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Gwaliar Gharana
Provenance
Early Nineteenth Century near Gwalior.
Founder
Ustad Nathan Khan and Pir Baksh are acknowledged to be the
founders of Gwalior Gharana.
Genealogy
Nathan Khan migrated from Lucknow to Gwalior with his
grandsons Hassu and Haddu Khan, who later came to be the
chief contributors to the gayaki of this gharana. Bade
Mohammed Khan was another reputed vocalist of this gharana
credited with introducing the concept of 'taan' into the
khayal. The taan came to be one of the major
distinguishing features between dhrupad and the khayal
style of singing. Bade Muhammad Khan preceded Haddu-Hassu
Khans. He was the main source of inspiration to the
younger duo.
Genre
The highlight of Gwalior gayaki is its simplicity in
presentation. Lucidity is important to the Gwalior style
that subscribes to the view that easy presentation is the
simplest way to involve the listener. It is therefore that
exponents of this gharana largely sang ragas such as Yaman,
Sarang, Bhairav, Bhup, and Basant etc. These being ragas
which the listener easily identify, ensures that they
concentrate more on the finer nuances being displayed
rather than focusing their energies on identifying the
raga and its basic form.
The Peerless & Illustrious
Pt. Shri Balkrishnabuva Paluskar (1849-1927), Pandit
Vishnu Digambar Paluskar (1872-1931), Rehamat Khan
(died-1920, who lived on Maharashtra), Aptebua,
Paranjpebua, Vasudevbua, Shankar Pandit, Eknath Pandit,
Anant Manohar Joshi, Krishnarao Shankar Pandit, Gajananrao
Joshi, Sharadchandra Arolkar, Omkarnath Thakur, Vinayakrao
Patwardhan, Narayanrao Vyas, B.R.Deodhar, D.V.Paluskar,
Kumar Gandharva and Shankar Rao Bodas.
The Torchbearers
L.K.Pandit, Jal Balaporia, Laxman Rao Bodas, Malini
Rajurkar, Veena Sahasrabuddhe, Padma Talwalkar and Ulhas
Kashalkar.
Anecdotes
Comments
Probably the oldest gharana in Khayal Gayaki, where others
are said to originate from.
View Maestros of Gwalior
Gharana |