan away to face the Nawab,
who, when he heard the whole story, was so impressed by the fervor
of a young man ready to use such grave methods that he called him
to the palace to play for him.
Baba gave a very impressive
performance on the sarod and on the violin, and then was asked if
he could handle any other instruments. The Nawab was quite amused
when Baba, replying, boasted that he could play any instrument available
in the palace. So, all the instruments were brought out and, to
the astonishment of everyone present, he did just that - one by
one, he played them all, and quite deftly, too ! The Nawab asked
him if he had any other talents, and Baba said that he could write
anything played or sung. The Nawab was overwhelmed when Baba did
this easily on the first attempt. The Nawab then sang him a very
difficult gamak tan, a complicated embel- lishment in a phrase.
Fortunately, young Allauddin had detected that the Nawab was becoming
a little annoyed at the thought that such a young man might know
more than he, and so he meekly replied that such a tan would be
difficult to write down. The Nawab was so pleased at this that,
in a benevolent mood, he sent for Ustad Wazir Khan and recom- mended
young Allauddin to him as a deserving stu- dent. The Nawab himself
called for a large silver tray full of gold sovereigns, sweets,
material for new clothing, a ring, and new shoes. All these were
given to Wazir Khan on behalf of the disciple, and the binding ceremony
between Wazir Khan as guru and Allauddin Khan as shishya took place
on the spot.
As Baba has said, from the
time he moved to Cal- cutta until he came to Rampur, he had communicated
with his family and had visited their home several times. His family,
hoping they could give him a reason to stay with them, forced him
to take a wife on one of his visits, and later, had him marry a
sec- ond time. (Muslims may marry up to four times.) But to their
horror, Baba ran away from home on the day after each marriage ceremony.
His fanatic love for music left no room for such things as marriage
or a family then.
In his first two and a half
years as a disciple of Wazir Khan, Baba more or less had the duties
of a servant and errand boy to his guru and was not really being
taught music by him. Baba was rather unhappy about this, but he
still spent as much time as he could practicing what he had learned
from Ahmad Ali and others on the sarod. Then one day, there came
a telegram to him in care of Wazir Khan, asking him to come home
immediately because his second wife had tried to commit suicide
and was critically ill. She was an extremely beautiful woman, and
the peo- ple of her village had tormented her, saying she could
not keep her husband at home for all her good looks, and teased
her to such an extent that in her unhap- piness she tried to kill
herself. Wazir Khan had the telegram read (it was in English) before
passing it on to Baba. He was shocked and not a little angry to
learn about this, because Baba had told him that he was completely
alone and had no family. Imme- diately, he summoned Baba. After
being interrogated, Baba tremblingly revealed the truth. When the
great man heard the story, he was deeply moved. He real- ized that
this was a young man with an unheard-of, abnormal desire to learn
music, a love so strong that he would forsake anything else in life,
including the love of two young and beautiful wives.
In tears, Wazir Khan embraced
Baba, saying he had never realized any of these things, and he felt
ex- tremely sorry that he had not paid any attention to Baba in
those two and a half years. Then he advised Baba to go home for
a while, and as soon as he had straightened matters out, to return
to Rampur. Wazir Khan promised that he would consider Baba as his
foremost and best disciple outside of his own family, and said he
would teach him all the secrets of the art of music that the members
of Tan Sen's family pos- sess. "I'll teach you all the dhrupad and
dhamar songs," he said, "and the technique and different baj [styles
of playing] of the been, rabab, and sursringar." He qualified his
vow, however, by saying he could never permit Baba to play the been,
because it is tra- ditionally restricted to the Beenkar gharana
- his fam- ily - and he warned that if Baba were to play it Baba
would never have an heir and his family would die out. Then Wazir
Khan further explained that it would be quite possible for Baba
to use all the tech- niques and styles of playing the been on the
sarod, and he agreed to teach him to play the rabab and sursringar,
two instruments that were going out of use at that time.
Wazir Khan did indeed keep
his promises. Baba told us that many years later, when he was serving
His Highness the Maharaja of Maihar, one day news arrived that Wazir
Khan was on his deathbed. Baba rushed straightway to Rampur to be
with his guru. Wazir Khan blessed him before he died, saying that
Baba's name and the names of his disciples would live forever and
carry on the great tradition of the Beenkar gharana and the glory
of Mian Tan Sen.
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THE REMARKABLE ''IMPURIST''
Few people have any idea
of the contributions Baba has made to the world of music, especially
in the in- strumental field. Above all, I feel, he is responsible
for enlarging the scope and range of possibilities open to an instrumentalist.
He has led us away from the confines of narrow specialization that
prevailed in our music really through the first quarter of this
cen- tury. Until then, one player would do only music of a light
and delicate nature, and another would per- form only romantic compositions,
some musicians were purely spiritual and others emphasized the "ma-
terialistic" side of the music - the wealth of embel- lishment.
Because Ustad Allauddin Khan, as a young man, was taught by so many
masters, he learned a variety of styles of singing and playing and
acquired a good many instrumental techniques - wind and bowed and
plucked-string instruments, and even drums.
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And so he very naturally incorporated in his playing of the sarod
some of the characteristics of diverse vocal styles and of the playing
styles asso- ciated with a number of different instruments. He is
known mainly as a sarod player, but he also per- formed on several
other instruments. He was equally well known as a violinist, and as
he did with the sarod, he played the violin with his left hand. Three
stringed instruments that he did not perform on in concerts are the
been, the sitar, and the surbahar, although he was acquainted with
their techniques.
Musicians who follow Baba's
example may now choose from a great many vocal and instrumental
styles-alap, dhrupad-dhamar, khyal, tarana, tappa, thumri-and synthesize,
creating a whole new con- cept in interpretation and performance.
Baba faced much criticism in the beginning, as indeed, some of us,
as his disciples, have been and are still facing. Early in his career,
he was reproached for not playing "pure sarod" when he performed
and was criticized for bringing other techniques into his playing.
I myself, when I began public appear- ances, faced the charge of
not playing "pure sitar" and of having sarod techniques in my music,
because I had learned from a sarod player. And I remember clearly
that even into the late 1930s, sitar playing was restricted to a
very limited dimension, and the players kept to their favorite specialized
areas of music. There were some who used a small sitar for the "authentic"
sitar baj (here baj means style of playing) and played only medium-slow
Masitkhani gats with simple tans (or phrases), a style of composition
created by Masit Khan. There were others who played only medium-
fast Rezakhani gats and still others who used a rather large sitar
and played it more or less in the way one plays the surbahar (a
large, deep-sounding instru- ment with very thick strings). I have
heard the well- known sitarist Enayat Khan play the alap, jor, and
jhala (first three movements of a raga) on the surba- har, then
put aside that instrument and take up a small sitar to do the fast
Rezakhani gat. His father, Emdad Khan, is known to have done the
same thing.
The criticisms of "impurity"
of style are likely to come from other musicians who use the same
instru- ment, and they and their admirers can cause quite a storm
of differing opinion. Also, musicians who do not belong to one strong
and well-established gharana are often open to harsh judgments.
A musician who is a member of a certain gharana may - and often
does - change his style, enriching and expanding it after hearing
other musicians and interpreting their ideas in his own way. But,
if questioned about this, he has recourse to the shelter of his
gharana. He can claim that there is a precedent for what he has
done and trace it back through his own gharana's traditions. Often,
though, I am amazed that a musician who upholds the highest tradition
can be cruelly criticized if he also happens to be a creative artist
and brings about many innovations. The great Tan Sen and then Sadarang
and even Allauddin Khan faced this sort of criticism early in their
careers, but later their "in- novations" became part of our musical
tradition, and , were well established through their disciples.
That is one of the beauties of Indian classical music - that since
the Vedas it has never stood stagnant, but has kept on growing and
being enriched by the great creative geniuses of successive generations.
As a teacher, Baba aims
at perfecting the hand and finger technique of the student. No matter
what in- strument the student may choose, Baba insists that the
student who shows promise should also learn to sing the palta, sargams,
and other song compositions, carefully delineating the scope of
the raga and its distinctive notes and phrases and correctly using
the microtones, or shrutis, to give the proper effect to the music
and make it come alive. The reason for this is, of course, that
the basis of our music is vocal, and it is composed primarily of
melody, of embellishment, and of rhythm; any melodic phrase, with
or without a definite rhythm, that can be sung can also be played
on an instrument, with each instrument's own fea- tures bringing
a special quality to the sound. Ac- cording to our tradition, even
the instrumentalists are required to have a moderate command of
the voice. This makes it easier for them when they take on the role
of teacher to instruct their students, merely by singing the gats,
or tans, or todas, or even the alap, jor, and jhala. Along with
the ability to sing the melodies, Baba recommends that his students
learn to play the tabla and acquire a good knowledge of taladhaya
(rhythmics). In mastering the funda- mentals, the student learns
all the technique of prop- erly handling the instrument of his choice,
working in the particular idiom, tonal range, and musical scope
of a given instrument by practicing scales, palta, sargams, and
bols taught by the guru. Gener- ally, Baba starts with basic ragas
like Kalyan for the evening and Bhairav for the morning, first giving,
many pieces of "fixed music" in the form of gats, tans, or todas
based on the raga. By "fixed music" I do not mean music that is
written down as it is in the West; rather I am referring to what
we call bandishes, which literally means "bound down," but in this
con- text means "fixed." These are vocal or instrumental pieces,
either traditional compositions or the teacher's own, that students
learn and memorize by playing over hundreds, even thousands, of
times, to be able to produce the correct, clear sound, intonation,
and phrasing. Thus, Baba lays a solid foundation for the student
to know the sanctified framework of the ragas and talas.
When the student, after
some years of training, has fairly good control of the basic technique
of the in- strument and has learned a few more important morn- ing
and evening ragas (Sarang, Todi, Bhimpalasi, Bhairav, Yaman Kalyan,
Bihag, and so on) and has some mastery of the fundamentals of solo
playing, then he may expand his creative faculties and is encouraged
to improvise as he plays. But he has to be careful not to impinge
on the purity of the raga. That is, his playing must be correct
both in technique and interpretation. The right feeling of a raga
is some- thing that must be taught by the guru and nurtured from
the germ of musical sensitivity within the stu- dent. Unlike some
other musicians, Baba has never been stingy or jealous about passing
on to deserving students the great and sacred art that he possesses.
In fact, when he is inspired in his teaching, it is as if a floodgate
had opened up and an ocean of beautiful and divine music were flowing
out. The disciple spends many hours simply listening to his guru,
and then he endeavors to fill up the frame of a raga with impro-
vised passages born out of the compelling mood of the moment or
enlarged through his own attempts at improvisation as his understanding
grows and he becomes more familiar with a particular raga. At first,
the student may improvise only a fraction of his performance, but
as his musicianship matures, so his confidence grows, and he improvises
more and more. It is, in a way, like learning to swim. It is exhilarating
in the beginning to feel your own body moving through the water,
but you are afraid to swim far and there is always the fear of losing
control somehow. So it is with a raga. You are always a little afraid
at first that you will make mistakes, play the wrong notes, and
go out of a raga or lose count of the rhythm as the raga carries
you along, but your confidence keeps growing, and one day, you feel
you have complete control over what you are playing. A truly excellent
and creative musician of the Hindustani system will improvise anywhere
from fifty to ninety per cent of his music as he performs, but this
freedom can come about only after many many years of basic study
and discipline and organized training (if he has a good deal of
talent to begin with), and after profound study of the ragas, and
finally, if he has been blessed with guru-kripa, the favor of the
guru.
When I myself start to perform
a raga, the first thing I do is shut out the world around me and
try to go down deep within myself. This starts even when I am concentrating
on the careful tuning of the sitar and its tarafs (sympathetic strings).
When, with con- trol and concentration, I have cut myself off from
the outside world, I step onto the threshold of the raga with feelings
of humility, reverence, and awe. To me, a raga is like a living
person, and to establish that in- timate oneness between music and
musician, one must proceed slowly. And when that oneness is achieved,
it is the most exhilarating and ecstatic moment, like the supreme
heights of the act of love or worship. In these miraculous moments,
when I am so much aware of the great powers surging within me and
all around me, sympathetic and sensitive listeners are feeling the
same vibrations. It is a strange mixture of all the intense emotions
- pathos, joy, peace, spirituality, eroticism, all flowing together.
It is like feeling God. All these emotions may vary according to
the style and approach of playing and to the nature and princi-
pal mood of the raga. We Indians say that in a per- formance of
our classical music, the listener plays a great role. It is this
exchange of feeling, this strong rapport between the listener and
the performer, that creates great music. But wrong vibrations emanating
from egoistic, insensitive, and unsympathetic listeners can diminish
the creative feelings of the musician. Al- though I am not a Tan
Sen, at times I have seen miracles happen with my music. Perhaps
my playing does not cause rain to fall from the skies, but it has
made tears fall from the eyes of my listeners. The miracle of our
music is in the beautiful rapport that occurs when a deeply spiritual
musician performs for a receptive and sympathetic group of listeners.
A LEGENDARY TEMPER
Besides being famous for
his performances and in- novations in music, Baba was also very
well known throughout the musical world for his temper. I was rather
apprehensive about meeting him for the first time in person. But
I still remember how surprised I was when I found him to be so gentle
and unassuming, endowed with the virtue of vinaya (humility) in
the true Vaishnav spirit. It is only when he is wrapped up utterly
in his music that he becomes a stern taskmas- ter, for he cannot
tolerate any impurities or defects in the sacred art of music, and
he has no sympathy or patience with those who can. His own life
has been one of rigorously self-imposed discipline, and he ex- pects
no less from his students. Baba's views on celi- bacy and especially
on intoxication through alcohol or drugs are extremely rigid and
severe. He strongly in- sists that the students follow brahmacharya
- for the disciple, a traditional Hindu way of life that includes
only the absolute essentials of material needs. This way, with no
thoughts of fine clothes, fancy foods, sex or complicated love affairs
or anything else that satis- fies and encourages physical desires,
the student can channel all of his powers and forces, both mental
and physical, into the discipline of his music. Music, to Baba,
is a strict, lifelong discipline that requires long and careful
training, and if a student is not prepared to regard music in this
way, he had better not take it up at all.
Unfortunately, Baba no longer
travels or performs now, although on special occasions he may be
seen playing the violin or conducting the famous Maihar Band (an
ensemble of Indian and Western instru- ments) of which he is still
the director. He also con- tinues as Principal of the Maihar College
of Music which he attends every day. In 1952, Baba was made a Fellow
of the Sangeet Natak Akademi (National Academy of Performing Arts),
and in 1958, he was awarded the Padma Bhusan, an honorary title
for out- standing citizens, by the President of the academy. Viswa
Bharati, Tagore's university, gave him the hon- orary degree of
Doctor. Thus, honor and recognition came to him in the evening of
his life, but he remains, following the saying in the Geeta, unmoved
and un- ruffled as he pursues his work and the study of music, never
bothering, never worrying or looking back. Baba himself believes
he is well over a hundred years old, and his centenary has already
been marked. His true age is not known, because records have not
been kept, but what does it matter if he is over a hundred or nearing
a hundred? What he has accom- plished in his lifetime many others
could not do if they had three hundred years to live. He is respected
and well regarded by everyone, including the most orthodox Hindu
Brahmins, as a rishi, responsible for safeguarding traditions, for
developing, teaching, and passing on to disciples the art of music.
There are so many things
one could add about Ustad Allauddin Khan. He belongs to a school
that seems so far removed from our modern industrial era, and yet,
in every way, he has been ahead of his time, injecting a new significance
and life into Indian in- strumental music. With him will pass an
era that upheld the dedicated, spiritual outlook handed down by
the great munis and rishis who considered the sound of music, nad,
to be Nada Brahma - a way to reach God.
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