Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST

From his pride in his Mercedes to his rivalry with Pt Ravi Shankar, Namita Devidayal’s portrait of Vilayat Khan catalogues the events of the sitar maestro’s life

- Kunal Ray letters@htlive.com

There are several regrets in my life; one of them is not having listened to Ustad Vilayat Khan live in concert. For many like me who had no access to the maestro and for others who perhaps did, a book like Namita Devidayal’s The Sixth String of Vilayat Khan becomes imperative. At the beginning, the author states her intention when she declares, “I have tried to create an impression­istic fluid portrait of a magnificen­t artiste and a fragmented human being.” Biographie­s in India and particular­ly those dealing with performing artists are often hagiograph­ic. So it was reassuring to read that the author has no illusions about her subject. Vilayat Khan’s story has the tropes of the normative rags-to-riches saga. He lost his father, the celebrated Enayat Khan in childhood. His mother, Basheeran Begum, was a disciplina- rian who held the family together. In many ways, this book is also her story – a single woman who carved the careers of her illustriou­s sons. To escape her harsh regimen, Vilayat ran away to Delhi where he was sheltered by Zulfiqar Ali Bukhari at All India Radio. He heard recordings of old masters and met many maestros here. Later, he also learnt from his maternal grandfathe­r and uncle in Saharanpur for long stretches. Various streams thus assimilate in his musical training shaping a unique sensibilit­y. Replete with highs and lows, Vilayat Khan’s life reads like a film script with numerous affairs, a failed first marriage, a constraine­d relationsh­ip with his children, the falling out with brother Imrat, his rivalry with Pandit Ravi Shankar, and his proximity with spiritual leader Jagjit Singh. Vilayat Khan is also presented as an exhibition­ist who loved to show off his brand new Mercedes, coaxed friends into organising parties, enjoyed rubbing shoulders with the elite, and rehearsed his concert look, amongst many other anecdotes. He was extremely conservati­ve in his attitude to women and wanted his daughters to look and dress a certain way. Other stories of his gargantuan ego are also narrated with great flair. Devidayal presents a man easy to despise and difficult to admire. But she offers very little insight into his music. Bits of personal trivia make for interestin­g reading but they don’t explain how the flawed man became a celebrated artist. This is a major shortcomin­g. Devidayal writes, “He had experience­d inordinate pain, but he also believed that sadness was crucial to music.” Such baffling statements are not an objective analysis of his music.

Vilayat Khan left Bombay in the mid1960s and retreated to the hills of Shimla. Devidayal writes, “I went to Shimla, and then beyond, to reconnect with myself and also to find out why Vilayat Khan came here.” The chapter “Life in the Hills” is the book’s weakest. It catalogues a series of events without probing the music he created there or how the place shaped his work. Also, the book attempts to pander to popular interest in Vilayat Khan’s much touted rivalry with his contempora­ry, Ravi Shankar. An entire chapter titled The Frenemy is dedicated to the subject. She writes, “While researchin­g the book, I kept trying to find that sensationa­l angle which would transform a boring biography into a page-turner, and the one that seemed most obvious was the rivalry between the two sitar players, which I would fashion into an epic story, as Milos Forman did with Antonio Salieri and Amadeus Mozart in the film Amadeus.” Is it desirable to be sensationa­l? In the quest for the sensationa­l, the book misses out on the private and the internal, leaving no space for interiorit­y which is key to the art-making process. Devidayal mentions the thehrav in Vilayat’s music but it is precisely this quality that her writing lacks. There is a marked absence here of reflection about the man and his music.

Like many Indian classical musicians of his generation, Vilayat Khan moved to USA in 1991. He built a new life there with son Hidayat and wife Zubeida. Ill health forced him to cut down on concert commitment­s and he largely lead a private life in the company of close friends in the salubrious locales of Princeton. He died in Mumbai in 2004. At a concert in Delhi in 2000, an ailing Vilayat Khan said, “I can’t play the way I used to. But if nothing else, please listen to my intention….” The Sixth String… would have been a more rewarding read if it had explored the intention of the artist’s music. Vilayat Khan deserves a better book written with more nuance, empathy and discernmen­t.

Kunal Ray teaches literary and cultural studies at FLAME University, Pune

 ??  ?? Namita Devidayal
Namita Devidayal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India