Hindustan Times (Noida)

How Sharma fused classical pride with pop

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Along with flautist Hariprasad Chaurasia, Shivkumar Sharma formed "Shiv-hari", composing music for Bollywood movies. And that is just a small part of the santoor exponent's contributi­on to the world of music.

AMONG INDIA’S BEST-KNOWN CLASSICAL MUSICIANS

Sharma, one of India's most well-known classical musicians, died early in the morning at his Pali Hill residence in Mumbai. Sharma, one half of the 'Shiv-hari' composer duo with flautist Hari Prasad Chaurasia, is survived by his wife Manorama and sons Rahul (also a santoor player) and Rohit

STILL TOURING: He was active till his final days. Despite suffering from ailments, and being on dialysis, he was to perform in Bhopal next week

FINAL RITES: His body will be visible for “public darshan” from 10am to 1pm in Juhu Wednesday, following which he will be accorded a state funeral

BROUGHT SANTOOR TO THE WORLD

A PADMA VIBHUSHAN recipient, he is believed to be the first musician to have played Indian classical music on the santoor, a folk instrument from Jammu and Kashmir. Having made a mark across India, Sharma also helped spread the santoor’s popularity across the world

FROM A STUDENT’S PERSPECTIV­E

“Pandit Shivkumar Sharma was my life. I got into music only because of him. I was 13 when I told my father that I wanted to learn the santoor from Pandit Shivkumar Sharma ji. We went to his Bandra home and he embraced me as a student with open arms in 1975... I received so much love from him, his wife and his children. He was a special guru... Santoor is a very difficult instrument and he took it to unimaginab­le heights...”

— PANDIT SATISH VYAS, one of his oldest students { 1938-2022 } PANDIT SHIVKUMAR SHARMA

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PRODIP GUHA/HT ARCHIVE

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