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Ustad
Baba Allauddin Khan and
Smt. Annapurna Devi
[
The following article was scanned from the January 1988 issue of
"Society" (India).
Typos are thanks to the scanning machine. ]
"Annapoorna
Devi -- The Woman Shrouded in a Mystery"
by
Smarth Bali
smarth_bali@yahoo.com
[The article
includes four photos with the following captions:
Ravi Shankar and Annapoorna - the wedding photograph, 1941.
Hariprasad Chaurasia - the privileged one.
Ustad Ali Akbar Khan - her only brother who went away.
Ustad Allauddin Khan and Ravi Shankar- the two who mattered.]
*Some have heard of her. Few have met her. None truly know her.
Ali Akbar Khan says she is 'simply great'. Ravi Shankar acknowledges
her genius. Yet, none have heard her play. Mysterious, intriguing,
she is like our own Garbo, living in her own shadows, shutting herself
out from the world in the cloistered confines of a city flat, seeking
peace in an instrument her father taught her. She wants nothing
from the world, from society. But if she decided to give of herself,
the world would 6e a richer place.*
Six floors up the elevator
in a high-rise building, in one of the posh residential localities
of Bombay, lives a woman. That is by far the only information one
can get from the residents of the building and the elevator operator.
No one sees her, not even her immediate neighbour. The board at
the entrance of the building simply spells: 6 A-Annapoorna Devi.
With some trepidation one mumbles the floor number to the elevator
operator. A square board is tacked next to her door-bell. It reads:
1 ) The door will not be
opened on Mondays and Fridays.
2) Please ring the bell
only thrice.
3) lf no one opens the door
please leave your name and address. Thank you very much. Inconvenience
is regretted.
Standing there one wonders
whether to believe the instructions or not. However, courage is
a helpful commodity.You press the bell-button thrice and await a
response. Nothing happens. Not a sound from inside. As the Americans
would say 'it's kinda scary' but another attempt is futile, the
first one tells you. As one leaves the building, taking in a lungful
of the cool sea breeze, questions like a swarm of bees rush clouding
all other thoughts. How can a woman stay in the claustrophobic confines
of a flat so absolutely cut off from the rest of the world? Three
sixty five days of the year? ls it voluntary or is it an imposition
of another's ill,binding her to a forced anonymity? Is she happy?
What does she do? And finally, who is she? Annapoorna Devi is related
to two of the best known exponents of Indian instrumental music
in the world Pandit Ravi Shankar and Ustad Ali Akbar Khan. The later
is her brother and the former her ex-husband. What's more, she is
the daughter of the legendary Ustad Allaudin Khan, the sarod wizard.
While Pandit Ravi Shankar and Ustad Ali Akbar Khan have made a name
for themselves, she remains the genius behind the curtain. one whose
genius is acknowledged by all to the extent that some of her fans
openly claim she's more talented than Ravi Shankar himself. No matter
which school of music they belong to, none dispute the fact that
Annapooma Devi is a musician par excellence, not to be grouped with
the rest. If this is so, what does one make of the reclusive life
style that this lady leads? What does one say of an artiste who
has given barely ten or eleven public performances in all her life?
What is the touchstone of her talent? Why has all that talent been
cloistered? What are the deep mysteries that enveloped her making
her disappear from the limelight so completely? And what was she
as a woman who loved and lost, or may be not. Of the many who regard
as the very incarnation of Saraswati, only handful have met her,
leave alone listened to her play. After numerous attempts over a
period of six months, we failed to meet with her. Many spoke of
her eccentric behaviour, her famous temper; of how she had not allowed
even a top photographer of a newsmagazine to take her picture after
much persuasive pleading; of how she spurned a lucrative offer from
the Madhya Pradesh government which promised her a lakh plus perks
per year; of how she turned down leading musicians when they approached
her for training; of how she would refuse to meet people, regardless
of his/her status or talent; of how Indira Gandhi had to request
her to play for Yehudi Menuhin and George Harrison.... the list
is legion. Perhaps that's when the determination lo know her, or
at least of her, grew stronger. The prospects of meeting her however
remained as bleak as ever.
In Maihar, fifty seven or
fifty eight years ago, she was born the daughter of Ustad Allaudin
Khan. An orthodox Muslim father, Allaudin Khan decided to teach
only his male progeny, Ali Akbar Khan, the magic of sarod. One day
while the maestro was out, Ali Akbar could not get a particular
note right and Annapoorna who had been imbibing lessons from behind
the closed door stepped in and started pointing out the intricacies
of the piece by singing it. Her father who entered at that moment
was stupefied at the god-given talent of his daughter. Allaudin
Khan motioned to her to follow him to his room upstairs where he
handed her a tanpura and asked her to sing. While the young girl
sang, the father wept tears of joy and welcome disbelief. Her training
began.
Being well-acquainted with
the shy and introverted nature of his daughter, he decided to teach
her to play the strains of a dying instrument, the surbahar(a bigger
version of sitar). Soon, Ravi Shankar, who was pursuing dance in
the footsteps of his elder brother, the world-famous Uday Shankar,
also decided to learn sitar from Ustad Allaudin Khan and gave up
dancing.
The trio of Annapoorna,
Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan, began a long and arduous journey,
trying to plumb the depths of a five thousand year old tradition
and culture. Baba (as Allaudin Khan was called by his disciples)
was a very strict man and his temper was well-known. There were
times when the boys were so petrified that they dared not approach
Baba and the only person who had access to him was Annapoorna. He
taught her, and she in turn often taught the boys.
As the training progressed
the interaction between the three also increased. There came a time
when Annapoorna and Ravi Shankar were increasingly thrown together.
"I had gone to Maihar to study music, there was no question of getting
married", says Ravi Shankar in his autobiography, Raag Anuraag.
"From 1938 to 1941 my education continued.... I got married after
three years of my stay... My sisterin- law had come to visit me
at Maihar.... She would come to me and say, 'What a sweet girl is
Annapoorna. You must get just such a bride!' on her telling even
Alibhai seconded the proposal. Finally it reached my father's ear....
I was only watching the fun all those days. What was my age then?
Twenty, twenty one, what else?When the proposal to marry Annapoorna
was put forth I really did not think about its seriousness. At that
time I was obessessed with music. And Baba's love and his loving
way of teaching me. I never got any affection from my father all
my life... so the love I was getting from Allaudin Khan overwhelmed
me.. I was filled with gratitude. So when there was talk of marrying
his daughter I was not in a state to think reasonably about it.
I felt the marriage inevitable... the marriage took place."
With Ravi Shankar by her
side, Annapoorna gave some recitals, each surpassing the other in
exhibiting the subtleties and intricacies of classical music. Soon,
a son was born to them, Shubhendra, and a little while later things
began happening. Going by Pt. Ravi Shankar's autobiography one can
understand that the couple were probably destined to drift apart,
as he himself writes....' I was not in a state to think reasonably:.
Perhaps the moment reason set in, love frayed at the edges, leading
to the final break. Surprisingly, Ravi Shankar does not blame her
for it "but the chemistry of love did not work finally. Because
there is a need to compromise in the maturity of love. Just sentiment
and emotion cannot live for ever. At one stage there will be need
to compromise and we couldn't do that.....After Shubho's birth Annapoorna's
health also deteriorated...Usually I have nothing besides praise
for Annapoorna. She is so gifted! But she has a tremendous temper.
Like her father. That is to say, she has less patience than others.
And at that time even I was very ill-tempered. So we both would
flare up together. Then we came to Bombay towards the end of '44.
I was recovering from my illness at that time. And then I fell in
love with somebody else.. Kamala. Perhaps the affair became too
big, mainly from my side. Annapoorna was definitely hurt by the
entire affair. But my relation with Kamala was really nothing much.
Anyway, I was mainly responsible for this crack.. Annapoorna felt
hurt and went away to Maihar." This and her father's subsequent
death dealt a severe blow to Annapoorna, something that she could
never recover from. Nature had unleashed that strange, savage streak
of vengeance on the most undeserving. Pandit Hari Prasad Chaurasia,
the renowned flautist and one of her most famous disciples, says.
"The point we fail to understand is that she is no ordinarywoman.
How could she, after her break with Panditji ( Ravi Shankar) feel
confident of facing the world? After all she was Allaudin Khan's
daughter and Ali Akbar Khan's sister and a genius in her own right.
How could she open up with everyone? What could she have talked
about? Her family life? Her music which was inextricably woven with
her family ties? I guess she just gave up. A soul regardless of
the body." She became a recluse. She was not interested in the material
world to which she had never belonged anyway. Her son went abroad,
married an American and made that country the land of his dreams.
She yearned for him, for the artiste in him, but the son chose the
other way,the way of the world. She even refused to accept disciples
and those who came to her were often turned away, discouraged from
learning. Some of the disciples we spoke to described their experiences
with 'maaji' with remarkable likeness. The common thread that runs
through each person's description of his meeting with Annapoorna
Devi is her reluctance to accept him, her strict attitude and endless
patience. "I always had a great desire to learn from her since 1974"
says Nityanand Haldipur, a flautist with AIR who's just begun learning
from Annapoorna Devi about four months back. "But things never worked
out and I always missed a chance to meet her. Finally, one day,
my friend, a sarod player, Rajiv Taranath, took me to her house.
I was literally trembling with fear as I was overawed by what I
had heard of her, that she is very strict, stern and possesses a
fiery temper. Let alone approaching her to teach me, I could not
even bring myself to talk to her. Anyway, we all sat together talking
and I was trying to camouflage my intentions by referring to Taranath's
plans. I guess we veered towards talking of students and the lack
of patience that is obvious in them when I hesitantly broached the
subject of my training. Surprisingly she agreed and asked me to
play one of the basic ragas, Yaman. After listening to me she pointed
out certain flaws in my rendition and I was stunned. She was absolutely
right! Till that day I had considered myself as an artiste of some
calibre and was hopeful that I would be able to make a mark in a
couple of years. But now, I thought, I was just a beginner. "I used
to think, before I met her, given my doubting nature, that she is
regarded as great only because she happens to be Ustad Allaudin
Khan's daughter. But, believe me, when I met her and listened to
one of her recordings (very rare, of course) my god, I couldn't
believe it. I realised that a lot of artistes who prefix their names
with Pt. (implying Pandit) are only points, zeroes. She is incomparable.
Besides being an unmatched artiste she is also a fantastic human
being. Very strict and stern outside but soft within. I remember
an interesting incident. once, a Nepali boy who was learning from
her, visited her after a couple of months only to tell her that
he wanted to learn the violin instead of the instrument he earlier
played. She was very angry, I remember, but she soon cooled down
and asked me to search for a violin teacher for the boy. I told
her, 'But maaji, the teacher will expect monthly fees.' To which
she replied, 'Get the teacher and I'll pay him.' I don't know why
she is such a recluse and shuns performing but of course, I don't
have the gutS to ask her. In her presence I am a nobody."
Annapoorna Devi's only aim
in life is to spread her Baba's (Allaudin Khan's) art as much as
she can. The artiste in her seeks fulfilment in the privacy of her
room, the audience being the two huge photographs of her father
and mother who silently applaud the devotion of their daughter.
Is there something that torments her? Something that urges her to
live by herself, away from the robotic life of the masses? Chaurasia
explains, "I don't know what it is. I only know that she has no
will or desire to live. I remember once she was very ill and coughing
very violently. So when I went to see her I took some medicines
for her. To my shock, she threw the medicines away, 'Why have you
brought these for me? What is troubling you if I am coughing? Why
do you want me to live when I don't want to?' What could I say to
that? She has lost faith in life. It's a tragedy when I think that
such a rare human being, such a gifted musician, does not find any
meaning in life. My heart bleeds. I am of the view that for every
good thing that god gives, he takes away something to keep the balance
straight. In her case she is gifted with the complete personality
that becomes a true musician but god has also taken away from her
the security a woman seeks in her family. I had only heard of jogans
(saints). Now I have seen one." To justify her lifestyle as that
which many geniuses are prone to lead is not enough. In most cases
it is justified by a genuine rationale. Pradeep Kumar, a sarod exponent
at the Films Division, and a student of Annapooma Devi relates his
experience which throws some more light on her eccentric behaviour,
if one may call it that. "ln 1974 I started learning the sarod from
her. For five years I tutored under her and she became very fond
of me. To such an extent that she even started teaching me Ustad
Allaudin Khan's style of playing, the Dhrupad Ang. Around '79 my
parents fixed my marriage and at a quiet ceremony I was engaged.
I did not tell her this and one day suddenly I told her that my
marriage had been fixed. She took it very calmly and told me that
it was time I took a break and that she did not feel like teaching
me! I was aghast! Why, I asked her. ' It was your duty to tell me
about your engagement, wasn t it? A guru is not a simple word, it
means more than you imagine it does,' she said sternly. I realised
it was entirely my fault.
"After this I kept visiting
her, pleading with her all the while to take me back but each time
she would tell me that she was not in a mood to teach me, 'dil nahi
karta hai' (I don't feel like it). >From '79 to '86, seven, yes,
seven yes, I kept visiting her from time to time but to no avail.
My parents also came to plead with her a couple of times but she
wouldn't yield. She never once said she won't teach me, it was always
'I don't feel like.' Then one day, last year, I went to meet her
once again and asked her to teach me. She gave me her usual reply.
And that was it! I couldn't take it any more and burst out crying.
oh, how I wept! I was sitting in the hall and she was in her room.
She came out and scolded me, 'kya aurton ki tarah rote ho. Chooriyan
pahen lo (why are you weeping like a woman? Go wear bangles). And
then she relented 'I never said I'll never teach you, did l? I just
kept postponing it. okay get up now. Come tomorrow with some flowers,
garlands and a box of sweets we'll begin again. "That's how she
is. The way she is with her disciples she will be the same with
her son too, if it comes to that. To me she is the ultimate, a maun
saadhika (silent saint). But a very hard taskmaster. In all the
five years I was with her I learnt only two ragas, Bhairavi and
Yaman. Her favourite phrase is: 'you people want everything in a
short time.' The only way I have seen her relax is when she feeds
the pigeons on her balcony, otherwise it is music." Annapoorna Devi's
life in her house revolves around the usual chores -- dusting, cooking,
laundry etc. "I've never seen her sitting idle," says Rooshi Kumar
Pandya, her only in-residence student and companion for a number
of years. "And that's why the need for privacy. Her priorities are
different. She wouldn't want her home to become an open house where
everyone can walk in and out. Public life is not her way of living,
by choice. So that's the way it is. Between her household chores
and her students she hardly has any time. Then, there is her own
riyaaz (practice) to which she devotes lot of time. I think she
is one of the few absolutely absorbed people I have ever met, and
she is well-read too. Her other interests include watching films,
especially Pakistani plays." Rooshikumar Pandya, whose renewed romance
with music (sitar) started way back in the Seventies and gradually
metamorphosed into a permanent relationship, came to her in 1974
with a reference from her brother Ali Akbar Khan from whom he was
learning music in California. on his summer trips to India he decided
to learn from her and in 1982 he took up full-time training in sitar
from Annapooma Devi. "She did discourage me too by saying 'Aap lecture-vecture
dijiye, yeh aapke bas ka kaam nahin hai. (Go on with your lectures.
Music is not your cup of tea). Anyway I had a good reference and
she started teaching me. Today when I sit back and think about it
I wonder how did she take me under her wing. I mean I've been a
teacher but she's the best I have come across myself Her knowledge
and mastery over her subject is simply fantastic. once George Harrison
had come to listen to her along with Yehudi Menuhin. Menuhin, sadly,
could not listen to her but Harrison did" As the sun sets there
is relief in the knowledge that tomorrow is another day. And something
exciting might happen. For instance she may come out of her flat
and smile to her neighbour. She might take a walk down the sea-shore,
inhaling deeply of a bracing breeze that had been stemmed in all
these years. Perhaps she will allow the world to catch a glimpse
of her again, like seeing a gem that had been wrapped away in forgotten
corners.Perhaps she will play again, for old times' sake and one
last time, telling the world in her incontrovertible moment of triumph,
what it had been missing all these years. Yes, perhaps.
Smarth
Bali
smarth_bali@yahoo.com
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