Non-Competitive Section-Tansen-Haar X for चाह/ - TopicsExpress



          

Non-Competitive Section-Tansen-Haar X for चाह/ बेक़रारी from the Master of Masters.Bade Gulam Ali saab with this Thumri Yaad Piyaki Aaye.This composition was made after the tragic demise of his wife by himThis has been sung and improvised by many.Usadad Rasid Khan Saheb,Shobha Gurtujee & Kaushiki Desikan .All have their own delights.But I would settle for the original for fear of being blasphemous.youtu.be/LLbknarPdbY From You Tube some more about the great man.Bade Ghulam Ali was born in Kasur, Punjab, British India.[2] His father was a famous singer, Ali Baksh Khan, in a West Punjabi family of musical heritage. At the age of seven, he learned sarangi and vocal from his paternal uncle Kale Khan, who was a singer, and after his death he trained under his father. Khan started his career by playing sarangi. He became popular after his debut concert in Kolkata. Khan amalgamated the best of four traditions: his own Patiala-Kasur style, the Behram Khani elements of Dhrupad, the gyrations of Jaipur, and the behlavas (embellishments) of Gwalior. His voice had a wide range, spanning three octaves, effortless production, sweetness, flexibility and ease of movement in all tempi.[4] After the partition of India in 1947, Khan returned to his home in Pakistan, but returned to India later to permanently reside there. He did not approve of the partition, stating: If in every home one child was taught Hindustani classical music this country would never have been partitioned. In 1957, he acquired Indian citizenship and lived at various times in Lahore, Bombay, Calcutta, and Hyderabad. He was reluctant to sing for films, but sang two songs based on ragas Sohni and Rageshree for the 1960 film Mughal-e-Azam, in which his voice was represented as Tansens by the music director Naushad. To dissuade Naushad, he demanded a high price, reportedly Rs. 25,000/- per song, when the rate for popular playback singers such as Lata Mangeshkar and Mohammed Rafi was below Rs. 500/- per song. Khan was awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award and the Padma Bhushan in 1962.[5][6] Khan was married to Ali Jiwai, who died in 1932. Khans son, Munawar Ali Khan (1930--1989), was a classical singer. His grandson, Raza Ali Khan, is also a Hindustani classical singer. Khan died in Hyderabad at Basheerbagh Palace in 1968, after a prolonged illness which left him partially paralyzed in his last years. He continued to sing and perform in public with the support of his son Munawar until his death.
Posted on: Wed, 12 Nov 2014 13:26:17 +0000

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