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Indian classical music

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Photography and recording plucked her out of obscurity and made her a celebrity ... Able to hide her background by advertising herself as 'amateur' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Indian classical music


1
Indian classical music
  • Technology case study the tawaif and the
    gramophone

Lecturer Katherine Brown Email
k.r.brown_at_leeds.ac.uk Room 2.21
2
Todays Lecture
  • How technological change enabled the tawaif to
    make the switch from a feudal patronage system to
    modern middle class patronage
  • Move to British colonial cities
  • Theatre
  • Gramophone
  • Nur Jehan, Begum Akhtar, Gauhar Jan

3
From Lucknow to Calcutta
4
British Calcutta
5
Wajid Ali Shah
  • Tawaif of Lucknow (e.g. Umrao Jaan)
  • Wajid Ali Shah, last Nawab (prince) of Lucknow
  • Famous poet, musician, dancer, patron
  • British annexed Lucknow in 1856, WAS exiled to
    Calcutta suburbs
  • Continued lavish patronage of courtesans
  • Considered first Hindustani playwright

6
Wajid Ali Shah
7
Modern Theatre in Calcutta and Bombay
  • Traditional Indian theatre goes back 2000 years
    always includes music and dance
  • Premodern theatre either in courts or in open
    rural or urban spaces no special spaces
  • Arrival of British gt building of proscenium arch
    theatres set aside for drama
  • Victorian stage technologies (special effects,
    lighting, fly-in sets, etc.)

8
Proscenium-arch theatre
  • Large arch at front of stage, creating window
    through which audience views play
  • Audience faces stage
  • Anything not meant to be seen hidden by the arch

9
Modern Theatre in Calcutta and Bombay
  • Proscenium theatre modernity
  • Suited Prince Alberts idea of rational
    amusement for moral improvement
  • All theatres owned by Indian (Parsi) businessmen
  • Stage-folk and audience heterogeneous, British
    and Indian, all classes, English and Indian plays
    and actors
  • Maintained strong link between music, dance,
    drama Indian and Western music, sometimes mixed.

10
Star Theatre, Calcutta (built 1888)
11
Women performers in theatre
  • Originally female impersonators
  • By 1870s, women only acting female parts in
    Calcutta all drawn from courtesan classes
  • Strong link between classical music and theatre
    actors singing teachers all gurus
  • Courtesans moving into theatre already a move
    towards respectability

12
Gramophone Company (HMV)
  • British multinational, formed 1898, first Indian
    recording expedition 1902 by Fred Gaisberg
  • 1877 Edison invents phonograph
  • 1888 Berliner patents gramophone better sound
    recording, more permanent
  • Impetus of 1902 Indian recording expedition to
    sell gramophone equipment, not records!

13
Gramophone Company (HMV)
  • Gramophone itself primarily a symbol of
    modernity, affluence status symbol
  • Gramophone Company monopoly in India for 5
    decades, only selling expensive machines this
    made the gramophone an aspirational product for
    the urban elite
  • first manifestation of musical mass media

14
Gaisbergs 1902 expedition
  • Recognition that if you want to sell gramophones
    to different cultures, you also have to sell them
    records of music they like.
  • Local Gramophone Company agent Hawd urged
    necessity of recording Indian music.
  • Hence 1902 Indian recording expedition. Fred
    Gaisberg lands in Calcutta and records for two
    months.

15
Saraswati HMV catalogue
16
Recruiting musicians
  • Traditional Indian aristocratic patrons who
    already had gramophones - access to traditional
    markets for classical music
  • Venues accessible to the local British agent the
    theatres.
  • First 1902 recordings of female theatre actresses
    from Classic and Corinthian Theatres

17
The Corinthian Theatre
  • Built by Richard Roskell Bayne sometime between
    1866 and 1876
  • 1870s English plays and British actors
  • c.1886 bought by wealthy Parsi entrepreneur
    Jamshedji Framji Madan
  • Madan Theatres were commercially successful in
    both stage and later cinema
  • Continued showing both English and Indian dramas

18
Nur Jehan (1926-2000)
  • Pakistans most revered female vocalist also a
    film actress
  • Elder sisters started careers in Lahore
  • Brought to Calcutta c.1930 by the manager of the
    Corinthian Theatre
  • Nur Jehan began her cinema career aged 4
  • First husband film editor who first met her at
    the Corinthian had many lovers

19
Nur Jehan (1926-2000)
20
Begum Akhtar (1914?-1974)
  • heroine of the Corinthian theatre
  • biographers nightmare
  • Born in Faizabad near Lucknow (Akhtari Bai
    Faizabadi), mother a courtesan
  • Moved to Calcutta to get the best training
  • Was a courtesan at least in her early years
  • Acted and sang in films as well as recording
    career
  • 1945 married a barrister and briefly stopped
    singing

21
Begum Akhtar (1914?-1974)
22
Gauhar Jan (c.1875-1930)
  • Begum Akhtar inspired by her recordings
  • Calcutta tawaif, acknowledged expert in thumri
    and khayal, and Asias first major recording
    artist
  • Photography and recording plucked her out of
    obscurity and made her a celebrity

23
Gauhar Jan (c.1875-1930)
  • Discovered in a mehfil in the home of a
    merchant
  • Bridged India and West (she was Eurasian and
    multilingual)
  • Comfortable in commercial milieu of the
    Gramophone Company
  • But considered not respectable

24
Disembodiment of the voice
  • Sound recording technology made it possible for
    the voice of a disreputable woman to enter the
    homes of respectable, affluent people as a
    status symbol.
  • Severing body from voice enabled GJ to become a
    star despite her background
  • Able to hide her background by advertising
    herself as amateur
  • Once she had attained star status, she could
    appear in her own right on the public concert
    stage.

25
Gauhar Jan (c.1875-1930)
26
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