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Lament for a lost song

Classical musicians in Himachal are battling various odds to pursue their passion

Lament for a lost song

Haridatt Bhardwaj



Shailaja Khanna

Lack of proper auditoriums and opportunities to listen to musical greats and be trained under the best is what most musicians rue about

Toast of concerts

  • One Himachali artiste to gain national fame is Sunanda Sharma from Dah, Nurpur. She left home as a teenager to learn from the doyen of classical singing, Girija Devi, in Varanasi and then went to Kolkata. Today the Delhi-based is one of the most popular and well-travelled concert performers. But for lack of opportunities, Sunanda says, “I would love to perform in my state.”

Every year, flautist Haridutt Bhardwaj, a disciple of Pandit Ronu Mazumdar, organises a concert in the memory of his grandfather and guru, Pandit Chet Ram Sharma. But for the venue, which the Department of Language, Art and Culture gives free of cost, he says he has to personally raise funds for the concert. “Otherwise holding this annual musical tribute, which includes paying the artistes’ fee, travel, stay and posters, etc. would not be possible.” Sadly, this isn’t a one off example. Such is the state of affairs in the realm of classical music all over Himachal Pradesh.

Musicians across the state rue the fact that there are no opportunities for musicians, classical or otherwise. It isn’t interest that is lacking, but opportunities to hear classical music and then be taught by good performers that are rare. Some towns in Himachal do not even have a good auditorium with an adequate sound system. Even the famous Gaiety Theatre in Shimla, despite the wonderful acoustics which still do not require amplification, remains unused on most days. The nominal rental is unaffordable for most local musicians.

At the grassroots, not much to boast of

Diwakar Sharma, a tabla player from Shimla, laments: “Hamare rag-rag mein laya aur sur hai, yet we have no opportunities of employment in music. There are 60 posts for tabla teachers in the state, but no one is being hired. For the past 15 years, no new recruitments have been made.” All’s certainly not well with the teaching in colleges scattered all over Himachal Pradesh, including Shimla, Mandi, Hamirpur, Sundernagar, Jogindernagar and Kangra. Most of these institutes are peopled by academicians, not performers. The All India Radio has stopped employing artistes.

Hemraj Chandel, from Mandi, is one of the few national-level singers in Himachal Pradesh, currently teaching at a college in Jogindernagar, where he has 12 students. He says Sundernagar had a good tradition of music, built up assiduously after the dissolution of the princely states by two classical music lovers — Pandit Gangaram Sharma and late Dr Brijlal Bhardwaj. He says there was a reasonably good auditorium in the town and hardly any senior artiste of the time would not have performed there. “Even today concerts get an audience of 300 to 400. A festival in the memory of Vishnu Digambar, who visited Sundernagar, is still held every year in August, which was attended by Mandar Gadgil from Maharashtra last year,” he says.

Lal Chand, Gagandeep Hothi, Sunanda Sharma

Festival circuit

Chandel says that battling all odds, the state has been seeing a slew of music festivities. “Kangra hosts an annual Navratri festival organised by Dr PC Awasthi at the Chamunda Devi temple. In Nadaun, Hamirpur, a Basant festival is held annually; Kullu also sees two small festivals — one in February and the other on Guru Purnima; in Shimla, a one-day music concert is held at the Kalibari temple every year. For the past five years, the government has also been holding an annual five-day festival. Listening to masters is vital for the younger generation to be inspired to take up music as a livelihood,” says Chandel who learnt from Ustad Abdul Rashid Khan at the ITC SRA in Kolkata. Ruing lack of performers in the state, he says, “If you cannot produce students who are concert worthy, what is the use of your training? Music is a performing art, not just theoretical teaching. Your name as a musician remains alive through your disciples.”

What irks him, however, is the haste among youngsters to get a platform to perform. “The tedium of long years of rehearsing is not acceptable to them,” he points. Agrees Dr Lal Chand, currently teaching music in Shimla. He says his students do not feel inspired to do riyaaz as the opportunities to perform are limited.

Royal patronage

Hailing from Hamirpur, Lal Chand learnt how to play the harmonium from a prince of the erstwhile Dhami estate, Kr Lokendra Singh, nephew of the late Raja Dileep Singh. Dhami state had a tradition of classical music, but due to lack of opportunities, few performers come out of there now. “At the time, Guruji Bhimsen Sharma (disciple of Ustad Amir Khan and Ustad Vilayat Khan) and Prof Som Dutt Battu (who won the Sangeet Natak Akademi award recently) were active, there was a better environment of music.” Their students, Manoj Sharma, now principal at the College of Fine Arts in Shimla, and Suresh Sharma, a teacher in Dharamsala, are trying to keep the tradition of music alive.

Deepak Gautam, the only sarod player in the state, says princes of Mandi were patrons of classical arts and even had a family of kathak dancers from Rajasthan in their court. “Mandi has always had a good tradition of classical music, but today lacks even a decent auditorium,” rues Gautam.

Lamenting at the state of affairs, sitar player Gagandeep Hothi from Shimla says it is painful to see that a playback singer is paid lakhs to sing a piece of music composed by someone else, but a classical artist, who is creating music on the spot, is paid peanuts. Another reason is that organisers of the past were music connoisseurs; nowadays, they are businessmen.” This is a sad comment on a musically sensitive people, from a region which even has a raag named after it, Pahari.


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