Pandit Kumar Gandharva |
Pt. Kumar Gandharva was born on 8th April,1924 in Sulebhavi
near Belgaum ( Karnataka) to a Kannadiga family. He studied music under Prof B
R Deodhar and Ms. Anjanibai Mhalpekar, two eminent musicians of his time.
Kumar Gandharva or Shivaputra Siddharamayya Komkalimath (Kannada:
ಶಿವಪುತ್ರಪ್ಪ ಸಿದ್ಧರಾಮಯ್ಯ ಕಂಕಾಳಿಮಠ) (8
April 1924 - 12 January 1992) was aHindustani classical singer, well known for
his unique vocal style and his refusal to be bound by the tradition of any
gharana. The name Kumar Gandharva is a title given to him when he was a child
prodigy; a Gandharva is a musical spirit in Hindu mythology.
Early life and education
Gandharva was born in Sulebhavi near Belgaum, Karnataka,
India. He studied music under the well-known Prof B. R. Deodhar.
He married Bhanumati Kans in April 1947 and moved to Dewas,
Madhya Pradesh. Soon after moving there, he was stricken with tuberculosis.
Luckily, the wonder drugs which cure TB had only recently been discovered.
Gradually, helped by excellent medical support and care from wife Bhanumati,
Kumar Gandharva recovered and began singing again. However, his voice and
singing style would always bear the scars of his surgery, which are evident to
any person who listens to his songs such as 'Runanubandhachya" from the
drama "Dev Dina Ghari Dhavla".
Career
Bhanumati Kans, who was learning music first under Deodhar
and later under Kumar Gandharva himself, nursed him through his illness. His
first mehfil after recovery from illness took place in 1953. The illness
greatly affected Kumar's singing in later years – he was to be known for
powerful short phrases and his very high voice.
Kumarji also experimented with other forms of singing such
as Nirguni bhajans (Devotional songs), folk songs, and with bothragas and
presentation, often going from fast to slow compositions in the same raga. He
is remembered for his great legacy of innovation, questioning tradition without
rejecting it wholesale, resulting in music in touch with the roots of Indian
culture, especially the folk music of Madhya Pradesh. His innovative approach
towards music led to the creation of new ragas from combinations of older
ragas.
His style of singing attracted considerable controversy.
Veteran singer Mogubai Kurdikar did not consider his vilambit (slow tempo)
singing interesting and his own teacher Deodhar criticised some aspects of
Kumar's singing but their relationship was strained from 1940s when Kumar
Gandharva married Bhanumati. According to Pandharinath Kolhapure's book on
Kumar Gandharva, Deodhar was against the match. But the criticism mostly
centred around his vilambit gayaki. His singing in faster tempos, particularly
his mastery over madhya-laya, was widely revered.
Kumar Gandharva's first son, Mukul Shivputra, was born
around 1955. After Bhanumati's death in 1961 during second child's birth ,
Kumar married Vasundhara Shrikhande, another of his fellow-students at Deodhar
School. Vasundhara Komkalimath formed a memorable duo with him in bhajan
singing. She also provided vocal support to his classical renditions quite
often. Their daughter Kalapini Komkalimath would later accompany both her
parents on tanpura.
Some of Kumar Gandharva's ideology is carried forward by his
son and daughter, as well as students such as Madhup Mudgal, Shubha Mudgal,
Vijay Sardeshmukh and Satyasheel Deshpande. Kumarji's grandson Bhuvanesh (Mukul
Shivaputra's son) has also made a name for himself as classical singer.
For a long spell, Kumar Gandharva's activities as a musician
were managed by his friend and tabla accompanist Vasant Acharekar. Acharekar
was Vasant Desai's assistant in the 1950s but later devoted himself fully to
his role as an accompanist to classical singing until his death in late 1970s.
His son Suresh Acharekar is also a tabla player, and has accompanied Kumar
Gandharva and other artists. Kumarji had friendly relations with noted Marathi
literary couple Pu La Deshpande andSunita Deshpande.
Kumar Gandharva was awarded the Padma Vibhushan award in
1990.
The 4th movie in the series of 4 movies in the Kabir Project
by Shabnam Virmani features the life of Kumar Gandharva and his disciples, his
career and his journey into "Nirgun" singing. His song 'Sunta Hai'
actually forms the title of the movie 'Koi Sunta Hai'.
'Hans Akela' is a 1 hour 18 minute documentary on Pandit
Kumar Gandharva made by Films Division Govt. of India with interviews with
various people - wife, friends, students.
'Mukkam Vashi'is a book made on notes collected during a 2
day workshop of the same name. It collected together the thoughts of Pandit
Kumar Gandharva on the nature of music at a fundamental level.
Raghav R. Menon has written a document on the quest of
Pandit Kumar Gandharva for the meaning behind Swara as told inMarga Sangeet
Pt. Kumar Gandharva was a musicologist as well. During his
period of illness, when he was advised a complete rest, he used to spend time
contemplating on different aspects of music. He had his own thoughts about many
different Ragas, styles of rendition and different types of composition. His
remarks about composite Ragas, Thumri and Tarana are quite different from the
conventional ones.
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