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Noteworthy
The Telegraph
Meena Banerjee
15th December , 2006
Balancing an almost equal number of vocal and instrumental artistes
the 14th ITC Sangeet Sammelan (December 8-10) offered a mixed bag of
recitals by young and veteran musicians in the premises of the Sangeet
Research Academy (SRA).
M. Venkateshkumar was the discovery of the year. When the final evening
commenced with his vocal rendition, no one knew what to expect from this
vocalist from Dharwad who belongs to the Gwalior school. The brief
opening phrase etched raga Puriya, segregating it from its look alike
Marwa, with sparkling precision. The stark masculinity of his husky,
powerful voice and open aakar, dipped in melody, was surprising as the
Gwalior gharana is known for its honeyed, high pitched timbre. The
step-by-step elaboration in slow medium ektal, leaning towards Kirana,
was a delighting blend of Pandit D V Paluskar and Pandit Bhimsen Joshi
in an original pack. Flaunting his aesthetic intent with easy charm, the
tans flowed like raining pearls and the tihais dazzled with their varied
patterns.
SRA’s renowned accompanist duo Ananda Gopal Bandopadhyay (tabla) and
Jyoti Goho (harmonium) enjoyed the confident rhythm sense of the
vocalist to the optimum as he settled with Yaman followed by a Pilu
thumri set to deepchandi. Those who turned up in large numbers attracted
by the star musician slated for the rest of the evening were spellbound.
Young sarod player Alam Khan gave as commendable a performance as he did
in his debut in the city last winter. The son-disciple of Ustad Ali
Akbar Khan delineated a mellow, almost spiritual Yaman Kalyan. Along
with the ma, he seemed to enjoy the serene Ma fraught with the fragrance
of peace and meditation. Yogesh Samsi’s unobtrusive tabla helped him to
keep the spirit of the raga intact through the whole gamut of gatkari
with melody reigning supreme.
Rupak Kulkarni’s flute brought out the beauty of Bhupali with steady
notes and gliding phrases in the alap. He followed in the footsteps of
his guru Pandit Hari Prasad Chaurasia with dedication while playing the
almost inevitable rupak gatkari embellished with rhythmic patterns, tans
and tihais, supported by the tabla of Samir Chatterjee. His fast teental
gatkari was in Maru Bihag.
Sitar virtuoso Shujaat Khan was trapped in a paradoxical situation.
Apparently disturbed by the din of the road traffic and inspired by the
presence of senior musicians in the audience, his alap in Shuddh Kalyan
kept reverting back from the jod and jhala but the inherent character of
this solemn raga remained elusive. With Shubhankar Banerjee’s tabla, his
gatkari focused on taiyari.
The Sammelan began with young SRA scholar Sameehan Kashalkar’s well
rendered Yaman though the sudden appearance of Ma in tarana came as a
jerk. Supported by Gopal Mishra’s tabla and Gaurav Chatterjee’s
harmonium he sang another tarana in Tilak Kamod. The evening of December
9 commenced with Sadhana Deshmukh Mohite’s disappointing Bhupali.
Rewarding recitals by celebrated maestros Swapan Chowdhury (tabla), Ram
Narayan (Sarangi) and Ajoy Chakrabarty, Girija Devi and Manas
Chakraborty (vocal) were spread over the three-day soiree. The ITC award
meant for the Eastern region went to Pandit Dinkar Kaikini from Mumbai,
Western region.
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