Never before has the world
of Hindustani classical music received such a double-blow as on
February 14, 1974, when it lost two stalwarts on the same day.
In the death of Padma Bhushan Srikrishna Narayan Ratanjankar,
we lost a most dedicated musician and erudite musicologist, and
a few hours later, the grand voice of Padma Bhushan Amir Khan
was stilled for ever in a tragic car accident. Both have bequeathed
precious musical legacies for posterity, each in his own way.
Pandit Ratanjankar with
his life of almost ascetic simplicity, his dedication to and personal
sacrifice for the propagation of classical music, and indifference
to publicity and money, was quite an extraordinary personality
in this era when the majority of professionals hanker after fame,
wealth, and a following. The mantle of the great Chaturpandit
Bhatkhande could not have fallen on worthier shoulders. Like his
guru, Ratanjankar was "a dedicated soul wedded to music." While
tragedy after tragedy struck his personal life, Pt. Ratanjankar
sought solace for his soul by plunging deeper and deeper into
the art which alone gave him a purpose in life and courage to
pursue the ideals set before him by his revered guru.
Decades ago, when Pt.
Ratanjankar was known with affection and respect as "Anna Saheb"
among his colleagues, friends and followers, and his voice was
in excellent form, he could have chosen the more paying and exciting
life of a practical musician. But, such was his reverence and
loyalty to the memory of his Guru, that he chose to follow the
latter's footsteps, to continue the work of training generations
of musicians and music teachers, and to work in every possible
way for the propagation of classical music. So dedicated was he
to his ideals, that he stuck on steadfastly to the Principalship
of the Bhatkhande Music College, Lucknow, through three long decades
when emoluments were meagre, and sometimes, not forthcoming at
all! Leaving his family in Bombay, Srikrishna Ratanjankar spent
the best years of his life cooped up in a small room next to his
equally small office-cum-class room in the college. It would not
be an exaggeration to say that but for the enormous personal sacrifices
that he made, this music college would not have survived the years
of poverty and emerged as such a reputed institution today. While
personal tragedies assailed his life repeatedly, this small, frail,
man continued to live like a true Karma Yogi, imparting music
to students and scholars who flocked to him from all parts of
India, and Ceylon, writing scholarly articles on music for various
journals, seminars and radio-talks, and enriching our music with
a prolific number of masterly compositions such as Khayals, Lakshanageets,
Taranas and Bhajans (in Hindi and Sanskrit). An erudite scholar
in music, he remained an eager student and research-scholar till
the end.
Born on the first dawn
of this century in a middle-class Maharashtrian family of Bombay,
Srikrishna's father (an officer in the C.I.D.) had a deep and
discriminating interest in music. Therefore, he was able to have
the good fortune of receiving excellent training in the art under
the most efficient masters available. At the age of 7, young Srikrishna
was put under the training of Pt. Krishnam Bhat of Karwar (a pupil
of Kale Khan of Patiala Gharana) whose method of teaching was
so thorough that in 2 years of (nothing but) scale exercises,
the boy's "swar-jnan" was perfected. His next teacher was Pt.
Anant Manohar Joshi (a pupil of Balakrishna Buwa). It was about
this time that Srikrishna's family came into contact with Pt.
Bhatkhande Ji. The latter was so deeply impressed by the boy's
talent and zeal, that the Chaturpandit predicted that with proper
training, he would not only become a great musician, but also
a pioneer in the rejuvenation and popularization of Hindustani
classical music.
From 1912, Ratanjankar's
family had to endure many misfortunes. Young Srikrishna lost his
mother, and his father had to retire from service on a premature
pension owing to recurring heart-attacks. Unable to live in a
costly place like Bombay, the family shifted to Ahmadnagar where
Srikrishna, though only 13, began to give "mehfils" (music sittings)
and became very popular.
In 19l6 Srikrishna took
part in the first All India Music conference in Baroda. In 1917.
he was given a scholarship by Baroda State for studying music.
The family moved to Baroda where the teen-aged musician taught
the Maharani for some time. With Pandit Bhatkhande's approval
he became a disciple of Aftab-e-Mousiqui Ustad Faiyaz Khan and
remained with him for five years. The mutual affection and respect
between these two was great, and the Ustad always mentioned Srikrishna's
name as one of the most eminent of his "musical heirs".
In 1923 Ratanjankar's
family went back to Bombay. In spite of the vicissitudes of the
family, and his all-engrossing musical training, he found time
to pursue his academic studies as well, and in the year 1925,
Ratanjankar graduated from the Wilson College. The contact with
Pandit Bhatkahandeji was always maintained, and then Ratanjankar
began to take classes and give performances in the Sharada Sangeet
Mandal sponsored by Bhatkhande. Later on, when Pt. Bhatkhande
started the Music College in Lucknow, Ratanjankar was brought
here, first as professor, and soon after, became Principal. The
latter used to accompany the Chaturpandit during his visits to
the various eminent musicians of the day to collect ancient compositions
from various Gharanas. Thus he was able to learn an enormous number
of old and traditional compositions (Dhrupads, Dhamar, Khayals,
Lakashanageet and Thumri). Like Bhatkhandeji, his disciple also
strove in various ways through lectures, classes, demonstrations,
writings etc., to revive interest in classical music among the
public.
A senior music teacher
of today recalls the first time he met and heard Sri Ratanjankar.
It was in the All India Music Conference organised in Lucknow
in 1924. In that conference where music maestros from all important
centres like Rampur Jaipur, Gwalior, Alwar, Dholpur, Indore, Baroda
and Maihar had assembled, Shrikrishna somehow stood out like a
young Abhimanyu among the revered Dronas, Bhishmas, etc. Besides
being a graduate and a polished musician, he was already a profound
scholar in music. His voice was in excellent form and his erudition
in "Sangeet Shastra" was astounding. He could render rare and
difficult ragas like Deepak, Patmanjari, Natnarayan, Bhankar,
etc., with as much ease as the Prachalit (current and popular)
ones like Yaman, Bilawal, Todi, Bhairavi etc.
He knew by heart even
the rare compositions published in the fifth and sixth parts of
Bhatkhande's Kramik Series. We could not help wondering how and
when he had managed to learn such a large number of ragas and
compositions, to take his B. A. Degree, and to make such a deep
study of classics like Sungeeta-Ratnakar, Natya-Shashtra, Lakshya-Sangeet,
Raga Tala vibodh and so on !
Those who have had the
good fortune to listen to "Anna Saheb's" (Ratanjankar's) music
when he was in his best form can never forget the vastness of
his raga - and - songs - repertoire, the richness of his creative
imagination, the purity and precision of his note-combinations,
and the overall beauty of his well-integrated, systematic style.
Being of a shy and quiet temperament, and a genuine votary of
music, Annasaheb never made any concessions to placate plebian
tastes. He retired into his own quiet shell, and loosened the
springs of his great and unspoilt art, only in front of the knowing
and discerning few. His style, though basically of the Jaipur
Gharana, bore the unmistakable impression of Ustad Faiyaz Khan's
Agra or Rangeela style, while delightfully combining some of the
best characterstics of the Gwalior-gharana. The resulting synthesis
was a remarkable individual style of his own. It was a rare combination
of sweetness and dignity, aesthetic purity and creativeness and
of swara suddhi with Uchchaar suddhi (purity of notes and intonation).
I have had the good fortune to listen to innumerable soirees of
Annasaheb when his music was at the peak of its glory. Some of
his memorable performances were at the various festival functions
organised in the college such as Basant, Hori, Janmashtami and
so on. But it was at the annual Sangeet Dhara programmes, dedicated
to Pt. Bhatkhande's memory, that he really sang like one inspired,
and poured out his soul in song, in honour of his gurus "Punya
tithi." Past and present students, musicians from far and near,
used to flock to participate in this unbroken-musical stream which
commenced at dawn on l9th of September each year, and lasted for
12 hours. The ragas Paraj, Bhairavi, Lalit Poncham, Desh, Darbari
,Sohini, and Malhar that I heard him sing in the Nineteen forties
still echo in my ears.
Throughout the day and
late into the night, Annasaheb lived in a musical world of his
own, engrossed in ancient music classics, and composing new rare-combinations
like Marga-Bihag, Kedar Bahar, Sawani Kedara, Rajani Kalyan, Salag
Varali, Sankara Karan etc. He also experimented on new types of
compositions like Varnams from Carnatic music with Hindi Sahitya
and Taranas with Sanskrit verses instead of Persian ones. Well
versed in English, Hindi, Sanskrit, and Marathi, all this came
to him with ease. It was a joke (though a fact) among his students,
that his "companions" during railway-journeys were never light
magazines or novels, but heavy classics like the Samaveda, Bharata
Natya Sastra, and Sangeeta Ratnakara.
With the passing of years,
the strenuous years of music teaching, the impact of tragic personal
losses, and deteriorating health-all these factors ruined his
voice. Ratanjankar performed less and less frequently. He concentrated
on other aspects of music-creativity. As an examiner in various
universities, and as a member of the Syllabus-Committee, he wrote
and published his Sangeet Shiksha in 3 parts, the Abhinava Sangeet
Shiksha, the Tana Samgraha, etc. His Abhinava - Rag Manjari alone
contains nearly 200 of his original and beautiful compositions.
He never tried to publicise the fact that his compositions are
being broadcast from the various stations of All India Radio almost
every day. Generations of musicians will revere his memory as
one of the most eminent and prolific Vagyeyakars of modern times.
Only a musician-cum scholar could create such beautiful classical
songs in which Swaras and Sahitya, blend so harmoniously. Annasaheb's
musical credo was that the effect of music ought to be, and is
pure aesthetic joy" and that the musician should be able to draw
out from every raga whatever rasa or emotion he wishes to". Perhaps
it was to illustrate this point that he wrote his successful musical
operas-Govardhanodhar, Jhansi Ki Rani and Shivamangalam. The first
of these was put out as a national programme from all stations
of AIR. In all of them, he made use of a plethora of ragas to
produce various rasas.
When the Indira Kala Sangeet
University was inaugurated in Khairagarh (Madhya Pradesh), Principal
Ratanjankar was persuaded to accept the Vice-Chancellorship. Leaving
his humble college in Lucknow was a most painful wrench for him.
Again, like a true karma-yogi, he felt it was his duty to take
up this new challenging job, see this infant University through
its birth-pangs, and put it on firm foundations. In fact, a less
dedicated person could not have borne this heavy responsibility.
Night and day, he strove selflessly for the University. Only his
closest-associates know how he secretly used to donate a large
slice of his own salary back to the University whenever funds
became inadequate. He did not lay down the heavy reins of this
office until he had steered this institution out of troubled waters
and set it sailing along calm seas.
At a time when the majority
of north Indian musicians looked askance at Karnatak music, Shri
Ratanjankar was one of the very few who studied deeply the theory
and ragas of the Karnatak system, appreciated its great traditions,
and adapted much from it to enrich the Hindustani system. Averse
to party politics, and narrow provincialism, he remained dignified
and above petty jealousies. Sangeet Kalanidhi Justice Venkatrama
Iyer described Ratanjankar as "the symbol of the unity of lndian
music". As a member of the expert committee of the Music Akademy,
Madras, he contributed richly to "promote close mutual understanding
between the two systems".
As chairman of the Music
Auditions Board, Pt. Ratanjankar was closely associated with AIR
for a number of years. He participated in many music seminars
with his scholarly papers. Among his more well-known disciples
may be mentioned the late Chandrasekhar Pant, the late Chidanand
Nagarkar, Chinmoy Lahiri, Dinkar Kaikini, P.N. Chinchore, Dr.
Sumati Mutatkar, S.C.R. Bhat, K.G. Ginde and others. While all
of them have been regular broadcasters, two of them served on
the staff of the AIR for many years. But now most of them are
teaching music.
Shri Ratanjankar adorned
many positions of honour in the world of music and was honoured
with the title of "Padma Bhushan" by President Rajendra Prasad
in recognition of his outstanding services to music.
Musicians and musicologists
from all over the country pay their homage to the memory of this
rare "missionary" in music who lived a life of utter simplicity
and dedication, and who enriched Hindustani music in many ways.
In one of his many lovely Bhajans he used to sing: "It is a precious
gift to be born as a human being on this earth. Do some good work
while you are here. Keep your mind and body and your entire life
pure and clean. Help those in need. Make your life useful and
purposeful". In fact, this describes Pt. Ratanjankar's own approach
to life.