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"For
us, as a family, music is like food. When you need it you don't
have to explain why, because it is basic to life."
-Ali Akbar Khan
The classical music of North India is an uplifting and extraordinary
music, dating back thousands of years. Ali Akbar Khan is one of
today's most accomplished Indian classical musicians. Considered
a "National Living Treasure" in India, he is admired by both Eastern
and Western musicians for his brilliant compositions and his mastery
of the sarode (a beautiful, 25-stringed Indian instrument). Concert
violinist the late Lord Yehudi Menuhin called Ali Akbar Khan, "An
absolute genius...the greatest musician in the world," and many
have considered him the "Indian Johann Sebastian Bach."
Ustad Ali Akbar Khan's family traces its gharana (ancestral tradition)
to Mian Tansen, a 16th century musical genius and court musician
of Emperor Akbar. Ali Akbar Khan's father, the late Padma Vibhusan
Acharya Dr. Allauddin Khan, was acknowledged as the greatest figure
in North Indian music in this century.
Born in 1922 in East Bengal (Bangladesh), Ali Akbar Khan (Khansahib)
began his studies in music at the age of three. He studied vocal
music from his father and drums from his uncle, Fakir Aftabuddin.
His father also trained him on several other instruments, but decided
finally that he must concentrate on the sarode and on vocal. For
over twenty years, he trained and practiced 18 hours a day. After
that, his father continued to teach Khansahib until he was over
100 years old, and left behind such a wealth of material that Khansahib
feels he is still learning new things from it. Since his father's
death in 1972, Khansahib has continued his father's tradition, that
of the Sri Baba Allauddin Seni Gharana of Maihar and Rampur, India.
Ali Akbar Khan gave his first public performance in Allahabad at
age thirteen. In his early twenties, he made his first recording
in Lucknow for the HMV label, and the next year, he became the court
musician to the Maharaja of Jodhpur. He worked there for seven years
until the Maharaja's untimely death. The state of Jodhpur bestowed
upon him his first title, that of Ustad, or Master Musician. Many
years later, he received the title of Hathi Saropao and Dowari Tajeem
at the Jodhpur Palace's Golden Jubilee Celebraton in 1993.
At the request of Lord Menuhin, Ali Akbar Khan first visited the
United States in 1955 and performed an unprecedented concert at
the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He also made the first Western
LP recording of Indian classical music, and the first television
performance of Indian music, on Allistair Cooke's Omnibus, sowing
the seed for the wave of popularity of Indian music in the 1960's.
Khansahib founded the Ali Akbar College of Music in Calcutta, India,
in 1956. Later, recognizing the extraordinary interest and abilities
of his Western students, he began teaching in America in 1965. In
1967, he founded the Ali Akbar College of Music, which moved to
Marin County, California, the following year. He currently maintains
a teaching schedule of 6 classes a week for 9months of the year.
Khansahib also opened a branch of his college in Basel, Switzerland,
run by his disciple Ken Zuckerman, where he teaches yearly during
his world tour. Ali Akbar Khan continues to tour extensively in
Asia, Europe, The Netherlands, Australia, Canada, and the United
States.
Khansahib has composed and recorded music for films throughout
his career. He composed extensively in India beginning with "Aandhiyan"
by Chetan Anand (1953) and went on to create music for "House Holder"
by Ivory/Merchant (their first film), "Khudita Pashan" (or "Hungry
Stone") for which he won the "Best Musician of the Year" award,
"Devi" by Satyajit Ray, and, in America, "Little Buddha" by Bernardo
Bertolucci.
1997 was a landmark year for Ali Akbar Khan. In February, he was
the second recipient to receive the Asian Paints Shiromani Award
- Hall of Fame, following filmmaker Satyajit Ray. He celebrated
his 75th birthday in April and AACM's 30th anniversary in June.
In August, the Indian Embassy requested Khansahib to perform at
the United Nations in New York and at Kennedy Center in Washington
DC; both performances were in celebration of the 50th year of India's
Independence. In September, Ali Akbar Khan was chosen to receive
the prestigious National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment
for the Arts. It was presented by Mrs. Hillary Clinton at a ceremony
in the White House.
When Ali Akbar Khan first received the title of Ustad as a relatively
young man, his father merely laughed. But later, when the patriarch
was a centenarian, he told his son one day that he was very proud
of him: "I am so pleased with your work in music that I will do
something which is very rare. As your Guru and father, I am giving
you a title, Swara Samrat (Emperor of Melody)." Khansahib feels
most fortunate to have received this blessing from his father, mother,
and uncle.
CURRENT PRESERVATION ACTIVITIES
Ali Akbar Khan and his family, and in particular his father Sri
Baba Allauddin Khansahib, have created vast written, recorded, and
oral records of music in their tradition known as the Sri Baba Allauddin
Seni Gharana of Rampur and Maihar, India. On June 14th 1994, The
Ali Akbar Khan Foundation was created in order to fund the Baba
Allauddin Institute, a library and archive to preserve and make
available these materials to future generations. The oldest reel
to reel tapes of performances in the collection have already been
preserved on new master tapes.
In old times, there were no written records of music notation in
India, only the words of the songs. After learning Western classical
music notation when he was young, Baba Allauddin Khan created the
first written notation of Indian music. He also went on to invent
orchestral compositions in classical ragas with harmony, which was
new to India. The Institute is currently scanning and printing copies
of over 100 composition books of Baba Allauddin Khan which were
brought over from his home in Maihar, India. They are simultaneously
being transcribed, cataloged and translated into English by one
of Khansahib's senior disciples, Smt. Sisirkana Choudhury.
Khansahib's wife, Mary, his sons, Alam and Manik and his secretary,
Karuna Davy, are all actively working on the archives. This project
alone encompasses over 10,000 compositions from the 16th through
the 20th century including; 360 different exercises for voice and
instruments, old traditional--and Baba Allauddin's own--compositions
in Tantrakaru style, songs in dhrupad style and old taranas, and
a great variety of talas (rhythm cycles). All of the materials are
quite rare and much of it is in a state of continuous physical deterioration,
so financial help is needed urgently if the Institute is to succeed
in preserving this music for future generations.
Another equally extensive project will be to preserve and transcribe
the recordings of Khansahib's own classes at the Ali Akbar College
of Music where he has taught for over 33 years, and continues to
teach today. In this year 2000, plans are forming to remodel and
expand the college building in San Rafael to include a larger performance
space, multi-media library and archive storage, offices, and classrooms.
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