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  The Lost World of Hindustani Music
Product Details:
Author: Mumar Prasad Mukherji | ISBN: 978-0-19-547467-1 | Format: Paperback | Pages: 354 | Weight: 0.72 lbs | Pub. Date: 2007 | Publisher: Oxford University Press
DESCRIPTION
Kudrat ten rang-birangee! Oh many splendoured Creation’. So went the bhajan Ustad Abdul Karim Khan sang before the saint Tajuddin Baba.The holy man, entranced by the song, clapped his hands and danced.
Kumar Prasad Mukherji’s elegy to a vanishing age of musical giants is comprised of many shared experiences between performer and audience, and between recital and applause. It is his salute to a world receding into the shadows of history, peopled by ustads, pandits, the rich and famous, the sacred and the profane. He traces the origins of their schools from folk traditions to the courts of ancient emperors and the sounds of ankle-bells of dancing girls. He points to the time when notation crept into classical music, horrifying old masters accustomed to an art form that celebrated spontaneity and improvisation, but resulting in the preservation of ragas that would otherwise have been lost to time.
While Mukherji’s beloved ‘khansahebs', ‘panditjis’ and ‘buwas’ may have been inspired by the divine, his recounting from legends and personal memory shows us those greats as intensely human creatures.They are driven by appetites not always noble and their intrigues and jealousies are universal. Humour, too, abounds in these pages, as do characters who will remain forever etched in the mind of the reader.
Kumar Prasad Mukherji was born in 1927 into a welt-known Bengali family. He had diverse interests and wrote a number of books on music and cricket. His first novel entitled Kudrat Rangi Birarigi was awarded the Rabindranath Tagore Purashkar and in 1972 he received the title of Paridit from Gana Kala Parishad.
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