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Bangalore: Gauhar Jaan: Song sung true

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  • Bangalore: Gauhar Jaan: Song sung true

    GAUHAR JAAN: SONG SUNG TRUE
    Vaishalli Chandra

    Daily News & Analysis
    April 13 2010
    India

    Bangalore: Staring at you from the cover of My Name is Gauhar Jaan!

    The Life and Times of a Musician is Gauhar Jaan herself. "Even this
    picture has a story behind it," says author Vikram Sampath. "It is
    from a picture postcard sent by a British officer to his mother back
    in England, mentioning how besotted he was with this Indian beauty.

    Instead of keeping the postcard, his incensed mother chose to give
    it away. The postcard traveled around and somehow made its way to
    Switzerland and back to India. And now it is on the cover of this
    book."

    Gauhar was no ordinary woman. The first Indian classical musician
    and woman to record on the gramophone at the turn of the 20th century
    when technology was at its most basic, this feisty Hindustani vocalist
    from Calcutta adapted to the needs and demands of recording with elan.

    Today technology may have made recording a breeze, but the book tells
    us how in that era, artists had to sing very loudly and refrain from
    making any movements to ensure a good recording.

    The book also traces Gauhar Jaan's life and times as a musician, and
    for Sampath it was like piecing together a jigsaw puzzle. Bemoaning the
    lack of documentation of artistes' lives, he says, "For these people,
    the music was bigger than the person." After two years of research, he
    has collected documents that put to rest myths about her date of birth
    as well as her lineage -- Gauhar Jaan was born Elieen Angelina Yeoward
    on June 26 1873 in Azamgarh. Born into an Armenian Christian family,
    she was six years old when her mother and she converted to Islam.

    The book charts the course of her life and tells us how the
    much-acclaimed and celebrated songstress met a tragic end. In fact,
    the opening chapter of the book actually depicts her last years as
    a palace musician at the Mysore Palace and her disgust at finding
    out that she would receive a sum of Rs500. It presents a picture
    of an emotionally broken woman, something circumstances and the
    controversies surrounding her turned Gauhar into.

    For Sampath, the journey has been an enjoyable experience. It all
    started when he was researching his first book Splendours of Royal
    Mysore: The Untold Story of the Wodeyars. But the author feels several
    co-incidences finally convinced him to write this book. Interestingly,
    a few of the experiences were distinctly eerie.

    "There was storm-like weather one day when I opened Gauhar Jaan's
    archived letters in Mysore, and then again a similar storm brewed
    in the sky one evening in Calcutta. I felt as if there was a guiding
    presence," he says. Talking about the relevance of the book in an age
    when mp3s rule the roost, Sampath says the history of how technology
    has evolved to suit musicians is revealing and inspiring.

    "That was a time when musicians had to adapt to technology and not
    the other way round," he says.

    Gauhar's success in spite of her struggles are as interesting as
    her emerging as a much sought-after female musician, making this
    a contemporary feminist story with a strong female connect, says
    the author.

    A student of music who enjoys the research involved in writing
    non-fiction, Sampath rules out writing any fiction but we could soon
    have another book on music. "I want to bring together the gramophone
    celebrities of north and south India as well as resume another project,
    that of tracing the Carnatic music scene," he says.

    If he has a wish, it is that Indians learnt the importance of taking
    care of our cultural legacy. "Our country must learn how to respect
    history and document and honour artistes of the past. The business
    of archiving is vital; there is such rich treasure that is waiting
    to be lost."

    Comparing the journeys that his two books set him on, Vikram says,
    "When I was writing Splendours of Royal Mysore, there was a lot of
    documentation available. But this time it was a journey into the
    unknown. I went in to the tunnel without knowing if I would find
    light at the end of it."
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