Art & Entertainment

Omkarnath And Voleti: Curious Tales Of Give And Take In Indian Music

On this day half a century ago, Hindustani classical lost titanic Omkarnath Thakur. December 29 was also when Carnatic바카라™s Voleti Venkateswarulu died (in 1989). A peek at the two vocalists바카라™ lives:

Omkarnath And Voleti: Curious Tales Of Give And Take In Indian Music
Omkarnath And Voleti: Curious Tales Of Give And Take In Indian Music
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It was in a western locality of undivided India that Omkarnath Thakur was born, but pursuit of classical music and prospects of professional flourish called him towards the country바카라™s east, where he did make it big. As For Voleti Venkateswarulu, his native Rajahmundry is often described as the gateway to step out of the south, though that wasn바카라™t why the Carnatic exponent happened to please even the Hindustani masters upcountry.

On this day, exactly half a century ago, Omkarnath died바카라”after adding a grand resonance to north Indian classical music and himself gaining a indelible name in its chapters. As veteran musicologist Deepak S. Raja notes, Thakur바카라™s was a 바카라śtowering presence바카라ť for almost three decades starting from 1930.

바카라śHe rose to national eminence sharing the stage with formidable rivals like Ustad Faiyyaz Khan and Kesarbai Kerkar, and held on to his position even as the next generation of vocalists like Ustad Bade Gulam Ali Khan and Ustad Ameer Khan were acquiring large followings and building awesome reputations,바카라ť Mumbai-based Raja notes in a blog.

Down the peninsula, Voleti, who also died on December 29 (in 1989), sang in a style that appealed to not just Carnatic lovers around the Deccan, but to exponents of other genre바카라”and that included Bade Gulam Ali Khan (1902-68) besides Pakistani ghazal singers Mehdi Hassan (1927-2012) and Ghulam Ali (now 77). Venkateswarulu, who worked at All India Radio for a while, nurtured the habit of humming Hindustani for himself in the studios, notes aficionado Ashok Madhav. 바카라śHowever, as soon as a programme was announced on the radio, Voleti would quickly switch to Carnatic,바카라ť he says. 바카라śSuch was his felicity in changing from one style to another.바카라ť

Inversely, Omkarnath adapted a few Carnatic ragas into the Hindustani repertoire. And that he did in such masterly way that these ragas practically lost all traces of their south Indian origins, says Dr Raja. Panditji 바카라śselected them for their emotional content, and rendered them in his own unique style바카라ť, notes the scholar. To add another facet to it, Omkarnath had also been the master of famed violinist N. Rajam (now 79), who, after learning Carnatic (under the famed Musiri Subramania Iyer) came to Banaras from her native Kerala to learn under Omkarnath at the Hindu University.

In any case, Panditji바카라™s close friendship with Carnatic violinist Parur Sundaram Iyer (who also played Hindustani) has been legendary. Sundaram Iyer바카라™s son, another bilingual violini maestro M.S. Gopalakrishnan (1931-2013), famously employed the vocals of Omkarnath when it came to presenting Hindustani.

If Malkauns is the Hindustani equivalent of the Carnatic Hindolam, it wouldn바카라™t be completely out of place here to listen to the raga in both styles바카라”by Omkarnath (1897-1967) and by Voleti (1928-89)바카라”separately.

Critic Susheela Misra notes in an article that Panditji, in Hyderabad the early 1930s 바카라śgave such an inspired rendering of raga Malkauns바카라ť that his guru Vishnu Digambar Paluskar (1872-1931) of Gwalior gharana 바카라śhugged and blessed him with tears of pride and joy in his eyes.바카라ť Scholar Gurudev Sharan says one was generally struck as much by the leonine grandeur of Omkarnath바카라™s personality as by his stentorian voice. 바카라śDressed in a flowing white silk robe, he made a great impression on the audiences by his very presence,바카라ť Sharan substantiates. 바카라śHis compelling resilient voice with an amazingly wide tonal range seemed to blend perfectly with the dignity of his bearing.바카라ť

The same write-up, though, quotes Dr Rajam lamenting the plight of her guru in his final days바카라”lonely, as his mother, brothers, sister and wife had all predeceased him. 바카라śIt was a pity that he had to lead a lonely life all through. He had neither a house of his own, nor a relative to fall back upon in his old age, nor even a reliable servant to look after him. It was a pathetic sight to see him at the ripe age of 65 sweep the floors and cook his food all by himself. He used to remark that it was not in his luck to have a settled home. At the fag end of his career, when he did buy a house at Broach, the cruel hand of fate prevented him from settling down there.바카라ť

Voleti, on the other hand, was lucky celebrate much of his life바카라”having also been a particularly avid fan of cinema. For all the liking he had for Hindustani music, Venkateswarulu was known for his expertise in singing quintessential Carnatic ragas like Begada, Arabhi, Atana and Anandabhairavi. Even so, the sample chosen here will be Hindolam:

Venkateswarulu바카라™s bhrigas and gamakas had the clarity of his prime guru Sripada Pinakapani (1913-2013), even as he was trained (from age five) under from Chaturvedula Achutaramaiah Sastry and later Manuganti Vekata Rao Pantulu of Kakinada. If Omkarnath won the admiration of his contemporaries and disciples, with Voleti the praise came even from his own guru. 바카라śGenius바카라ť was the word chosen by Dr Pinakapani, who redefined the Carnatic scape of his region of Deccan in the last century. 바카라śYou can describe him as one of the best musicians of Andhra ever,바카라ť the tutor once said. 바카라śI went we will ever get a musician like that.바카라ť

Voleti, who served as a producer of the Carnatic wing at All India Radio in Vijayawada from 1966, had graduated in music from Andhra University. With Omkarnath, his childhood, too, was troubled바카라”having been born into a poor family in Jahaj village of Khambhat (today바카라™s Anand district of Gujarat) in the princely state of Baroda. When Omkarnath was three years old, the family moved to Bharuch, where his father left the military to become a sanyasi, leaving his wife to run the household. That meant that Omkarnath, by the age of five, began helping his mother out by doing various odd jobs.

For geniuses, apparently, nothing stands in the way while climbing steps to eventual glory.

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