____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
Ustad Sultan Khan - Sarangi Ikram Khan – Sarangi Nandan Mehta - Tabla Hanif Khan -Tabla
TRACKS
1 Alap 11.45 2 Gat (slow) in rupak (7 beats) 17.21 3 Gat (moderate) in rupak (7 beats) 9.20 4 Gat (fast) in kaharva (8 beats) 15.03
SARANGI
For many followers of north Indian music, the sarangi is a treasured solo instrument all the more so for its relative rarity in this role. Demanding to play, it needs a fierce concentration and many years of practice to make the bow draw the necessary refined quality of tone. Yet played by the finest musicians it has a mysteriously physical, visceral character that makes it appear to sing straight from the heart. And indeed it is closely associated with singing. Until well into the 20th century, it was heard most often as shadow and support for vocalists, rarely taking the spotlight itself a haunting timbre in the background that cried out for the listener's full focus if only it had the chance. The efforts of contemporary musicians such as Sultan Khan and Ram Narayan have changed all that. They, andothers after them, have shown handsomely that the sarangi could match any of the more conventional solo instruments in its expressive force and scope for extended performance, once it was treated with the equivalent degree, not just of technical perfection, but of imaginative artistry.
Ustad* Sultan Khan is internationally renowned for the emotional depth of his playing, and his xtraordinary technical and melodic control. He is one of the representatives of the Indore Gharana, made famous by Amir Khan. From seven years old he learned from his father, Gulab Khan, who was both an accomplished sarangi player and a vocalist, and like his father he often contributes vocal 'Amir khani' nuances to his performances. Sultan Khan gave his first performance at the All-India Conference at the age of 11. He has won numerous musical awards, including being a recipient twice of the Sangeet Natya Academy Award (the President's Award). He performed along with Ravi Shankar on George Harrison's 1974 Dark Horse World Tour. In 1997 he had the honour of playing for Prince Charles' 50th birthday celebration. He has composed and recorded music for films such as In Custody and Gandhi. But his true devotion and love lie in playing the classical music of India. (* Ustad is a term of respect used to denote a Muslim musician's achievements and contribution to their art.)
He is joined in duet by Ikram Khan, who was born in Jaipur to a family of Rajasthani musicians. Introduced to the sarangi in his youth, he became a pupil of Sultan Khan.
Ikram was employed for ten years by All India Radio and took part in many concerts and festivals of classical music within the ambit of television. Since 1994 he has regularly visited Europe as a soloist. This meeting with the West has made him aware of the potential for exchange which exists between these two cultures through music. As well as being an ambassador for the sarangi, Ikram shares his knowledge of Indian music as a member of the performing group Kabul Workshop, a vehicle for musical research and a bridge between cultures. It was formed by Francesco Russo from Italy and Khaled Arman from Afghanistan, who met in 1998, complemented by other musicians from Afghanistan and Morocco.
There are also two tabla players on this recording. Nandan Mehta belongs to the famed Benares gharana and is a pupil of Kishan Maharaj. He has worked and recorded with the great singer Pandit Jasraj and many other leading musicians. His immediate family is exceptionally musical: he is the husband of Manju Mehta, 'first lady of the sitar’, and their daughters are the sitarist Purvi Mehta and the tabla player Hetal Mehta. Manju and Nandan are driving forces behind the prestigious Saptak School of Music International Festival, which has now been running in January for more than 20 years. The second tabla player is Hanif Khan, son and disciple of the illustrious master of tabla Hidayat Khan. Since his teens he has toured extensively in India and around the world, in small and large ensembles. He also has an affinity for the light genres including lok geet, bhajans, folk, and Western fusion styles. Currently he is considered one of the top tabla players in the UK and is a sought-after accompanist at the Nehru Centre, London, for visiting Indian artists.
The performance here, recorded during the 2005 Saptak Festival, is essentially a duetfor sarangis of notable beauty, with alternating tabla accompaniment. It reaches a positively vocal degree of lyrical intensity, above all in the opening alap. Sultan Khan leads off while Ikram Khan shadows and then follows him, with a certain amount of overlap. As the notes of the raga are introduced, the music ranges widely around them, up and down in pitch, while the length of the phrases steadily extends. Just as gradually, the centre of the pitch range rises until it reaches a peak after some eight and a half minutes. For a while there is an animated focus around this peak, then an intense concentration on it which draws an audible response from the Saptak Festival audience. As track 2 begins, the tablas whose performers take it in turns to play - enter with their slow seven-beat cycle (2 + 2 + 3). The recurring melody of the gat is a haunting phrase that descends from the flattened sixth degree of the scale, usually played by the two sarangi performers in unison. After about 20 minutes the animation begins to increase, led by the sarangis and taken up with gusto by tabla. Shortly before the end of this gat there is a quieter interlude, and then a varied melody descending the full octave links on to begin the second gat. The sarangi playing becomes more flamboyant, but towards the end it is the percussion that takes the lead in moving the pace on towards the third gat. Again linked directly, but with the tala changing to an eight-beat cycle, it features a melody that rises briefly and then falls back, and the virtuosity goes on with some frantic flights of imagination from the sarangis and a couple of steps up in pace. In the final few minutes, a gradual acceleration begins that continues right through and inspires an equally brilliant percussionist's response
New Delhi: Sarangi maestro and classical singer Ustad Sultan Khan, the soulful voice behind hits like 'Piya Basanti Re' and 'Albela Sajan Aayo Re', passed away on Sunday afternoon in New Delhi after prolonged illness.
The Padma Bhushan awardee, 71-year-old Khan, who hailed from a family of Sarangi players in Jodhpur, was on dialysis for some time, family sources said.
His funeral will take place in Jodhpur on Monday.
Credited for reviving Sarangi, Khan is famous for his extraordinary control over the instrument and his husky voice.
He started performing at a the age of 11, and later collaborated at the international level with sitar maestro Ravi Shankar, on George Harrison's 1974 'Dark Horse World Tour'.
Khan's was a family of Sarangi masters from Rajasthan. He was initially tutored by his father, Ustad Gulab Khan. Later, he trained under Ustad Amir Khan, a classical vocalist of Indore gharana (school).
After establishing himself as Sarangi player, Ustad Sultan Khan also worked with musicians from the Hindi film industry, such as Lata Mangeshkar, Khayyam, Sanjay Leela Bhansali apart from collaborating with musicians in the West.
Apart from Padma Bhushan, Khan won numerous musical awards including the Sangeet Natya Academy Award twice, the Gold Medalist Award of Maharashtra and the American Academy of Artists Award in 1998.
Khan was also a member of the Indian fusion group Tabla Beat Science, with Zakir Hussain and American bassist Bill Laswell.
His son, Sabir Khan is also a well-known Sarangi player.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
After Jagjit Singh and Bhupen Hazarika, another music maestro, Ustad Sultan Khan breathed his last today at the age of 71. The Sarangi player passed away after succumbing to kidney failure on Sunday afternoon.
His funeral will take place in Jodhpur tomorrow.
Not just the world of classical music, Ustad Khan also ruled the world of Hindi pop music.
A Padma Bhushan awardee in 2010, the maestro popularized his favourite musical instrument, the ‘Sarangi’ throughout the globe, carving a niche for himself since the age of eleven.
Not just the world of classical music, Ustad Khan also ruled the world of Hindi pop music. Image from ibnlive
Ustand Khan’s profound baritone made him much popular, even to those who did not listen to classical music. Be it his ‘Piya Basanti’ or his ‘Albela Sajan Ayo re’ from the movie Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, his voice never failed to penetrate the hearts of listeners with ease.
He collaborated with legends such as Ravi Shankar on George Harrison’s 1974 ‘Dark Horse World Tour’ to make the kind of music which was classical and popular at the same time. Sultan has won numerous musical awards. He has won the Sangeet Natya Academy Award twice, also known as the President’s Award, as well as the Gold Medalist Award of Maharashtra and the American Academy of Artists Award in 1998.
Khan’s was a family of sarangi masters from Rajasthan. He was initially tutored by his father, Ustad Gulab Khan. Later, he trained under Ustad Amir Khan, a classical vocalist of Indore gharana (school).
After establishing himself as sarangi player, Ustad Sultan Khan also worked with musicians from the Hindi film industry, such as Lata Mangeshkar, Khayyam, Sanjay Leela Bhansali apart from collaborating with musicians in the West.
Bollywood was completely shocked at the demise of Ustad. Expressing his shock over Khan’s death, musician Salim Merchant said, “I lost my ustad – ustad sultan khan, my guru my friend my idol. He passed away this afternoon. We will never have a sarangi maestro like him.”
Actress Dia Mirza said, “Ustad Sultan Khan Saab our most revered sarangi player… your rich legacy will live on. RIP.”
Musician Ismail Darbar, who worked with Khan in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, said, “It’s a great loss for Indian music industry. I was shocked to hear the news of his death as I knew that he was not keeping well for sometime.”
“I share a different rapport with him. He was my father’s close friend. I was the first one to make him sing a song for a film. He sang ‘ Albella…’ brilliantly for the film,” Darbar said.
Shreya Ghoshal, who collaborated with Khan on ‘Leje leja re‘, wrote, “Just heard about the loss of our dear Ustad sultan khan Sa’ab I had the gr8 fortune and honour of working with him. Too saddened.”
His demise has marked the end of an era. The ‘Sarangi’ will no longer produce the same tune. The sufi probably will not sound as mystical as it sounded when Ustad sang. The soulful voice will never be heard again. But, Ustad will remain singing forever in our hearts. The songs he gave us, will forever be treasured.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
Ustad Sultan Khan, the renowned sarangi player and classical singer who died Sunday, was sought after by Bollywood composers and traveled with George Harrison, but in India he earned the most respect for reviving a dying art.
Mr. Khan, 71, belonged to a family of musicians from Jodhpur, Rajasthan, where his body will be laid to rest.
Jack Vartoogian/FrontRowPhotosUstad Sultan Khan in 2005.
He lent his baritone voice to such albums as “Piya Basanti” and the soundtrack of popular Bollywood films like “Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam” and “Maqbool,” and accompanied the renowned sitar player Ravi Shankar on tour with Mr. Harrison in 1974.
But he earned the Padma Bhushan, India’s third-highest civilian honor, for the revival of the sarangi, a stringed musical instrument that he brought to the international stage in a number of collaborative performances. In April 1992, when he played at Symphony Space in New York with the tabla players Zakir Hussain and Alla Rakha and the sarod player Ken Zuckerman, he inspired Edward Rothstein to write in The New York Times:
“There are times when music really is an art in play, when sound seems to come into being for the sake of pleasure, inspiring thrill at its difficulty and wonder at its powers.”
There was “no sense of commercialism” in Mr. Khan’s playing, Mr. Rothstein wrote. The sarangi sounded “like a supple human voice,” he said: “Its slightly nasal whine, produced with a thick bow, was shaped into wiry, sinuous phrases. Mr. Khan created miniature arabesques, toying with the ear in exquisite, ornamented melodies of a Karnatic, South Indian raga.”
Tributes began to pour in Monday from friends and family. “We will never have a sarangi maestro like him,” said the singer-composer Salim Merchant.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
Ustad Sultan Khan's demise has left another void in the world of music. As the entertainment fraternity mourns for the legendary singer, we take a look at the eminent people from the field of art and music who died recently.
Ustad Sultan Khan, the soulful voice behind hits like 'Piya basanti' and 'Albela sajan aayo re', passed away this afternoon here after prolonged illness. The Padma Bhushan awardee, 71, who hailed from a family of sarangi players in Jodhpur, was on dialysis for some time, family sources said.
His funeral will take place in Jodhpur tomorrow. Credited for reviving sarangi, Khan is famous for his extraordinary control over the instrument and his husky voice.
He started performing at a the age of 11, and later collaborated at the international level with sitar maestro Ravi Shankar, on George Harrison's 1974 'Dark Horse World Tour'.
Khan's was a family of sarangi masters from Rajasthan. He was initially tutored by his father, Ustad Gulab Khan. Later, he trained under Ustad Amir Khan, a classical vocalist of Indore gharana (school).
After establishing himself as sarangi player, Ustad Sultan Khan also worked with musicians from the Hindi film industry, such as Lata Mangeshkar, Khayyam, Sanjay Leela Bhansali apart from collaborating with musicians in the West.
Apart from Padma Bhushan, Khan won numerous musical awards including the Sangeet Natya Academy Award twice, the Gold Medalist Award of Maharashtra and the American Academy of Artists Award in 1998.
Khan was also a members of the Indian fusion group Tabla Beat Science, with Zakir Hussain and American bassist Bill Laswell.
His son, Sabir Khan is also a well-known sarangi player.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
Ustad Sultan Khan will be sorely missed, both for his genial humility and his supreme skill
For Indian music, 2011 has proved to be annus horribilis — a truly horrible year. One can't remember a year that witnessed the departure of so many of our great masters in quick succession. It began with the passing away of the one and only Pt. Bhimsen Joshi, followed by Rudra veena exponent Ustad Asad Ali Khan, Dhrupad maestro Ustad Rahim Fahimuddin Dagar, sitar maestro Ustad Uma Shankar Mishra, ghazal singer Jagjit Singh and the versatile colossus Bhupen Hazarika. The year is not yet over and we have lost another talented musician, when sarangi maestro Sultan Khan passed away at the age of 71, leaving his countless admirers inconsolable. He was suffering from diabetes and kidney failure.
This writer met him only once, way back in 1989. Bhopal's Bharat Bhavan, under the able guidance of poet-administrator Ashok Vajpeyi, had organised a three-day Sarangi Samaroh that was attended by more than 200 sarangi players from across the country including Pt. Ram Narayan, Ustad Sultan Khan and Ustad Abdul Latif Khan. The event was aimed at discussing the ways by which the decline of the sarangi as a solo and accompanying instrument could be stemmed. It was packed with structured discussions, performances and informal interactions.
Humility personified
During a long conversation with him, I was most impressed with his humility, self-confidence and optimism about the future of his chosen instrument.
He was well-known even at that time. The way he had played the sarangi in Muzaffar Ali's unforgettable film ‘Umrao Jaan' (1981) was superb and people felt it added to the hypnotising effect of Asha Bhonsle's voice. But it was in the later years that he truly emerged as an internationally renowned exponent of the sarangi who was not afraid of experimenting with new ideas and genres.
He was a member of the fusion group, Tabla Beat Science, along with tabla maestro Zakir Hussain and Bill Laswell. So great was his humility that he happily accompanied Zakir Hussain by providing him lehra on the sarangi. He was fully adept in the art of providing accompaniment and knew that an accompanist must keep his ego in check so as not to overshadow the main performer. No wonder he was a much sought after artist in Bollywood. He became a household name by lending his voice to the song ‘Albela Sajan Aayo' in Sanjay Leela Bhansali's ‘Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam' and his album ‘Piya Basanti' was an instant hit.
Ustad Sultan Khan belonged to a family of traditional musicians of Jodhpur and learnt the art of playing the instrument from his father Ustad Gulab Khan. However, he was greatly influenced by the vocal style of Amir Khan and incorporated the great ustad's badhat, taan patterns, sargams and tarana while fashioning his own style of sarangi playing. Ustad Faiyaz Khan and Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan were among his other major influences. So close was the tone of his sarangi to the human voice that New York Times critic Edward Rothstein complimented him for turning his instrument into ‘a supple human voice' after he performed in the company of tabla maestros Alla Rakha and Zakir Hussain, and sarod player Ken Zuckerman at Symphony Space in New York in April 1992.
Human tone
Rothstein was also appreciative of the absence of ‘commercialism' in Ustad Sultan Khan's musical attitude. He wrote: “Mr. Khan, a member of one of India's musical families, has a worldwide reputation (he was heard on the soundtrack of ‘Gandhi'), but there was no sense of commercialism in his playing. Using fingernails to change pitches of the instrument's gut and metal strings (not the pads of the fingers as in Western string instruments), sliding into and out of notes, he made the ancient instrument (held like a cello by a cross-legged player) sound like a supple human voice. Its slightly nasal whine, produced with a thick bow, was shaped into wiry, sinuous phrases.”
No wonder that his contribution did not go unnoticed. He was honoured with the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award while the President conferred the Padma Bhushan on him this past year. He was also given the Ustad Hafiz Ali Khan Award in 2001.
His death has been mourned by ordinary music lovers as well as top notch musicians alike. The famous Saptak Festival of Ahmedabad will be dedicated to his memory in the coming year. The world will sorely miss the Sultan of Sarangi.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
It was a tragic Sunday for Indian classical music as renowned Sarangi player-vocalist and Padma Bhushan Ustad Sultan Khan passed away in Jodhpur due to kidney failure.
Ustad Sultan Khan who belonged to the Indore Gharana is known for his songs Piya Basanti Re, Albela Sajan Aayo Re and Leja Leja. CS talks to a few musicians who knew the legend as a loving mentor, colleague and friend
I met Ustad Sultan Khan for the first time while recording for In Custody. He was very encouraging, and praised my voice. Later, we collaborated for the song Albela Sajan Aayo Re from Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, for which he gave the voice for Vikram Gokhale, while I was Salman Khan's voice. His willingness to perform with young musicians showed his liberal attitude towards life and music. The world of Sarangi won't be the same without him. Shankar Mahadevan
I worked with him on an album Pyaar Ke Geet that was composed by one of his disciples, Sandesh Shandilya. We all knew him as a great Sarangi player and vocalist, but he was also an equally fun-loving man. In fact, I recollect many incidents when he lightened the mood around by pulling someone's leg. But we always took it in good humour as he was a very senior artist. He has contributed towards the growth of many young musicians with his immense knowledge and loving encouragement. Shubha Mudgal
Ustad Sultan Khan was famous for his humility, simplicity and respectful nature. He was polite even to the youngest of musicians. I last met him while working for an album, Padharo Mhare Des. As a Sarangi player, he will perhaps remain the most famous and illustrious student of the Indore Gharana. Music lovers will also remember his wonderful songs Piya Basanti Re, Albela Sajan and Leja Leja. I am confident that his son Sabir Khan will carry forward his fabulous legacy. Pandit Vishwa Mohan Bhatt
Ustad Sultan Khan was my idol, guru and friend. I first met him 15-16 years ago while working on an album as a keyboard player. We struck an instant rapport and he took me under his wings. Slowly, we became friends. When we (Sulaiman and I) opened a studio some years back, he was the first person to enter the studio and give it his blessings. Ustad Sultan Khan was also the man who encouraged me to hone my singing skills. He told me that he understood his singing talent only at the age of 60, but didn't want me to repeat that mistake by ignoring mine. Salim Merchant
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
Sultan Khan, a renowned Indian classical musician who carried forward the tradition of a disappearing instrument, the bowed lute called a sarangi, and who performed with Western musicians like George Harrison and Ornette Coleman, died on Nov. 27 in Mumbai, India. He was 71.
The cause was kidney failure, said Zakir Hussain, the tabla player who frequently performed with him.
Mr. Khan, who lived in Jodhpur, was the heir to multiple generations of his family’s style of improvising on the sarangi, translated as the instrument of “a hundred singing colors,” which has three melody strings and 33 sympathetic strings. It is a difficult instrument; instead of choosing notes by pressing down the strings on the neck, as on a violin, the player presses upward with a fingernail. Few classical musicians of Mr. Khan’s generation studied it. But Mr. Khan ensured that the sarangi was heard worldwide and spurred its revival.
Mr. Khan performed and recorded widely in the rigorous North Indian classical tradition, improvising on ragas with songful melodic lines and virtuoso flourishes. He was also a vocalist, and he often interspersed singing and playing.
“It is thought among musicians in India that his sarangi literally sang,” Mr. Hussain said by telephone from Mumbai. “He was able to coax out of the instrument all the nuances of the vocal style of Indian music.”
Along with classical performances, Mr. Khan was employed in many other spheres. He worked on Bollywood musical soundtracks and had a latter-day pop career in India as a singer. He performed or recorded with Western pop and rock musicians including Madonna and Duran Duran, jazz musicians like the saxophonist Dave Liebman, and with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, the Pakistani qawwali singer.
With Mr. Hussain, the bassist and producer Bill Laswell and two tabla players who are also dance-music producers, Talvin Singh and Karsh Kale, Mr. Khan formed the South Asian-tinged electronica group Tabla Beat Science in 1999. “Western influences have given a different dimension to my music,” he once told an interviewer.
Mr. Khan was born in Jodhpur and first studied sarangi with his father, Ustad Gulab Khan, who had studied with his own father. He also took singing lessons with the classical vocalist Amir Khan (no relation) whose school of improvising, the indore gharana, strongly influenced all Mr. Khan’s music. Mr. Khan was 11 when he made his solo debut, playing sarangi at the All-India Music Conference.
The sarangi traditionally accompanies singers, and Mr. Khan worked with many vocalists, both in classical performances and as a studio sideman for Bollywood films. He also emerged as a soloist. He performed around the world with Ravi Shankar’s group as part of Harrison’s 1974 tour, and he performed with Mr. Shankar on the soundtrack for the 1982 film “Gandhi.”
As early as the mid-1970s, Mr. Khan worked with American jazz musicians, among them Mr. Liebman. At jazz festival performances in 1998 and 2000, Mr. Khan was a member of Global Expression, a fusion group led by Mr. Coleman.
A number of Bollywood composers studied sarangi with Mr. Khan and drew on his knowledge of Rajasthani folk music for their scores. While moviegoers had long heard Mr. Khan’s sarangi playing, in 1999 they also heard his grainy baritone voice on the song “Albela Sajan Aayo Re” in the film “Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam” (“Straight From the Heart”). He was 60, and the song started a pop career. In 2000, an album he made with the female singer Chitra, “Piya Basanti,” became a major hit in India; the title song won an international viewers’ choice award at the 2001 MTV Video Music Awards.
Mr. Khan received the Sangeet Natak Akademi award from India’s national academy of music, dance and drama in 1992, and in 2010 the government of India gave him the Padma Bhushan, its third-highest civilian honor.
He is survived by his wife, Bano Khan; two daughters, Maimuna and Rukhsana; and a son, Sabir. His hereditary line of sarangi players continues: Sabir Khan and one of Mr. Khan’s nephews, Dilshad Khan, are both noted sarangi players.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
Jodhpur? Kathe birajo? (Do you come from Jodhpur? Where do you stay there?)
This was the master key to unlock the heart of the late sarangi maestro, Ustad Sultan Khan. Belonging to a long-standing family of sarangi players hailing from Jodhpur, for the late master, the city and its musical linkages remained inseparable and endearing, and visitors who could establish referential links with his beloved city were a class apart in the presence of the maestro. Conversations invariably diverted from hardcore musical discussions to the familiar sights and sounds of the city and the visitor was pressed into sharing a meal with the musician family in the true spirit of Jodhpur hospitality.
Despite his stay in Bombay throughout his professional career and his music concert tours around the world, the Jodhpur magic never wore off and as part of his final wish, he has been laid to rest in that city, beside the graves of his revered ancestors. Like all gharana-oriented musicians, he too had begun his training at the feet of his late grandfather Ustad Azim Khan. Later, he had honed his skills under his late father Ustad Gulab Khan. Thereafter, in the calling of a sarangi maestro who, unlike other musicians, is required to establish himself as both a soloist and an accompanist on the sarangi, Ustad Sultan Khan had been placed under the tutelage of the famed vocalist of the Indore Gharana, the late Ustad Amir Khan.
Simple human being
Away from the arc lights of the performance venue, the portly ustad was a journalist’s dream. Despite his fame as both a vocalist and a sarangi nawaz, he had none of the airs of a star performer. Whenever references were made to his impeccable handling of his instrument, he was quick to point out that his instrument was a fickle mistress who could let him down at the most prestigious concert by slipping off his fingers and playing a false note, despite endless hours of preparation and riyaaz. At home, clad in his signature lungi and kurta, he held court with musicians and common listeners with utter ease.
Asked to an informal round of practice playing, the ustad would regale his listeners with a sing-along in a vocal mettle that made it difficult to separate instrument from vocal timbre for his style of sarangi bowing was in the format of the gayaki ang and with his singing impromptu in sync with the playing, the rendition became a Ganga-Jamuna musical merger of rare quality.
He had held his first solo concert at the tender age of 11 at the All India Music Conference, a platform that gave space to beginners of promise alongside the veterans. At this concert, the august audience had comprised none other than the legendary doyen, Ustad Gulam Ali Khan, among others. Thus, for the junior players, this stage was more in the way of an assessment than a way of drawing attention to their expertise. Of course, Ustad Sultan Khan had excelled on both counts, for, in his hands the sarangi rang out notes that duplicated the human voice with such sincerity that listeners found it hard to decipher one from the other. In those years, in keeping with the prevailing practice among vocalists, the sarangi was mastered by every vocalist. Thus, Sultan Khan could sing as well as play his instrument and had kept up this practice all through his performance career. Before long, he had come to be regarded as a vivacious folk and film music singer also.
Public recognition in the art came when in the 1990s he took the film world by storm by his rendition of Piya basanti. The maestro went on to make his musical mark once again in the number, Albeli saajan aayo re, sung to the drumbeats of a very young Shankar Mahadevan. His tryst with the drums took on a permanent character when he became the instrumentalist who kept time on the sarangi to the complex tabla concerts of Ustad Zakir Hussain.
It was his sarangi that, like a steadfast time keeper, provided the cycle of beats coming to rest on the first or sa note while the tabla patterned a complex variety of relas, tukras and kayedas. As a solo sarangi player, he was the handpicked artist at prestigious concert platforms such as the ITC Sangeet Sammelan. His sarangi also made its mark in joint performances with other sarangi players such as Kamal Sabri. The senior musician made all his team members feel completely at ease and won over hearts with his amiable mannerisms.
Recognition
Much before the listeners had learnt to recognise the ustad at on-stage performances, the late ustad had made his mark as the chosen accompanist by the film industry’s greatest diva, Lata Mangeshkar. In later years, he was a favourite with Sanjay Leela Bhansali and Khayyam who felt that the sarangi accompaniment in the hands of Sultan Khan Sahib gave added fillip to their performances.
In like manner, the world of jazz and rock was to find in him an artist after their own hearts. He was the ideal accompanist for fusion concerts and made his mark with bassist Bill Laswell. His work alongside Pandit Ravi Shankar and in George Harrison’s Dark Horse World Tour is now the stuff of musical history. In the summer of 1998, Ustad Sultan Khan emerged triumphant on the fusion music scene when recording with Warren Cuccurullo and his experimental rock band.
The California-based band had been working on alternate musical forms to bring out a psychological and surreal angle in pop music and the plaintive notes of the sarangi with its mood-specific aura proved ideal for it. He attuned his sarangi to be in sync with bass and acoustic guitars, giving the music a distinct character and form.
On the Indian musical scene, the late ustad will be long remembered for his musical style. In his hands, the lilting richness of desert air sprang to life. For the purist listener, he had a plethora of evening melodies to regale them with. In his bowing the ragas Des, Nat, Bhairav, Bageshri, Maand and others of this thaat or genus, were listeners’ favourites.
Holding his much weathered and sonorous instrument close to his right ear, much in the way of a beloved’s touch, with bent head and half-closed eyes, he would begin an effortless bowing of the strings. The mehrab-like decoration of the upper half of the instrument, with its blue stone engraving like a third eye and a red string dangling from one of the wooden knobs of the strings, the sarangi of Ustad Sultan Khan would enchant his audience into a world of melody that touched hearts and linked the concert hall into a trance-like delight under its spell.
In his life and his art, Sultan Khan proved that even a dying musical instrument such as the sarangi can leap back to life and mesmerise thousands with its sonorous timbre, even keel bowing technique and flexibility of styles to suit all genres and please all generations
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
The sultan takes a bow Ustad Sultan Khan Four unaccompanied alaaps on the Ustad's sarangi EMI / India Archive Music, Rs. 245 Rating: *****
Some songs or albums can be like characters in a book: they inhabit your soul for days and then demand to be written about. Sometimes, the unbearable heaviness of the obsession pushes things out in the open without justification or context. Sultan Khan's unaccompanied sarangi — recorded for the New York-based India Archive Music in 1994, released in India in 2005, and re-distributed to select retail outlets in recent months — is an album capable of provoking such a whim.
Atypically, the album has only the alaaps, or introductions, to four raags — Basant Mukhari and Lalit, which are slotted as early morning raags, and Shuddh Sarang and Bhimpalasi, which belong in the afternoon. All the expositions cut through the soul with the precision and ease of an ice-saw. The intensity of the sarangi, which is considered as the instrument closest to the human voice, comes through nakedly in these anadorned recordings.
The album, however, needs to go out with an advisory: it can cause serious mood swings. Its depressive lows may be as sharp as its elatory highs. So it's perhaps best enjoyed in a padded cell.
Single of the fortnight
Indian television seems to have found a new way of commercialising our obsession with music. First came the antaksharis, talent hunts and other musical game shows. The new formula seems to be about allowing us a peek into artistic collaborations, especially between Indian and Western sounds.
The critical success of Coke Studio and the Dewarists had much to do with this curiosity. Now we have MTV Sound Trippin, in which Sneha Khanwalkar, composer of Oye Lucky, Lucky Oye, goes out to record bits of sound from real and surreal India and then fashions songs out of the samples.
For the first episode, she goes to Ludhiana to record sounds as diverse as the making of cricket bats and the conducting of the so-called rural Olympics in Kila Raipur. She mixes them with the voice of a pair of qawwali-trained sisters, and then goes to work on laptops. The mash that comes out the other end of the blender is "Tung tung', an attractive "traditional-yet-modern' song that fits Real India's conception of a matrimonial jackpot.
If you haven't watched it on TV yet, catch it at bit.ly/tungtung.
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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