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Agra gharana

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Recording by Zohrabai (1910).

The Agra gharana is a tradition of Hindustani classical vocal music descended from the Nauhar Bani. So far, Nauhar Bani has been traced back to around 1300 AD, during the reign of Emperor Allauddin Khilji of Delhi.

The first known musician of this tradition is Nayak Gopal. The style prevalent then in the Gharana was "Dhrupad-Dhamar". Ghagghe Khudabuksh (1790–1880 AD) introduced the "Khayal" style of Gwalior Gharana into Agra gharana which Khudabaksh learnt from Natthan Paribaksh of Gwalior.

Pedagogical genealogy

The following maps are based on recorded accounts by Vilayat Hussain Khan and Yunus Hussain Khan.[1]

Ancestral Lineage

Gauharbani Guru
Parampara
Nayak
Gopal
Swami
Haridas
Nauharbani Guru
Parampara
Kirana Gharana
Parampara
Miyan
Tansen
Lohang
Das
Alakh
Das
Khalak
Das
Malukh
Das
DaughterSujan
Singh
Bichitra
Khan
Surgyan
Khan
Qader Shah
(Jogi Bacche)
Daughter
Hyder ShahWazir
Khan
Dayam Khan
("Saras-rang")
Hasan & Saiyad
Khan
Gwalior Gharana
Guru Parampara
Qayam Khan
("Sham-rang")
Faiz Mohammed
Khan (Barodewale)
Nathan Peer
Baksh
Rangile Gharana
Parampara
Junggu
Khan
Soosa
Khan
Gulab
Khan
Ghagge Khuda
Baksh
Ramzan Khan
("Rangile")
Sher
Khan
Mohammed
Khan
Ghulam Haider
"Kallan" Khan
Ghulam Abbas
Khan
Mohammed Ali
Khan
Nisar Hussain
"Natthan" Khan
Hydori BegumTassaduq
Hussain Khan
Qadri BegumAbbasi BegumSafdar
Hussain Khan
Faiyaz
Hussain Khan

Distinguishing characteristics

The gayaki (style of singing) of the Agra Gharana is a blend of khayal gayaki and dhrupad-dhamar. In training, both the khayal and dhrupad components run hand in hand and are not taught in an isolated fashion. This is obvious from the method of singing notes of the Agra Gharana which demands that the projection of voice be more forceful and voluminous than usually encountered in khayal gayaki, as well as uttering notes open and bare (without grace notes).

Most khayal performances by artists of Agra gharana commence with the nom-tom alaap, a tradition unique to the Agra gharana. Different facets of a raga are displayed with the help of bandish while the raga is elaborated using vistaar.[what language is this?]

The gharana adopts a kind of voice production which relies on a flatter version of the vowel sound "a", which makes its music agreeable to rhythmic variations and is best suited for a deep masculine voice. Emphasis is laid on bold, full-throated and robust voice production, and singing in the lower register (mandra) is favoured. Keeping in tune with its dhrupadic origins, the singers use broad and powerful ornamentations (gamaks),[what language is this?] extensive glides (meends),[what language is this?] and resonant articulations of notes. As with the Gwalior gharana, the Agra singers accentuate the importance of the bandish and its methodical exposition. Singers following Faiyaz Khan's style resort to the dhrupadic nom-tom alaap before singing the bandish. The singers of this gharana are also great masters over layakari[what language is this?] or the rhythmic component. In fact, layakari is the foundation on which the singers build the edifice of the bandish. Agra singers' tihais[what language is this?] are eagerly awaited, as are their nifty ways of arriving at the same, by building up anticipation within the listener.

This is the only Gharana that has still continued to sing Dhrupad-Dhamar along with Nom-Tom Alap, Khayal, Thumri, Tappa, Tarana, Hori,

Some prominent exponents

Bibliography

  • Bonnie C. Wade (1984). "Agra gharana". Khyāl: Creativity Within North India's Classical Music Tradition. CUP Archive. pp. 101–129. ISBN 978-0-521-25659-9.
  • Babanrao Haldankar; Padmaja Punde (2001). Aesthetics of Agra and Jaipur Traditions. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-7154-685-5.
  • Tapasi Ghosh (2008). Pran Piya Ustad Vilayat Hussain Khan: His Life and Contribution to the World of Music. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. ISBN 978-81-269-0855-4.

References

  1. ^ Ghosh, Tapasi (2008). Pran Piya: Ustad Vilayat Hussain Khan. India: Atlantic Publishers and Distributors. p. Appendix. ISBN 978-81-269-0855-4.
  2. ^ Jeffrey Michael Grimes (2008). The Geography of Hindustani Music: The Influence of Region and Regionalism on the North Indian Classical Tradition. p. 139. ISBN 978-1-109-00342-0.