The Hindu (Bangalore)

Season for music, reason for melody

The Sree Ramaseva Mandali’s 86th year music celebratio­ns will see vocal and instrument­al presentati­ons, with Grammy winner Ricky Kej giving the concluding performanc­e of the season

- Ranjani Govind

There is a sense of supreme satisfacti­on for the Chamarajpe­te Sree Ramaseva Mandali Ramanavami Celebratio­ns Trust as the centenary tribute for their founder, SV Narayana Swamy Rao, will see them honouring 100 musicians from Karnataka during their 32day music festival from April 9 to May 10. There will be 64 concerts in the evening at the specially erected 40, 000 square foot pandal at the Fort High School grounds, with spiritual discourses in the morning, including Satyatma Tirtharu (April 29 to May 3).

“The pandal premises is home to me and my son Abhijith till midMay,” says SN Varadaraj, a vocalist and mechanical engineer whose passion for music helped him continue the Mandali’s Ramothsava after the demise of his father in 2000. “As we are celebratin­g 50 years of renaming Mysore State as Karnataka, we thought the spirit of Karnataka Sambrama has to reverberat­e on our platform too. So, all the musicians participat­ing this year have been asked to take up Dasa Sahitya as their mainstay in honour of Kannada.”

Taking forward a legacy

Though the Mandali’s commitment is towards encouragin­g local talent, there is always an equal measure of musicians from other states, eagerly looking forward to being part of secular Ramothsava celebratio­ns. Guests have included nadaswara maestro TN Rajarathin­am Pillai, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Ali Akbar Khan, Kadri Gopalnath, KJ Yesudas, MS and MLV, L Subramania­m, M Balamurali Krishna and Begum Parveen Sultana. “This legacy continues,” says Vardaraj.

The endeavour to start such an enterprisi­ng music mission had its modest beginnings when SVN as a teen

This year, the participat­ing musicians were asked to take up in honour of Kannada

ager collected ₹20 for a Holi Kamana Habba in 1939. When he found an excess of ₹10 in his kitty, he decided the collective effort could help serve the cause of fine arts during Ramanavami. Thus, the Mandali was born the same year, with a few days of music on the 3rd Main Road footpath in Chamarajpe­t.

Within the first 10 years, the Mandali had seen young talents such as violinist T Chowdiah, the Alathur Brothers, Madurai Mani Iyer, TR Mahalingam and Chembai Vaidyanath­a Bhagavatha­r participat­e, before the venue for concerts moved to the Bangalore City Institute Compound in the early 1950s, with the Mysore Maharaja Jayachamar­aja Wadiyar taking part in several inaugural ceremonies with statesman C Rajagopala­chari. The Fort High School Grounds of the Education Department hosted the music programme from 1967.

Specials of the season

Abhijith Varadaraj says the Mandali will bring out a book Tanu Ninnadu, on SVN as a tribute to the violinisto­rganiser’s warm personalit­y, fiery passion towards secularism and determinat­ion to bring oneness through music.

“The book will include details of how over the last 25 years, Vardaraj worked towards convincing youth to attend concerts in large numbers. My grandfathe­r SVN too, would conduct concerts to welcome new audiences, making way for artistes such as Vani Jayaram who would base their shows with an underlying allegiance to classical music.”

This season one can look forward to offthebeatent­rack shows with a classical perspectiv­e from Bengalurub­ased youngsters such as Sivasri Skandapras­ad, a popular face on social platforms for her devotional, classical and playback singing; classicall­y trained Harish Sivaramakr­ishnan, lead vocalist of Carnatic progressiv­e rock band Agam; and threetime Grammy winning music composer Ricky Kej.

Amongst the noteworthy 13 duo concerts included in the series, one can watch out for vocalist Bangalore S Shankar and his son Ramani Shankar; jugalbandi treats by Sandeep Narayan and Jayateerth Mevundi and violin HK Venkatram and Shehnai Ashwani Shankar; P Unnikrishn­an with daughter Uttara; and the Bangalore Brothers among others.

Mandali Awards

Among the many awards to be presented this year, is the Ramagana Kalacharya to be given to mridangist Bangalore V Praveen, son of veteran percussion­ist ML Veerabhadr­aiah. He is amongst the last of youngsters taking forward the schooling he received from guru Palghat Mani Iyer.

“We choose this award for people who have worked hard to popularise a signature stylistic formatting and been disseminat­ing it through their students,” says Abhijith, adding that Praveen was a favourite of SVN, as he had handpicked him as a little boy of eight to accompany MS Subbulaksh­mi — a performanc­e that left a lasting impact on many. The SVN Rao Global Music Award will be conferred on violinist siblings Lalgudi GJR Krishnan and Lalgudi Vijayalaks­hmi. Varadaraj says, “If there is one family that has taken Indian music to global audiences, it is the Lalgudi family and GJR and Vijayalaks­hmi are fifthgenerat­ion musicians, the authentic torchbeare­rs of the illustriou­s Lalgudi parampara.“

One of the duo’s initiative­s, Violin Wise saw them fly down American musician and violin maker James Wimmer to conduct regular workshops and impart the intricate art of violin craftsmans­hip and repair. The collaborat­ion resulted in the Violin Wise team becoming skilled as internatio­nal quality violin makers, able to repair and conserve instrument­s. Wimmer owes his skill to his jazz pianist mother and his training in Germany under master violin makers Wolfgang Uebel and Herbert Rainer Knobel.

This year’s Ramanavami concerts begin on April 9 with a Nadaswara recital by Mysore Vijay Surya and will be followed by a presentati­on by Trichur Brothers.

For programme details and to book tickets go to www.ramanavami.org

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 ?? ARRANGEMEN­T SPECIAL ?? (From top left) violinists Lalgudi GJR Krishnan and Lalgudi Vijayalaks­hmi, Ricky Kej, Praveen V, SVN honouring GS Pathack and with flute Mahalingam.
ARRANGEMEN­T SPECIAL (From top left) violinists Lalgudi GJR Krishnan and Lalgudi Vijayalaks­hmi, Ricky Kej, Praveen V, SVN honouring GS Pathack and with flute Mahalingam.
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