A remarkable flowering of Hindustani music happened in the Hubli - Dharwad region of Karnataka.
One of, if not the greatest exponents of Hindustani Classical Music is Pt. Bhimsen Joshi. He would've turned 100 today!
A thread 🧵celebrating BhimaNNa, THE maestro!
Pt. Bhimsen Joshi was a bit of a family black sheep. He kept running away from home as a very young child, following whichever troupe of musicians passed through his village.
His father, fed up with having to go looking for him wrote “son of teacher Joshi” on all his shirts so people who found him could send him back.
Hubli Dharwad was resolutely in Carnatic country geography wise. However, due to the sublime maestro Ustad Abdul Karim Khan frequenting the region, Hindustani gained a foothold here.
Abdul Karim Khan had a tragic personal life. Appointed to the Baroda court as musician, he fell in love with Tarabai Mane, daughter of a high ranking nobleman Sardar Marutirao Mane, and the couple eloped.
They had four children, but Tarabai fell out with him and left with her children, all very accomplished musicians in their own right.
Here’s the Ustad, singing a Miyan ki Malhar!
Uff. Sublime
Pt. Bhimsen Joshi is part of his lineage. His guru, Sawai Gandharva, was Abdul Karim’s direct disciple.
Here’s Pt. Bhimsen Joshi reprising the Ustad’s inestimable Basant. Guaranteed to move you!
Further, in 1934 Pt. Joshi started learning the Dhrupad from the legendary singer Pandit Mangatram in Punjab.
Many believe it is here that Joshiji mastered his "taans" - improvised vocalisation (typically the extended a that you most often associate with Hindustani music)
Later during the Harivallabh Sangeet Sammelan in Jalandhar, the Gwalior Gharana stalwart Pandit Vinayakrao Patwardhan told BhimaNNa to return to his hometown where Sawai Gandharva lived and trained pupils!
As an example of his mastery over taans, check out this performance by Panditji.
The energy is UNBELIEVABLE!
Aptly, the youtuber who uploaded this describes it as an "explosive performance"
Pt. Joshi was like a sponge soaking up skills & various aspects of Hindustani music.
His son says "When he was working at All India Radio, Lucknow, he would often travel to Benaras to listen to renowned ‘thumri’ singer Siddheshwari Devi.”
This quote Panditji encapsulates his attitude about assimilating different traditions into his own:
“I have never been choosy about imbibing from various traditions. I have heard countless performances of numerous great artistes of all ‘gharanas’ throughout my life . . .
. . . One never knows how and where
whose influence can sink in and show up while you perform. Some of these concerts seem to me like they happened just yesterday.”
Panditji's on-stage histrionics are legendary, but he was a colorful character off stage too & enjoyed his life!
Many fans recount this hilarious story.
Midway during a concert in Pune, Panditji took a break & announced "Just ten minutes. I want to watch Wimbledon too!" 😂
Although a Kannadiga, BhimaNNa also held the city of Pune very close to his heart.
BhimaNNa became the legend that he is today in the city of Pune.
Jayant Deshpande recounts this quote by Panditji: "If it weren’t for Bharat Gayan Samaj (Pune) there would’ve been no Bhimsen"
Panditji was also an institution builder & played an important role in the setting up of Lalit Kala Kendra of Pune University.
The university established the Bhimsen Joshi Chair in his honor at its Centre for Performing Arts. unipune.ac.in/chairs/Bhimsen…
Coming back to his influences:
A lesser known fact about BhimaNNa is that he idolised the legendary Ustad Amir Khan.
Quick aside for some bollywood buffs: There is a comedic sequence in the 2003 film Hungama where Ustadji's name is confused for actor Aamir Khan
Pt. Joshi: He not only idolised Ustad Khan but also patterned his taans after Khan sahib.
But this was a mutual admiration society!
Amir Khan apparently said that only after listening to at least 25 BimaNNa's mehils can one think of becoming a mehfil singer!
For multiple generations of his fans in Karnataka, Joshiji's rendition of Purandara Dasas - considered as the earliest proponent of Carnatic music - songs are an inseparable part of their musical experience.
The maestro's renditions are truly unique!
Panditiji also had some songs in the films. The most famous is the one where Panditji and Manna De's voice compete in the song Ketaki Gulab from the movie Basant Bahar
Surprisingly, Manna De's voice defeats Bhimsen Joshi
Manna De probably thought this was absurdly hilarious.
According to this @cinestaan article, Manna De refused to sing and also went AWOL.
Later Manna De said “I should sing with Bhimsen Joshi, compete with him, and defeat him too?"
His version of the song Bhagyada Lakshmi Baramma was used in the Kannada film "Nodi Swami Naavu Irodu Heege" (Sire, This is How We Are) directed by Shankar Nag, & starring Shankar Nag, Lakshmi, Anant Nag, Arundhati Nag Master Manjunath, and Ramesh Bhat.
Panditji also had international fans.
Apparently, Pakistani ghazal legends Mehdi Hassan and Ghulam Ali asked for Bhimanna's presence whenever they performed in Pune!
We want to end the thread with Panditji's appearance on @shekharsuman7's 90s TV classic Movers & Shakers.
The master talks about his search for a guru, trip to Kabul, Jawaharlal Nehru among other things!
Here is the story of how the 1982 Asian Games started a temple ritual that continues to this day.
A thread 🧵
Little bit of context - Thrissur is considered the cultural capital of Kerala and has hosted the Thrissur Pooram - at the Vadakkunathan Temple every year when the moon rises with the Pooram star in the Malayalam Calendar month of Medam.
In other words, around May every year.
The pooram event sees a good collection of elephants (more than 50) decorated with nettipattam (decorative golden headdress), strikingly crafted Kolam, decorative bells, and ornaments.
@IWTKQuiz x @iimb_official teaming up to bring, not one, but TWO quizzes at the Unmaad Festival 🥳
IIM Bangalore is hosting Unmaad, India’s biggest B-School cultural fest with tonnes of activities and competitions from cooking to dancing to quizzing!
We will be hosting 2 quizzes at the event both online and offline.
1️⃣ The Galactic Geniuses - General Open Quiz
🗓️ Online Prelims: 5th Feb 2023
🗓️ Offline Prelims: 26th Feb 2023
🏆 GRAND FINALE: 26th Feb, IIM-B Campus
The 73rd amendment of Constitution of India that empowered local governments and introduced women’s reservation in local governments.
A Thread 🧵
This amendment from 1993 has resulted in a governance revolution in India.
Today, there are more than one million women representatives in local governments across India.
Safe to say that this has no parallel in the world!
Droupadi Murmuji, the path breaking politician from Odisha, won her first major electoral victory in the Panchayat election of 1997 from Rairangpur Nagar Panchayat.
She won this from a seat that was reserved for women (in this case, ST women).
Indians hope that the budget is good for them and they can share sweets. But every year, for a small group of people, the finance minister turns into a Halwaai. #Budget2023
The Halwa ceremony is the traditional start of the budget process. More than 100 officials of the Finance Ministry, will be locked up (Big Boss style) in the Budget printing press till the Budget speech is over.
Last year due to Omicron, finance minister didn't prepare the halwa on a kadhai.
Instead, she distributed sweets to all the people involved before locking them up inside the finance ministry... True lockdown stylz.
You might think these are the names of shots by Surya Kumar Yadav..
But the right answer is that these are all games invented by one man - Erno Rubik. A thread🧵
Rubik was born in the basement of a Budapest hospital, which had become an air raid shelter.
As a child, he loved to draw. He studied architecture at the Technical University of Budapest,then attended the College of Applied Arts. He became obsessed with geometric patterns.
In 1974, he was in his bedroom at his parents house. For some reason, he tried to put together 8 cubes, so that they could stick together and also move around.
He made cubes of wood, then drilled a hole in them to link them together.