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The Anād Foundation

~ Culture | Conservation | Continuity

The Anād Foundation

Category Archives: People

Meeting Sarangi Legend Pandit Ram Narayan

06 Monday Jun 2016

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Foundation, ANAD Khand, Guru Nanak Dev University Events, Oral History Archives, People, Photos

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Nikon, NikonD810, Zeiss, Zeiss25mm, Zeiss85mm

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On May 30, 2016, Bhai Baldeep Singh, Chairman, The Anad Foundation, visited the residence of one of the world’s living legend sārangi maestros, Pandit Ram Narayan. Pandit Narayan speaks chaste Punjabi having worked at All India Radio (AIR), Lahore, until the partition of 1947. This visit was more about Pandit Ji hearing some of the ancient compositions of Gurbani and Khandarvani Dhrupad.

Here are some images that Bhai Baldeep Singh took of the maestro and his illustrious son, sarod maestro, Pandit Brij Narayan.

Bhai Baldeep Singh in Practice Session – Hum Ghar Sajan Aaye

15 Thursday Oct 2015

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Foundation, Oral History Archives, People

≈ Leave a comment

Ustad Bhai Batan Singh of Mehli dedication
Bhai Baldeep Singh in a Practice Session with Ustad Lakha Khan Manganiar (Sindhi Sarangi), Ghewar Khan (Kamaicha) and Firoze Khan (Dhol) – a short Alapa, and Dhurpad – “Hum Ghar Sajan Aaye” set in Jhaptaal, a 10-beats cycle.

Harmonium Tuning with Gurjit Singh Sokhi

14 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in People

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Bharat Music House is one of the famous music shop chains in Delhi. The main shop used to be one in the midst of many furniture shops on Panchkuiyan Road. With the infrastructure development that happened as a lead up to the Commonwealth Games, these shops have been shifted to the Gol Market area. Gurjit Singh Sokhi, the eldest son of Gyan Singh Sokhi, now plays host at the shop here while his dad sits at their Bali Nagar outlet. His youngest brother, Amarpal Singh, runs their third outlet at Lajpat Nagar called New Bharat Music House, which specializes in western music instruments.

Several years ago, Gurjit had sourced three sets of French made harmonium reeds for me and sent them to a factory in Kolkata. As the French or German reeds were made longer than the ones manufactured in India, the reed board needed to be custom made. Eventually, I got a fine triple-set scale-changer harmonium.

For the 31-raga Gurbani Kirtan performance at the Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, I had requested Narinder Singh, staff at the Music Department to play the harmonium with me. During the performance, Narinder’s fingers were dancing on the harmonium. It was a big surprise for many who have seen me perform over the years especially since 1999, when I finally had been freed from the jaws of this instrument. The purpose of having this instrument was to practically show how it is inadequate for use in Indian classical music. When I sang the very first raga sri I demonstrated the unique intonation of its komal rikhab svar (second flat) and asked my accompanist to emulate that note – the harmonium just could not. Likewise, I demonstrated various other notes which the “harm-o-nium” is not able to render.

Here a few images I took with my phone while Gurjit tuned and repaired the harmonium for me:

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A photo of the performance (harmonium being used only to demonstrate its inadequacy in Indian classical music) taken by cinematographer Jasbir Singh:

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A day with Professor Kartar Singh at Anandpur Sahib

14 Wednesday Aug 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Discussion Forum, People, Postcards from the Journey

≈ 1 Comment

It was quite a drive to Anandpur Sahib from Guru Nanak Dev University campus – nearly 200 kms, of which many were monsoon torn deep pitted. I had to manage many a shoddy road repair work, which is a normality in Punjab at least. A dog’s tail is never straight so it must be the norm in other states as well. The trip was to spend the day with Professor Kartar Singh at the SGPC run Gurmat Sangeet Academy, Anandpur Sahib, and with the living legend dhadhi singer, Vilayat Khan Ragi who lives at village Goslan near Malaudh, Ludhiana. Both are National Akademi of Music, Dance and Drama awardees. Interviewing Professor Kartar Singh took unusually long time meaning the visit to Goslan had to be put off for another day. The meeting with him was 1947 partition related – Professor Sahib’s father was killed in 1947 while his brother avenged his fathers death as well 🙁 as if vengeance ever fills the void a parents’ demise leaves, as well as regarding the raga forms making done in the last 23 years. The learned professor has a nice sense of humour – he is a fine story teller! It was an important interview. Here is a photo:

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A day with Bhai Balbir Singh Ragi (1998)…

24 Friday May 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in People, Photos

≈ Leave a comment

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There was a funny President of DSGPC in 1998 and he would not allow us to film at the Damdama Sahib Gurudwara, Nizamuddin East. Raghu Rai and his wife Gurmeet Rai, then a dear friend, gave us space to film my documentary “The Sacred Music of the Sikhs” for a couple of days. They lived near Khan Market in those days.

Gurliv Singh has volunteered 6 months for Anad and among the transparencies and negatives he has been scanning, I found this image.

National Akademi of Music, Dance & Drama Awards Programme

21 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by Anād Foundation in ANAD Discussion Forum, People, Press

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The Sangeet Natak Akademi awards will be conferred by the Honorable President of India, Sri Pranab Mukherjee, on May 28, 2013, followed by the performances of the awardees.

SNA Awards 2012 Programme Card III SNA Awards 2012 Programme Card II SNA Awards 2012 Programme Card I

A morning walk in Guru Nanak Dev University

06 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Poetry Page, People

≈ 1 Comment

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A walk in the fog. Amritsar 2013. 3:25am.
© bbs.

A few days ago I had remarked about
my growing bald-ness
and wondered about the deep-er realms
if there were any.
Blending both I joked
I had my name.

I did not know the deeper realms
could be so wondrous.

Years ago I had digitized the old spools records of my granduncles for a cousin (uncle) of mine. Dr. Inderjit Singh is the second son of a granduncle, the illustrious Bhai Gurcharan Singh. Yesterday, those records came full circle. Inderjit’s elder brother, chacha Surinder Singh, nicknamed Sant [literally a saint but he is everything else but that ;-)] gave me a pen drive with some mpeg files of the recordings of my granduncles jatha made in the 70’s and 80’s. Some of the recordings I had given Inderjit also came along. I have been listening to them ever since.

These are the copy of the originals that were stolen from the concerned department in Punjabi University. These recordings were then plagiarized or in other words, these recordings inspired a creation of new compositions by some people in Patiala. These people have not been forthright in acknowledging officially but have done so privately.

These recordings are a world of their own kind. The magic is evident.
As noted poet Kulwant Singh Grewal recently said of them when they were writing their two volumes,

“the radiance on them, when the two brothers were writing the two volumes, was so profound that one could not see them straight in the eyes”.

There must have been something then
For it seems so evident in the recordings.

The simplicity in awe inspiring.
Chaste and pure they are.
There is none they are singing to but for themselves.
They are the singers and also the listeners.
It seems they are rehearsing
to sing in the heavens.
I could only be a witness
unable to participate in their song
For we seem to belong to different ages
—albeit ages so miraculously overlapped
For when I have been singing along with them
I was of no consequence to them
but they and their record has an impact on me.
I have fallen in love with them yet again —perhaps even more.

My eldest uncle, Hardeep Singh, a top bureaucrat in Punjab, used to sit on the ground when he would visit them in Delhi, with eyes closed – with flowing tears.
Hardeep Tau left his body in 75
I can feel being in his body instead now
albeit in the same mudra

Hardeep was a mere three months younger then Bhai Avtar Singh, my younger grandnuncle —his uncle, yet he would place his forehead at the feet when they sang.
I can feel being in his body instead now
albeit in the same mudra

I wish Bhai Avtar had not stopped playing the taus along
when he sang.

I wish Bhai Gurcharan had not stopped playing the jori.

I wish he could sing more —he could play more
I wish I could listen more
that they could bloom more and more
along with their song I
like a vine
in an eternal bow.

Theirs is contribution so unique —so unparallelled.

Simplicity is a consciously attained virtue.

It is special to walk in the university campus
especially in dense fog
especially when everyone is
fast asleep
especially with recordings of my granduncles
playing on
—and it was
—me in the fog
when bounds melt
under the stars
nature’s loving lap
grace
deep breath
nectar —its taste
yet again…

Participate I could not
gracious as they were
they granted me with the gift of
—their breath
—their phulkari weaved
—their gadwa filled
with songs so eternal.

Good Evening India II: Ustad Ghulam Sabir Khan & Arushi Nishank

03 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in People, Television

≈ 1 Comment

For the second set of interviews, I was only a little more prepared than the first time, which I thought was a no-show, a near disaster actually, as far as the beginning and ending sequences were concerned. The change overs weren’t exciting either. Believe me, at one point I thought of just getting up and walking away from the set. Somehow, I didn’t. This time the ambit was interesting from laughter with both the artists to tears as Arushi so lovingly remembered her late mother. I wanted to tell her that even I have only recently realized what it is to lose ones mother.

I also think starting the show with a tribute to the contribution of Ustad Ghulam Sabir Khan’s wife, Mehtab Begum, in his life was very powerful. His acknowledgement of her seva was indeed moving. Even I have an ancestor named Bhai Mehtab Singh, the father of Baba Tehal Singh who was also known as Bhai ‘Punjab’ Singh. I thought Ghulam Sabir Khan’s description of his three teachers and related demostrations – Ustad Rafique Ahmed Khan (grandfather), Ustad Siddique Ahmed Khan (father) as well as his maternal uncle and teacher, Ustad Sabri Khan – was fascinating.

Contents are usually fine when I am around 🙂 It is such a learning curve learning about artists and their work – young and elderly alike. Some with eventful decades behind and for others ahead.

Here are some of the images taken by Gurliv Singh, who was kind enough to accompany me to the Prasar Bharati studios.

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Walking in the corridor

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Even if the path may seem hazy initially, things do become clearer.

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Meeting the artists…

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Abdul Rehman, the tabla player.

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Getting wired up for sound check.

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Final checks before take off

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Crew monitoring the show

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Ustad Ghulam Sabir Khan is a very fine soul indeed.

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I had particularly requested him to bring along his vocal student and am glad he brought along the promising Shaheb Hasan.

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I was glad with all that we touched upon…

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I was still wired so couldn’t get up to give him a hug for being so darn beautiful a man – generous a teacher.

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Insha’Allah, we shall meet again…

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Meeting with Kathak exponent Arushi Nishank.

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It is nice to see the young and vibrant as educated professionals in addition to being able art exponents.

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Me monitored.

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She monitored.

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Both monitored.

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My first first show was so horrible that even two notches better in the second got me an applause from the crew at the end..!

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They all said my ‘anchoring’ was a little better. See, I am not an ace in everything I do – I do mess up occasionally and these occasions do happen very often.

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Meeting the Additional Director General, Mr. B. M. Bakhshi IBPS with the programme producer Sushma Khan.

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Hugs and invitations to do more…

An evening with Bhai Sahib Bhai Balbir Singh

26 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in Humour & ..., People, Postcards from the Journey

≈ 3 Comments

On February 18, 2013, I spent wonderful 3 late night hours discussing, debating, conversing, laughing, reminiscing with Bhai Balbir Singh Ragi at his lavish residence in Amritsar. Clarified a lot of ‘histories’ with him and shared a lot of information with him.

Bhai Balbir Singh and I, we have had an interesting relationship spanning over two decades now. I will never forget the first time we met in Chandigarh and told him that I am the grandnephew of Bhai Gurcharan Singh Bhai Avtar Singh – he had very lovingly embraced me then. His two brothers, Bhai Mohinder Singh and Bhai Chatar Singh, loved me more perhaps? I am still unsure —theirs was a sarcasm-less attendance to ‘me’ as compared though things are looking better these days. Thereon it was an inquisitive me, by and by learning about their music – what and how they played and what and how they sang. That they had also learnt a lot from Bhai Arjan Singh Tarangar further cemented my relationship with them – I was their – and even my granduncles’ – youngest classmate.

Learning from them – Bhai Balbir Singh and his percussionist brother, Bhai Mohinder Singh – was a funny experience too. One brother would share a composition but would do so with a caveat – “please do not tell my brother that I taught you this – else he will fight with me for sharing this with you..!” Both of them taught the same repertoire hiding from each other and obviously I had two separate diaries albeit with the same compositions – talk reiteration!

There were issues which somehow soured our relation for long stretches of time. The main being his effort to claim me as his exclusive student. It seemed that he just couldn’t really get, until recently perhaps, that I am a book as if, co-authored by 6 maestros with small or relatively bigger contributions additionally from him plus 20 other elders; and that I will always cherish and also represent their treasures – their memories, including that of him.

There was a lot that most of these elders took from me as well – it was not a one way traffic. Even the fact that I was being simultaneously hopping from one maestro to another like a bumble-bee, pollinating all who I met in my strides. In the early till mid-90s, even Fahim Sahib (fondly called Papa Saheb by me) would quote me in his interviews by adding , “jaise ki, bakaul mere bete ke…” (like, just as my son (baldeep) says…). A few years down the line, the quotes remained but the reference to me had gone. But that is alright. This problem is rampant in music where the references are lost especially when all memory is not imbibed by subsequent generations.

It used to be quite embarrassing in the early years for the three brothers dealt with me as if they were dealing with my great-granduncle, Baba Jwala Singh, for they believed that I was none else but his reincarnation. Another group of people thought I was an incarnation of another maestro extraordinaire, Bhai Sahib Bhai Batan Singh of Mehli. Well, the upside was that they shared the riches they imbibed from either (and more) of these maestros, thinking they were returning back all that ‘I’ had entrusted to them before ‘I had died the last time around’. The other astonishing moments I used to be confronted with in the 90’s was when many of these ‘teachers’ of mine desired to be reborn as my ‘sons’ leaving me wondering how many would I have to father and feed 🙂 Well, they all enriched me and I am only grateful to each one of them with all my might and more.

Bhai Balbir Singh had been playing strange over the last years for he would try to deny interviews to most people I sent to him including Nirinjan Kaur Khalsa, who is doing her doctoral studies at the University of Michigen. Each time I had to call and convince him – try to sensitize him of the importance of meeting the researchers and scholars for the sake of these people gaining understanding of the tradition of Gurbani Kirtan. He would eventually relent.

No images were taken this evening – one for he was very casually dressed and the other, both mine and my student, Jatinder Singh’s phones on record modes respectively. I am sharing some images with Bhai Sahib though, from my visit to Nishan-e-Sikhi at Khadur Sahib at the invite of Baba Seva Singh Ji. The former Jathedar of Akal Takhat, Gyani Joginder Singh Vedanti was also present. I will always be grateful to Bhai Balbir Singh for his gracious comments that day.

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Bhai Balbir Singh sat intimately at the edge of the stage.

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He was poking at times leading to a very spiced up exchange between him and I 😉

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Together we have laughed so much in the last 23 years of knowing of each others’ existence far out-litre-ing our fights..!

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I am grateful for each step we are yet to stride together —each scowl – each laugh – each debate and reasoning – begging to differ or in agreement. None of it will ever matter for he is once an elder, always an elder. I can only be proud of him..!

Myths Are Thus Created

I
It was in the year 1992, that late Dr. Jolly came up to me and asked me “how can Bhai Balbir Singh say that his ancestors go back to the times of Guru Arjan Dev for he claims to be the 7th generation in his family but that would make 210 years including him (30 years multiplied by 7)? How come his ancestor was there to sing when the Rababi’s Bhai Satta Bhai Balwanda left the fifth Guru?” I had told. “let me go to Bhai Saheb and ask?” Chacha Bhai Balbir Singh had naughtily replied, “Haha! they were ‘our’ ancestors only..!”

I wonder if Dr. Jolly ever updated his writeup. If he did, that would have been scholarly but if he did not, an unfortunate myth may have been created. Sadly, Dr. Jolly died in a road accident a few years later. In any case, he should have been more academic in noting such unsubstantiated claims without subjecting them to even the simplest of scrutiny.

People would have read and believed this ‘innocent’ claim. These people would have then connected with Bhai Balbir Singh on the basis of that claim.

II
This Gurmat Sangeet Department at Patiala has been an interesting or rather an intriguing presence. The protagonist is Gurnam Singh who is very jittery, I have learnt, with my presence in the Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, as a visiting professor. Some dilruba players at the Darbar Sahib (Golden Temple) have questioned my presence with “what is Baldeep Singh doing here in the university, Dr. Gurnam Singh has already done all the work in the field (of Gurmat Sangeet)!”

I have had problems with this group of individuals from the very beginning and when this story of asking the sons and daughters of some of the Gurbani Kirtan exponents of the 20th century for sponsoring rooms and auditoriums in the name of their ancestors was the lowest point they could stoop to. Gurnam sold the idea to Bhai Avtar Singh Ragi, a granduncle of mine, to pay up 25 lakhs or 2.5 million rupees (about 50,000 $s) in order to have the auditorium named in his father, the legendary Bhai Sahib Bhai Jwala Singh. It was like asking Mahatma Gandhi, “Gandhi Ji, the country would really love to make Raj Ghat (mausoleum) in your name but you will need to pay for it..!” He would have smiled and declined and so would have Baba Jwala Singh. He did not even allow his body to be cremated for people wanted to build a mausoleum in his memory after cremating his body. He ordered his sons and nephews to quietly offer his body to River Beas so that none of his ‘followers’ would know the place of his bodily burial. When my grandaunt Bibi Amar Kaur, wife of Bhai Avtar Singh, died and we were driving to Goindwal Sahib with her ashes that my granduncle showed me the place where his illustrious father’s body had been Beas-buried.

The other ridicule in the name of music which has been done is by this allocation of the term ‘Taksal’. Somehow, Gurnam has taken upon himself the role of the ordaining people and mere music schools as ‘exponents’ and ‘Taksals’ respectively. There can be no better example of this department ordaining Bhai Balbir Singh as not only belonging to but being the head of the Tarn Taran ‘Taksal’. The uniqueness being the ending pauri and singing of Dasam Bani texts. The funny side is that anyone versed with the actual tradition of Gurubani Kirtan will tell that these virtues were that of each family or school not necessarily particular to anyone particular.

While helping filling out Bhai Balbir Singh’s response form for the coveted National Sangeet Natak Akademi award, which the honorable professor (gurnam) has aspired for since the last many years, this issue of Gharana or tradition/taksal did come up.

Myths are thus destroyed

I
On the birth anniversary of the fourth Sikh Guru, Sri Guru Ramdas (Nanak IV), which is celebrated inside the Manji Sahib hall. This hall has a horrible audio ambiance, nevertheless. For the first time, I ended up being invited at this Gurbani Kirtan festival in which only the Bani or compositions by Nanak IV is sung. Bhai Balbir Singh was also one of the singers. I was scheduled to sing at the last while Bhai Sahib sang at the prime time, when the live telecast is relayed across the satellite world and venue is jam-packed. He reiterated the ‘story’ of how the ‘forsaken’ Rababi-s, Bhai Satta Bhai Balwanda had left the fifth guru, Sri Guru Arjan Dev (Nanak V), and that ‘his ancestors’ had sung the Kirtan with folk music instruments.

I had sung an original composition of Nanak IV in Raga Nat Narayan and then I had spoken in response to the claims (Bhai Balbir Singh):
One, that the historians believe that the episode of the legendary Rababi’s actually happened during the second guru, Guru Angad Dev (Nanak II) and not in the times of Nanak V. They (the historians) rely on the fact that in the ode in Ramkali by the two Rababi’s, which is included in Gurbani, the majority of the text is in honour of Nanak II, Guru Angad Dev.There was this episode of the two Rababi maestro-Kirtaniye having left the Guru’s court in a huff but had eventually realized their own error and had eventually sought forgiveness. The story of their return back to the Guru’s court is seeped in humility, grace and dignity. They are two among the other authors of Gurubani we the Sikhs, bow to in reverence. So, when the two exponents, namely, Bhai Balwand and Bhai Satta, may never have left the court of Nanak V, how could the story of anyone picking up ‘folk instruments’ be accurate.
Two, if we are to believe the legendary Bhai Gurdas, the maternal uncle of Nanak V, whose odes are equally revered in the Sikh thought, when he bears ‘witness’ (in quotes for he was not actually a witness to Guru Nanak but relied on accounts from Sikhs or Nanak-panthis associated with the first guru) that each Sikh household during the first guru’s times had become an abode of Dharma (Dharmsaal) and that instruments mridang and rabab were played. Now, these instruments are not folk instruments and require considerable learning. The music of the later gurus until Nanak V was of the highest order. Just because the Gurus’ Rababi-s used to lead the singing during the main ceremonies, it would be inaccurate to imply or infer that the Sikhs who remained when the Rababi’s left, were musically illiterate.

I also shared these thoughts with my respected ‘Chacha’ BHai Balbir Singh and I think he got his historic facts and values right.

II

While filling up the form, I asked him about the samprada or gharana (school) he belonged. His answer was Gwalior gharana for he had studied from Pandit Krishna Rao.

I asked him, “what about Agra gharana?”

He said, “No!”

I then reminded him about his learning from my cousin, Sardar Balbir Singh Kalsi and his teacher, Padma Shri, Sardar Sohan Singh who was a disciple of Ustad Faiyyaz Khan of the Agra gharana.
He exclaimed, “But he (Ustad Faiyyaz Khan) lived in Baroda!”

I clarified, “Yes he was the court musician in Baroda (the Royal court of the Gaekwads) but his gharana is called Agra gharana.”

With a “Sure, then add that!” Bhai Balbir Singh had nodded.

I then asked him about the Gurbani Kirtan repertoire of his. He said “We have our own gharana, of Tarn Taran” referring to the status ordained by the Department of Gurmat Sangeet, Punjabi University, Patiala.

I asked him, “Who was your teacher?”

He said, “Pandit Nathu Ram”

I asked him, “Who was Pandit Nathu Ram’s teacher?”

He said, “I do not know!”

I asked him details about Pandit Nathu Ram’s singing style who was an extraordinary Dhrupad singer. He only remembered about the “makaaN lagaanaa” but no composition. I did correct the pronunciation of his for he was calling it mukaam but did not tell the name of Pandit Nathu Ram’s teacher, who was a junior classmate of Baba Jwala Singh, a great-granduncle of mine.

So many people taught at Tarn Taran and the most important exponents to teach there belonged to the same tradition and lineages as my own. To term it now as a Taksal or a gharana is nothing less than a cruel joke on the tradition.

Remembering Maharaj Bir Singh of Namdhari Darbar

03 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by bhaibaldeep in People, Photos, Postcards from the Journey, Reflections

≈ 3 Comments

A few months ago, I finally got a professional scanner with an aim to scan thousands of negatives, transparencies and prints that had been lying around unattended. Two of Anad’s volunteers, Akshay Sharma – a neighbourhood kid, and a computer engineer with serious photography interests, Gurliv Singh, a nephew, had very kindly accepted to do the ‘job’. Every now and then, my heart quivers at ‘re-discovering’ and perhaps in some way, revisiting, moments of my life when I had the privilege of being mentored and tutored by some of the finest ‘farmers’ of the 20th century South-Asia.

Maharaj Bir Singh, the younger brother of the Maharaj Jagjit Singh (1920-2012) by two years, the previous head of the Namdhari Sikh Darbar, Bhaini Sahib, was an extraordinary – a beautiful man —what a mentor – what a philanthropist..!

As he introduced me once to some of the Haryana State political top brass and aides of a certain political party, who had to wait for two extra hours because he and I, were singing and playing on the second floor: “Do not be fooled by his humble appearance – by his loosely tied turban, kurta and kashehra“, he had surprisingly said, “he does photography – so did I, he did flying – so did I, he plays pakhawaj – so do I, he sings dhrupad – so do I..!” One of those present was the young and promising Kumari Shelja, who has since served as Cabinet Minister, Government of India.

He was as if humility, compassion, love and generosity incarnate. For a few years, the first stop he would make after reaching Nizamuddin Rail station from Bangalore, where he would be visiting his son, would be at my Nizamuddin residence – be it any hour of the day or night. We would take turns – playing pakhawaj, singing, playing dilruba. Sometimes, he would recall a few compositions and teach them (as in image-I, below). He would sometimes write a letter with notated down compositions – saying I learnt this from so-and-so ancestor of yours or from another maestro.

Reviewing some of the recent scans the two volunteers at Anad have recently done – I found these images (Photos by Maria Maurizia Costanzo from January 1997), which I share as I eagerly await for more, and more…

img555 Edit

I remember learning the Be-aaR composition from him. Most probably, January 1997.

img557 Edit

Singing compositions that he learnt from Bhai Kaloo, the Rababi exponent from Anandpur Sahib.

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‘That look’ as I would await his next sudden-strike – he was a very naughty warrior-musician..!

Shortly after, I visited him at his place in Jeevan Nagar, District Sirsa, en route to Ganganagar where lived Bhai Ratan Singh from our village. Those years, I traveled with my cameras, instruments, a/v recorders all loaded (in the station-wagon).
The evening session we had, past dusk, is etched in my memory – perhaps my finest raga sri rendition till then, with Maharaj Bir Singh playing some scintillating stuff on the pakhawaj —was perhaps one of those times when, under the stars and skies, just about everything clicks. He also played some dilruba that evening with the honour to accompany him on the Jori all mine. Here is an image I took as he played:

img515 Edit

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