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Gwalior gharana

The Gwalior Gharana (Gwalior school of classical music) is one of the oldest Khyal Gharana in Indian classical music. The rise of the Gwalior Gharana started with the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar (1542–1605).

The favourite singers of this patron of the arts, such as Miyan Tansen, who was the most famous vocalist at the court of Akbar, came from the town of Gwalior.

History edit

The Gwalior Gharana evolved during the time of the Mughal Empire (1526CE – 1857 CE). Among the early masters (ustad) were Naththan Khan, Naththan Pir Bakhsh and his grandsons Haddu, Hassu and Natthu Khan.[1] The head musician in the imperial court was Bade Mohammad Khan, who was famous for his taan bazi style.[citation needed] Both Bade Mohammad Khan and Naththan Pir Bakhsh belonged to the same tradition of Shahi Sadarang (also known as Nemat Khan, dhrupad singer and veena player in the court of Mohammad Shah (1702 CE – 1748 CE).[2]

Hassu Khan (died 1859 CE) and Haddu Khan (died 1875 CE) continued to develop the Gwalior style of singing.[3] Haddu Khan's son Ustad Bade Inayat Hussain Khan (1852 – 1922) was also a singer but his style departed from the methodical Gwalior style.

Among the brothers' students were Vasudeva Buwa Joshi (died 1890), who became a teacher; and Ramkrishna Deva, who became a musician in Dhar.[4] It was Ramkrishna Deva's student, Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar (1849 – 1926) who brought the Gwaliori gaeki (singing style) to Maharashtra state.[5]

Another prominent disciple of the duo was a Muslim dhrupad and dhamar singer from Amritsar, Miyan Banney Khan. He introduced Khyal in Punjab and Sindh and then took a musical position at the court of Nizam of Hyderabad.[6] Miyan Banney Khan's pupils included his cousin, Amir Khan (also known as "Meeran Bukhsh Khan"), Gamman Khan, Bhai Atta Muhammad, Ali Baksh Khan(father of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan), Kale Khan, Mian Qadir(sarangi), Bhai Wadhawa, Bhai Wasawa, Baba Rehman Baksh.


These all disciples started their own Gharanas and their descendants are still the most respected musicians of the subcontinent. Amir Khan also shared Miyan Banney khan's cheejs with the pupils of Pt. Balkrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar when he stayed in Miraj for sometime. However, his disciples included among others his four sons. One of the sons, Pyare Khan, became a professional musician.[7] Another son, Baba Sindhe Khan (1885 – 18 June 1950) became a music teacher and trained pupils such as the educator B. R. Deodhar (1901 – 1990); the singer Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (1902 – 1968),[8] and Farida Khanam (born 1935).

On 19 August 1922, Pyare Khan performed at the second annual celebration of the independence of Afghanistan. He became a mentor to a singer from Afghanistan, also performing at the celebration. This was the singer, Qasim Afghan ("Qasimju") (born 1878, Kabul).[9] Pyare Khan also remained a musician at the court of Maharajadhiraj Maharawal (Sir Jawahir Singh) of Jaisalmer (1914 – 1949). He was also a teacher of Seth Vishandas of Hyderabad in Sindh near Karachi and Mahant Girdharidas of Bhuman Shah, Punjab.

Mian Pyare Khan's sons were Ustad Umeed Ali Khan (1910 – 1979) and Ustad Ghulam Rasool Khan. They became respected classical vocalists of their times.[10] Ustad Ghulam Rasool Khan had two sons, Ustad Hameed Ali Khan and Ustad Fateh Ali Khan.[11] Ustad Fateh Ali Khan's son is Izat Fateh Ali Khan.[12]

Krishnarao Shankar Pandit (1893 – 1989) was a musician of the Gwalior gharana heritage. His father, Shankarrao Pandit was a student of Haddu Khan, Nathu Khan and Nissar Hussain Khan, Nathu Khan's son. Krishnarao Shankar Pandit practiced Khayal, Tappa and Tarana singing as well as layakari.

In 1914, Krishnarao Shankar Pandit opened a school in Gwalior, the Shankar Gandharva Mahavidyalaya. In 1921, he was awarded the title Gayak Shiromani at the All India Congress. Pandit became the court musician to Madhavrao Scindia of Gwalior; the State Musician of Maharashtra, an emeritus professor at Madhav Music College, Gwalior and an emeritus producer at All India Radio and Doordarshan. For his contribution to the world of classical music, he received awards including the Padma Bhushan in 1973 and the Tansen Award in 1980.

The students of Krishnarao Shankar Pandit included his son, Laxman Krishnarao Pandit, Sharadchandra Arolkar, Balasaheb Poochwale, and his granddaughter Meeta Pandit.

Pedagogical genealogy edit

The following map is based on accounts that Makkan Khan and Shakkar Khan were not related.[13] These accounts are supported by research indicating that Makkan Khan's descendants were dhrupadiyas and Shakkar Khan's descendants were khayaliyas, thus reflecting different genealogies.[14]

Ghulam
Rasool
Makkhan
Khan
Nathan Peer Baksh
(progenitor)
Kadar
Baksh
Ghagge Khuda
Baksh
Natthu KhanHaddu Khan
(founder)
Hassu Khan
(founder)
Agra Gharana
Parampara
Gul-e-Imam
Khan
Vishnupant
Chattre
{{{BANNO}}}Vasudevbuwa
Joshi
Ramkrishnadev
Paranjpe
"Devjibuwa"
Chote
Mohammed
Khan
Mehendi
Hussain
Khan
Faiz Mohammed
Khan
Bade Nissar
Hussain Khan
Rehmat Khan
"Bhu Gandharva"
Bade Inayat
Hussain Khan
Inayat Hussain
Khan
Meeran Baksh
"Amir" Khan
Ali Baksh &
Fateh Ali Khan
"Aliya-Fatu"
Rampur-Sahaswan
Gharana Parampara
Ghagge
Nazir
Khan
Balkrishnabuwa
Ichalkaranjikar
Shankar
Pandit
Eknath "Mao"
Pandit
Patiala Gharana
Parampara
Mewati Gharana
Parampara
Qurban Hussain
Khan
Vishnu Digambar
Paluskar
Anant Manohar
Joshi
Nilkanthbuwa
Alurmath
Raja Bhaiya
Poonchwale
Piyare
Khan
Ganpatibuwa
Ichalkaranjikar
Yashwant Sadashiv
Mirashibuwa
Neelkanthbuwa
Jangam
Ramkrishnabuwa
Vaze
Krishnarao Shankar
Pandit

Recent pedagogy edit

Singing style edit

A distinguishing feature of the gharana is its simplicity: well known ragas (melodic modes) rather than obscure ones are selected and sapaat (straight) taans (fast melodic sequences) is emphasized. While there is some limited raga vistar (melodic expansion) and alankar (melodic ornamentation) to enhance the beauty and meaning of the raga, there is no slow-tempo alap as in Kirana and there is no attempt to include tirobhava or melodic phrases to obscure the identity of the raga or add complexity. When the gharana is performed, the bandish (composition) is key as it provides the melody of the raga and indications on its performance. While doing bol-baant (rhythmic play using the words of the bandish) the Gwalior style uses all the words of sthayi or antara in proper sequence, without disturbing their meaning.

The behlava is a medium tempo rendition of the notes which follows the pattern of the aroha (ascent) and the avaroha (descent) of the raga. The behlava is divided into the asthayi (notes from "Ma" to "Sa") and the antara (noted from "Ma", "Pa", or "Dha" to "Pa" of the higher register). The asthayi section is sung twice before the antara. Then follows a swar-vistar in a medium tempo using heavy meends (glides) and taans. The dugun-ka-alap follows in which groups of two or four note combinations are sung in quicker succession while the basic tempo remains the same. The bol-alap is the next part where the words of the text are sung in different ways. Then there is in faster tempo the murki where notes are sung with ornamentation. The bol-taans have melodic sequences set to the words of the bandish. The other taans, including the gamak, follow.

The sapat taan is important to the Gwalior style. It is the singing of notes in a straight sequence and at a vilambit pace. Both Dhrupad and Khyal singing evolved in Gwalior and there are many overlaps. In the khyal style there is one form, Mundi Dhrupad, that incorporates all the features of dhrupad singing but without the Mukhda.

Exponents edit

19th Century and Earlier edit

20th Century edit

Contemporary artists edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mukherji, Kumar Prasad (2006). The Lost World of Hindustani Music (2006 ed.). Delhi: Penguin Books. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-14-306199-1.
  2. ^ Kumar, Kuldeep (14 October 2016). "Exploring the syntax of syncretism". The Hindu. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  3. ^ "Hassu Khan Haddu Khan". Oxford Index. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  4. ^ Wade, B. C. (1984). Khyal: Creativity Within North India's Classical Music Tradition. CUP Archive. p. 47. ISBN 0521256593. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  5. ^ The Gazetteer of India vol 2. Publications Division Ministry of Information & Broadcasting. ISBN 9788123022659.
  6. ^ Wade, Bonnie C. (1 January 1984). Khyal: Creativity Within North India's Classical Music Tradition. CUP Archive. ISBN 9780521256599.
  7. ^ Ranade, A. D. (2006). Hindi Film Song: Music Beyond Boundaries. Bibliophile South Asia. p. 207. ISBN 9788185002644.
  8. ^ a b . ITC Sangeet Research Academy website. Archived from the original on 23 May 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  9. ^ . www.afghanland.com. Archived from the original on 4 July 2017. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  10. ^ "Ummeed Ali Khan". Vijaya Parrikar Library of Indian Classical Music. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  11. ^ "Oriental Traditional Music from LPs & Cassettes: Hameed Ali Khan & Fateh Ali Khan (Gwalior Gharana) - Vol. 2 - Lok Virsa CL-0023 (1987)". Oriental Traditional Music from LPs & Cassettes. 12 June 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  12. ^ Hasan, Shazia (6 March 2023). "Soulful music tugs at the audience's heartstrings". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  13. ^ Te Nijenhuis, Emmie (1974). Indian Music: History and Structure. Belgium: E. J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-03978-3.
  14. ^ Nadkarni, Mohan (1999). The Great Masters: profiles in Hindustani classical vocal music. India: HarperCollins Publishers India. p. 38.
  15. ^ Joshi, Lakshman Dattatray (1935). Sangeetshastrakar va Kalavant Yancha Itihas. Pune: Aryabhushan Press. pp. 108–109.
  16. ^ Kumr, Ranee (29 March 2013). "Music from the 'school'". Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  17. ^ "Impassioned recital by Arolkar | the writings of Mohan Nadkarni".
  18. ^ Deodhar, B. R. Gayanacharya Pandit Vishnu Digambar. pp. 104–105.
  19. ^ Bakhle, Janaki (2005). Two Men and Music: Nationalism in the Making of an Indian Classical Tradition. Oxford University Press. p. 297. ISBN 9780195166101.
  20. ^ "Mahal, once the citadel of musicians, now strums broken notes | Nagpur News - Times of India". The Times of India. 9 April 2017.
  21. ^ "Sahitya Akademi broadcasts recitation of Sant Singaji verses under 'Gamak'".
  22. ^ Banerjee, Shoumojit (27 November 2017). "Pandit Narayanrao Bodas no more". The Hindu.
  23. ^ "Shankar Abhyankar".
  24. ^ Sarvamangala, C.S. (5 October 2012). "The eternal note". The Hindu. Retrieved 7 October 2014.

gwalior, gharana, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gwalior gharana news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message The Gwalior Gharana Gwalior school of classical music is one of the oldest Khyal Gharana in Indian classical music The rise of the Gwalior Gharana started with the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar 1542 1605 The favourite singers of this patron of the arts such as Miyan Tansen who was the most famous vocalist at the court of Akbar came from the town of Gwalior Contents 1 History 2 Pedagogical genealogy 2 1 Recent pedagogy 3 Singing style 4 Exponents 4 1 19th Century and Earlier 4 2 20th Century 4 3 Contemporary artists 5 ReferencesHistory editThe Gwalior Gharana evolved during the time of the Mughal Empire 1526CE 1857 CE Among the early masters ustad were Naththan Khan Naththan Pir Bakhsh and his grandsons Haddu Hassu and Natthu Khan 1 The head musician in the imperial court was Bade Mohammad Khan who was famous for his taan bazi style citation needed Both Bade Mohammad Khan and Naththan Pir Bakhsh belonged to the same tradition of Shahi Sadarang also known as Nemat Khan dhrupad singer and veena player in the court of Mohammad Shah 1702 CE 1748 CE 2 Hassu Khan died 1859 CE and Haddu Khan died 1875 CE continued to develop the Gwalior style of singing 3 Haddu Khan s son Ustad Bade Inayat Hussain Khan 1852 1922 was also a singer but his style departed from the methodical Gwalior style Among the brothers students were Vasudeva Buwa Joshi died 1890 who became a teacher and Ramkrishna Deva who became a musician in Dhar 4 It was Ramkrishna Deva s student Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar 1849 1926 who brought the Gwaliori gaeki singing style to Maharashtra state 5 Another prominent disciple of the duo was a Muslim dhrupad and dhamar singer from Amritsar Miyan Banney Khan He introduced Khyal in Punjab and Sindh and then took a musical position at the court of Nizam of Hyderabad 6 Miyan Banney Khan s pupils included his cousin Amir Khan also known as Meeran Bukhsh Khan Gamman Khan Bhai Atta Muhammad Ali Baksh Khan father of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan Kale Khan Mian Qadir sarangi Bhai Wadhawa Bhai Wasawa Baba Rehman Baksh These all disciples started their own Gharanas and their descendants are still the most respected musicians of the subcontinent Amir Khan also shared Miyan Banney khan s cheejs with the pupils of Pt Balkrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar when he stayed in Miraj for sometime However his disciples included among others his four sons One of the sons Pyare Khan became a professional musician 7 Another son Baba Sindhe Khan 1885 18 June 1950 became a music teacher and trained pupils such as the educator B R Deodhar 1901 1990 the singer Bade Ghulam Ali Khan 1902 1968 8 and Farida Khanam born 1935 On 19 August 1922 Pyare Khan performed at the second annual celebration of the independence of Afghanistan He became a mentor to a singer from Afghanistan also performing at the celebration This was the singer Qasim Afghan Qasimju born 1878 Kabul 9 Pyare Khan also remained a musician at the court of Maharajadhiraj Maharawal Sir Jawahir Singh of Jaisalmer 1914 1949 He was also a teacher of Seth Vishandas of Hyderabad in Sindh near Karachi and Mahant Girdharidas of Bhuman Shah Punjab Mian Pyare Khan s sons were Ustad Umeed Ali Khan 1910 1979 and Ustad Ghulam Rasool Khan They became respected classical vocalists of their times 10 Ustad Ghulam Rasool Khan had two sons Ustad Hameed Ali Khan and Ustad Fateh Ali Khan 11 Ustad Fateh Ali Khan s son is Izat Fateh Ali Khan 12 Krishnarao Shankar Pandit 1893 1989 was a musician of the Gwalior gharana heritage His father Shankarrao Pandit was a student of Haddu Khan Nathu Khan and Nissar Hussain Khan Nathu Khan s son Krishnarao Shankar Pandit practiced Khayal Tappa and Tarana singing as well as layakari In 1914 Krishnarao Shankar Pandit opened a school in Gwalior the Shankar Gandharva Mahavidyalaya In 1921 he was awarded the title Gayak Shiromani at the All India Congress Pandit became the court musician to Madhavrao Scindia of Gwalior the State Musician of Maharashtra an emeritus professor at Madhav Music College Gwalior and an emeritus producer at All India Radio and Doordarshan For his contribution to the world of classical music he received awards including the Padma Bhushan in 1973 and the Tansen Award in 1980 The students of Krishnarao Shankar Pandit included his son Laxman Krishnarao Pandit Sharadchandra Arolkar Balasaheb Poochwale and his granddaughter Meeta Pandit Pedagogical genealogy editThe following map is based on accounts that Makkan Khan and Shakkar Khan were not related 13 These accounts are supported by research indicating that Makkan Khan s descendants were dhrupadiyas and Shakkar Khan s descendants were khayaliyas thus reflecting different genealogies 14 GhulamRasool MakkhanKhan Nathan Peer Baksh progenitor KadarBaksh Ghagge KhudaBakshNatthu KhanHaddu Khan founder Hassu Khan founder Agra GharanaParamparaGul e ImamKhan VishnupantChattre BANNO VasudevbuwaJoshiRamkrishnadevParanjpe Devjibuwa ChoteMohammedKhanMehendiHussainKhan Faiz MohammedKhanBade NissarHussain KhanRehmat Khan Bhu Gandharva Bade InayatHussain KhanInayat HussainKhan Meeran Baksh Amir KhanAli Baksh amp Fateh Ali Khan Aliya Fatu Rampur SahaswanGharana ParamparaGhaggeNazirKhanBalkrishnabuwaIchalkaranjikar ShankarPanditEknath Mao PanditPatiala GharanaParamparaMewati GharanaParampara Qurban HussainKhanVishnu DigambarPaluskarAnant ManoharJoshiNilkanthbuwaAlurmath Raja BhaiyaPoonchwalePiyareKhanGanpatibuwaIchalkaranjikarYashwant SadashivMirashibuwaNeelkanthbuwaJangam RamkrishnabuwaVazeKrishnarao ShankarPandit Recent pedagogy editSinging style editA distinguishing feature of the gharana is its simplicity well known ragas melodic modes rather than obscure ones are selected and sapaat straight taans fast melodic sequences is emphasized While there is some limited raga vistar melodic expansion and alankar melodic ornamentation to enhance the beauty and meaning of the raga there is no slow tempo alap as in Kirana and there is no attempt to include tirobhava or melodic phrases to obscure the identity of the raga or add complexity When the gharana is performed the bandish composition is key as it provides the melody of the raga and indications on its performance While doing bol baant rhythmic play using the words of the bandish the Gwalior style uses all the words of sthayi or antara in proper sequence without disturbing their meaning The behlava is a medium tempo rendition of the notes which follows the pattern of the aroha ascent and the avaroha descent of the raga The behlava is divided into the asthayi notes from Ma to Sa and the antara noted from Ma Pa or Dha to Pa of the higher register The asthayi section is sung twice before the antara Then follows a swar vistar in a medium tempo using heavy meends glides and taans The dugun ka alap follows in which groups of two or four note combinations are sung in quicker succession while the basic tempo remains the same The bol alap is the next part where the words of the text are sung in different ways Then there is in faster tempo the murki where notes are sung with ornamentation The bol taans have melodic sequences set to the words of the bandish The other taans including the gamak follow The sapat taan is important to the Gwalior style It is the singing of notes in a straight sequence and at a vilambit pace Both Dhrupad and Khyal singing evolved in Gwalior and there are many overlaps In the khyal style there is one form Mundi Dhrupad that incorporates all the features of dhrupad singing but without the Mukhda Exponents edit nbsp Vishnu Digambar Paluskar 1872 1931 founded the Gandharva school in 1901 nbsp Gururao Deshpande 1889 1982 19th Century and Earlier edit Babasaheb Dixit disciple of Hassu Khan Vishnupant Chattre 1840 1905 disciple of Haddu Khan Ghagge Nazir Khan c 1850 c 1920 Qawwal Bacchon who learned from Chote Mohammed Khan and co founded the Mewati Gharana Faiz Mohammed Khan d 1920 disciple of Kadar Khan 15 Bade Inayat Hussain Khan 1840 1923 son of Ustad Haddu Khan Saheb Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar 1849 1926 disciple of Vasudevbuwa Joshi Devjibuwa and Chote Mohammed Khan Bhaiyyasaheb Ganpatrao 1852 1920 disciple of Bande Ali Khan and Inayat Hussain Khan Vishnu Digambar Paluskar 1872 1931 disciple of Balkrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar 20th Century edit Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze 1871 1945 disciple of Bade Nissar Hussain Khan Anant Manohar Joshi 1881 1967 disciple of Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar received Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 1955 Raja Bhaiya Poonchwale 1882 1956 disciple of Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar 16 Yashwant Sadashiv Mirashibuwa 1883 1966 disciple of Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar Krishnarao Shankar Pandit 1894 1989 8 disciple of Shankar Pandit Sharadchandra Arolkar 1912 1994 disciple of Krishnarao Shankar Pandit Eknath Pandit and Krishnarao Mule Beenkar 17 Omkarnath Thakur 1897 1967 disciple of Vishnu Digambar Paluskar Lal Mohammad Khan d 1962 son and disciple of Ata Muhammad Khan Vinayakrao Patwardhan 1898 1975 disciple of Vishnu Digambar Paluskar and Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze awarded Padma Bhushan 1972 B R Deodhar 1901 1990 disciple of Balakrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar Vishnu Digambar Paluskar Abdul Karim Khan and Vinayakrao Patwardhan received Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship 1964 and Padma Shri 1976 Shankarrao Sapre disciple of Vishnu Digambar Paluskar who founded Shriram Sangeet Vidyalaya at Nagpur in 1926 18 19 20 21 Deenanath Mangeshkar disciple of Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze Qurban Hussain Khan 1901 1970 son and disciple of Bade Inayat Hussain Khan Narayanrao Vyas 1902 1984 disciple of Vishnu Digambar Paluskar received Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 1976 Balwantrai Bhatt 1921 2016 disciple of Omkarnath Thakur Dattatreya Vishnu Paluskar 1921 1955 son of Vishnu Digambar Paluskar who learned from Mirashibuwa Narayanrao Vyas and Vinayakrao Patwardhan Manzoor Ali Khan 1922 1980 son and disciple of Jamalo Khan who also learned from Seendo Khan Kumar Gandharva 1924 1992 disciple of B R Deodhar Gajananbuwa Joshi 1911 1987 son and disciple of Anant Manohar Joshi Also learned from Vilayat Hussain Khan of Agra gharana and Bhurji Khan of Jaipur Atrauli gharana Vinayakbuva Utturkar Joshi 1914 1989 son of Pt Vishnu Keshav Utturkar Joshi Disciple of Yashwantbuwa Mirashi Mirashi Buwa Contemporary artists edit Ustad Fateh Ali Khan b 1948 awarded Sitara i Imtiaz 2010 and Pride of Performance 1991 Izat Fateh Ali Khan son of Ustad Fateh Ali Khan Ghulam Hassan Shaggan 1928 2015 disciple of Bhai Lal Muhammad awarded Sitara e Imtiaz 2000 Vasundhara Komkali 1931 2015 wife and disciple of Kumar Gandharva Awarded Sangeet Natak Akademi Award and the Padma Shri Narayanrao Bodas 1933 2017 son and disciple of Laxmanrao Bodas Also learned from Pralhad Ganu 22 Sunanda Patnaik 1934 2020 disciple of Vinayakrao Patwardhan Shankar Abhyankar b 1934 disciple of Narayanrao Vyas 23 Ashok Ranade 1937 2011 disciple of B R Deodhar Gajananrao Joshi and Laxman Bodas Also learned from Pralhad Ganu of Agra gharana Malini Rajurkar 1941 2023 disciple of Govindrao Rajurkar awarded Sangeet Natak Akademi award Pt Laxman Krishnarao Pandit b 1934 son and disciple of Pt Krishnarao Shankar Pandit awarded Sangeet Natak Akademi Award and Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship Tagore Ratna Sharad Sathe 1932 2019 disciple of DV Paluskar BR Deodhar and Sharadchandra Arolkar Neela Bhagwat b 1942 disciple of Sharadchandra Arolkar and Jal Balporia Iqbal Hussain Khan 1942 2010 son and disciple of Qurban Hussain Khan Arun Kashalkar b 1943 disciple of Gajananrao Joshi Also learned from Ram Marathe D V Panke Rajabhau Kogje and Babanrao Haldankar Dr Vidyadhar Vyas b 1944 son and disciple of Narayanrao Vyas Dr Veena Sahasrabuddhe 1948 2016 daughter and disciple of Shankar Bodas also learned from elder brother Kashinath Gajananrao Joshi Balwantrai Bhatt Dr Vikas Kashalkar b 1950 disciple of Gajananrao Joshi Ulhas Kashalkar b 1955 disciple of Gajananrao Joshi Also learned from Ram Marathe of Agra gharana Kedar Bodas b c 1963 2023 son and disciple of Narayanrao Bodas Also learned from Ashok Ranade Dr Meeta Pandit b 1974 daughter and disciple of Laxman Krishnarao Pandit Also learned from grandfather Pt Krishnarao Shankar Pandit Shashwati Mandal b 1973 disciple of Pt Balasaheb Poonchwale 24 Manjusha Kulkarni Patil b 1971 disciple of D V Kane Pt Ulhas Kashalkar Apoorva Gokhale b 1973 and Pallavi Joshi b 1980 disciple duo of Pt Gajananrao Joshi Madhukar Joshi Sucheta Bidkar Manohar Joshi and Arun Kashalkar Ateeq Hussain Khan b 1980 son and disciple of Iqbal Hussain Khan References edit Mukherji Kumar Prasad 2006 The Lost World of Hindustani Music 2006 ed Delhi Penguin Books p 57 ISBN 978 0 14 306199 1 Kumar Kuldeep 14 October 2016 Exploring the syntax of syncretism The Hindu Retrieved 27 November 2017 Hassu Khan Haddu Khan Oxford Index Retrieved 28 November 2017 Wade B C 1984 Khyal Creativity Within North India s Classical Music Tradition CUP Archive p 47 ISBN 0521256593 Retrieved 28 November 2017 The Gazetteer of India vol 2 Publications Division Ministry of Information amp Broadcasting ISBN 9788123022659 Wade Bonnie C 1 January 1984 Khyal Creativity Within North India s Classical Music Tradition CUP Archive ISBN 9780521256599 Ranade A D 2006 Hindi Film Song Music Beyond Boundaries Bibliophile South Asia p 207 ISBN 9788185002644 a b Gwalior gharana ITC Sangeet Research Academy website Archived from the original on 23 May 2012 Retrieved 29 December 2023 Afghanistan Ustad Qasim Afghan www afghanland com Archived from the original on 4 July 2017 Retrieved 6 January 2016 Ummeed Ali Khan Vijaya Parrikar Library of Indian Classical Music Retrieved 6 January 2016 Oriental Traditional Music from LPs amp Cassettes Hameed Ali Khan amp Fateh Ali Khan Gwalior Gharana Vol 2 Lok Virsa CL 0023 1987 Oriental Traditional Music from LPs amp Cassettes 12 June 2011 Retrieved 6 January 2016 Hasan Shazia 6 March 2023 Soulful music tugs at the audience s heartstrings DAWN COM Retrieved 26 May 2023 Te Nijenhuis Emmie 1974 Indian Music History and Structure Belgium E J Brill ISBN 90 04 03978 3 Nadkarni Mohan 1999 The Great Masters profiles in Hindustani classical vocal music India HarperCollins Publishers India p 38 Joshi Lakshman Dattatray 1935 Sangeetshastrakar va Kalavant Yancha Itihas Pune Aryabhushan Press pp 108 109 Kumr Ranee 29 March 2013 Music from the school Retrieved 19 October 2014 Impassioned recital by Arolkar the writings of Mohan Nadkarni Deodhar B R Gayanacharya Pandit Vishnu Digambar pp 104 105 Bakhle Janaki 2005 Two Men and Music Nationalism in the Making of an Indian Classical Tradition Oxford University Press p 297 ISBN 9780195166101 Mahal once the citadel of musicians now strums broken notes Nagpur News Times of India The Times of India 9 April 2017 Sahitya Akademi broadcasts recitation of Sant Singaji verses under Gamak Banerjee Shoumojit 27 November 2017 Pandit Narayanrao Bodas no more The Hindu Shankar Abhyankar Sarvamangala C S 5 October 2012 The eternal note The Hindu Retrieved 7 October 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gwalior gharana amp oldid 1216720876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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