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Khan, (Ustad) Alauddin (1862-1972) musician
and sarod expert, was born in the village of Shibpur in the district
of brahmanbaria,
son of Sabdar Hossain Khan, also a musician. He took his first music lessons
from his elder brother, fakir
aftabuddin khan.
At the age of ten, Alauddin Khan ran away from home to join a
jatra
party. His stay with this group exposed him to a variety of folk
genres: jari, sari, baul,
bhatiyali,
kirtan,
panchali.
Subsequently, he went to Kolkata, where he met a generous physician
named Dr Kedarnath, who helped him to become a disciple of Gopal
Krishna Bhattacharya, alias Nulo Gopal, a reputed musician of
Kolkata. Alauddin became his disciple with a commitment to practice
sargam for twelve years
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Alauddin Khan |
. However, after seven years, when Nulo Gopal died of
plague, Alauddin Khan turned to instrumental
music. He learned to play many indigenous and foreign musical
instruments like sitar, flute, piccolo, mandolin, banjo, etc., from Amritalal
Dutt, a cousin of swami
vivekananda and the music director of the Star Theatre. At
the same time, he learnt to play the violin in the western style from
Mr Lobo, a Goanese bandmaster, and in the Indian style from Amar Das,
a prominent musician. He also learnt staff notation from the wife of Mr
Lobo. He learnt to play sanai,
naquara, tiquara and jagajhampa from Hazari Ustad
and pakhwaj,
mridanga
and tabla
from Nandababu.
Thus he became an expert in many instruments. He worked
as a tabla player under an assumed name for some time in the Minerva Theatre.
Then he was invited to perform at the court of Jagat Kishore Acharya,
the zamindar of Muktagachha. There Alauddin Khan was attracted to the
sarod after listening to Ustad Ahmed Ali Khan, from whom he subsequently
took lessons in the sarod for five years. Alauddin Khan then went to Rampur
to take further lessons from Ustad Wazir Khan, a famous musician of the
Tansen Gharana in India and the court musician of Hamed Ali Khan, nawab
of Rampur. Alauddin mastered the difficult skill of the Sen Gharana. The
nawab sent him to the durbar of Maihar Estate in Central Province, where
he became the court musician of Brijanath, the Maharaja of Maihar Estate.
Alauddin Khan learnt yoga, pranayam and dhyan under the influence of the
pir (Muslim saint) of Bareilly.
Alauddin Khan visited different countries as a member
of uday shankar's
dance troupe in 1935. He was the first Indian musician to acquaint western
audiences with the classical
music of the Indian subcontinent. He directed the music of
Uday Shankar`s classical film, Kalpana, based on dance. Alauddin
attained excellence in the sarod and introduced the tune diri diri
instead of dara dara in the sarod. He also brought a radical change
in the mode of playing the sitar by applying the mode of sarod playing.
He introduced a new gharana
in the realm of Hindustani classical music, known as the Alauddin Sangeet
Gharana or Maihar Sangeet Gharana. He aided the invention of some new
musical instruments such as the Chandrasarang and the Surasrngar. Alaudddin
Khan created many ragas
such as Hemanta, Durgeshvari, Meghbahar, Prabhatkeli,
Hem-behag, Madan-manjari, Mohammad (Aradhana), Manjh
Khambaj, Dhabalashri, Sarasvati, Dhankosh,
Shobhavati, Rajeshri, Chandika, Dipika, Malaya,
Kedar Manjh, Bhuvaneshvari, etc. Among his disciples are
Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, Pundit Ravi Shankar, khadem
hossain khan, ustad
mir kashem khan, Rawshan Ara Begum, Annapurna, ustad
phuljhuri khan, Ustad Khurshid Khan, Ustad Ashish Khan, Ustad
Dhyanesh Khan, Pundit Jotin Bhattacharya, Pundit nikhil
banerjee, pannalal
ghosh, Indranil Bhattacharya, Sharan Rani. He formed an orchestra
troupe with indigenous musical
instruments and named it 'Maihar String Band'. Alauddin was
honoured with the title of 'Khan Saheb' by the British Government. He
received the Sangeet Natak Academy Award in 1952, the Padmabhushan in
1958 and the Padmabibhushan in 1971 by government of India. [Mobarak Hossain
Khan] |
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