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From
its modest birth in the places of worship, devotional singing has carved a niche
for itself in mainstream music
From tragic to tender, solemn to ecstatic, music can encompass
the entire gamut of human emotions.
Perhaps that is why music has been widely used to express devotion
in almost every religion of the world. A genre that has defied all attempts
to straitjacket it into a time-warp, devotional singing has undergone
a series of changes and continues to inspire, and attract, despite its
multi-denominational following.
Beginning as a novice attempt to be different in its presentation of
the devotional sentiment, devotional music has been in vogue ever since
the chanting of Vedic hymns. However, much before this phase, it was restricted
to domestic confines, with little possibility of becoming a presence on the concert
platform. Public singing of devotional numbers was reserved for a particular class
of singers in the lineage of qawwals, ragisand kirtankaars
who sang at dargahs, the gurdwaras and temples.
The homely
version offered to the family deity was largely the work of family members where
sonority, tunefulness or beat patterns were a loose-knit affair. An increasing
demand for quality bhajanrenderings found an appeal in the 1960s.
Classical maestros of today, then in their formative years, developed a
style of concluding recitals with a devotional number of classical and
literary value. This merger of professionalism and feeling gave a new fillip to
devotional music.
The constant demand of the listeners for repeat
performances of some particular numbers almost acquired the status of signature
tunes for the artistes. Thus Pandit Jasraj was swamped with requests to
sing Mata Kali and Begum Parveen Sultana was even dubbed the musical
Bhawani Dayani after her famous Bhairavibhajan.
By this
time, the custom of enclosing bhajan singing within a choral
format had become a tried and tested theme. Light music artistes like Anup
Jalota and more recently Vani Jairam proved beyond doubt that the form
was rife with innovative options. Thus the new bhajanhad its core
intact but its perimeters altered. It was sung with the help of a complete orchestral
backdrop and stage lights, while decor and costume were made part of the bhajan
baggage.
Listeners were no longer a select group but the same lot who
would hang on to nuances of a ghazal, or be engrossed in the intricacies
of a classical rendition. Snatches of taans were judicious inputs
to heighten the form, and audience participation was encouraged in the form of
clapping with the beats, adding a certain charm to the proceedings. Other stars
started glimmering on the stage of devotional music.
One of them was the late Pandit Kumar Gandharva. His relentless quest to
collect and and pile a repertoire of folk sources in rural Malwa, the region he
had toured and knew intimately, resulted in the emergence of a new genre of bhajannumbers. He resurrected several forgotten ballads and folk ditties
by singing them in a form that was highly individualistic.
These numbers
were appropriately termed 'nirgun' bhajans since they
did not express devotional sentiment for any particular deity but seemed to relate
directly 10 the likeness of a human being to the Maker. In fact, the trends in
devotional singing have spanned a gamut of areas, as each artiste invested
it with an individual stamp.
This includes a heroic handful who have
continued to present devotional music in its unchanged format. The Dhrupad
singers of today are its foremost example. The 20-generation-old Dagar Bandhu
clan has been submerged in the culture of their Dhrupad with
single-minded devotion. Indeed, so perfect has been their rendition that the Dhrupad
is now considered synonymous with Dagar Vani.
What sets the Dagar
clan apart is their unique style which, though not overawed by the finesse
of technique alone, has been the forerunner of technical expertise. Neither does
it masquerade a variety of emotions as creative input. This ancient form has attracted
many younger exponents including the brothers, Ramakant and Umakant
Gundecha, who have now become laudable exponents of this art.
They
began their Dhrupad training under Dagar gurus, at the Dhrupad Academy
in Bhopal. The cohesiveness of their recital carries the basic tradition
forward and couches it with a courageous quality that adds a further dimension
to its content. Among the older generation of duet singers are the brothers, Rajan
and Sajan Mishra.
Steeped in the tradition of Varanasi, their
duets fill the air with the emotive appeal of devotion. The bandish
that they eulogize, in Hindustani classical style, hypnotized with its
fine-tuned underlay of understanding. With jugalbandi proving such
a success, a crowded stage packed with musicians has gained greater acceptability.
The qawwali singers of yore are thus back in the limelight.
Their's is not the popular product of mass appeal registered as a titillating
exposition of bawdy nuances, but one of pristine identity meriting devotional
recognition; Ustad Jaffar Hussain and his party of musicians
have furthered this qawwali with their unsullied collection of age-old
numbers, including the lyrics of Amir Khusro and latter day Sufi
saints.
The couplets of Kabir and the poetry of Surdas
are also part of his repertoire presented in a classical weave, for the artiste
hails from a lineage that boasts a history of such singing. Thus retaining a high-pitched
timbre, he has refined the art into a stage-worthy form, eliminating repetitions,
dramatic trances and catchy patterings and making his own sensibility alight on
his singing with a convincing consciousness.
His oft-sung number Chaap
tilak cheenee rey... speaks of a transformation that an ascetic devotee undergoes
when the power of divine love entrances his being. The arrival of the cassette
boom in the music mart was like another passage of rites for the hymnal
order. Old traditionals, such as the chaupai (couplet) of the Ramayana,
were one of the first series that caught public attention.
The singing
duo Lata Mangeshkar and Mukesh gave voice to this immortal poetry
and the series crossed popularity polls much beyond expectations. Long before
one heard of collating and gathering information about chartbusters, the music-listening
public had attuned themselves to hearing a different number. Thus when the amalgam
Colonial Cousins came on the scene it was no gimmickry.
The singers, Hariharan and Leslie, chanted Krishna and
Jesus in one breath, and classical and pop forms merged without
a jarring residue in tow. The era of packaged devotion has even opened the gates
of secular appreciation. Today, a thriving qawwali market is in
vogue. Masters from both sides of the subcontinent have found favor with their
SufianaKalaam, the Kafi and the Dargahiqawwali.
Through their differing versions they have even
made discos swing to their beat. Catchy numbers like Mast Qalandar sung
by late Ustad Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan have proved to be chartbusters. Musicians
like Jaffar Hussain also elicit acceptance and interest and the stage has
now become alive to their complete mesmeric appeal. The sense of participation
in hymnal rendering is one of its main attractions.
As the words of the lyric are crucial to its meaning, modern day Christian
choirs throughout the country have adopted translated renderings of
traditional hymns. Thus in a church service in Uttar Pradesh or
Delhi it is not uncommon to find the congregation singing a Hindi version
of Silent Night, Holy Night on Christmas Day.
In the churches of Mizoram and Nagaland, the service
may be conducted in English but the choir invariably opts for the local
language. Similarly, the service in the southern churches is in Malayalam or Tamil,
but since listeners from elsewhere are familiar with the tunes, they do not find
this a parochial preference. Despite this evolved enrichment, there is also a
thread of continuity within the devotional network.
The music
of the gurdwara is a case in point. The tremulous tones of the shabadis an exquisite preserve and offsets the trendy change of today. In a bemused
world, one returns to them with a feeling of solace and a mark of continuance.
The devotional development thus is a thing of permanence that gathers about itself
fresh forms but does not lose sight of its core essence.