Many thanks again to Danny for sharing this cassette.
Legendary Late Pandit Balaram Pathak
'This great musician was also a great man. His real simplicity and 
unaffected manners, his laughing and mischievous eyes from which a child-like 
purity filters out, are eloquent enough. In one word: he is a true 
Artist.'
Late Pandit Balaram Pathak is one of the most important sitar players of 
the former generation. He influenced many sitar players and got recognized by 
many great musicians for his unique style.
Pandit Balaram Pathak's family traces ancestral tradition to Gopal Nayak; 
Lt. Pt.Ramgovind Pathak, the renowned musician, sitarist and surbahar player. 
His family was of refined musical stock, his Great Grand father Lt. Pt. 
Dinanath Pathak was a great Dhrupadi. Pt. Balaram Pathak is acknowledged as one 
of the greatest sitar players in Northern Indian music in India. He was born on 
November 5, 1926 in Balia, Uttar Pradesh. He learned the art of playing on sitar 
and surbahar in his early childhood under his talented father. From the age of 
ten he practised sitar and surbahar eighteen hours a day for the next sixteen 
years, learning Sur-singar (instrument) and vocal music. At the age of twelve he 
gave his first public performance at Murshidabad, West-Bengal. 
Balaram Pathak's debut concert dates back to 1938. As a winsome boy in his 
early stages, he played with rare artistry creating unprecedented sensation and 
great impact on the master musicians.
At a very early age he became the court musician of Maharaja Kamla Ranjan 
Royin Kasim Bazar, Murshidabad, West-Bengal. His talent has been able to graft 
all the finer points and subtleties of Dhrupad and Khayal in the 
instrument.
Balaram Pathak's style consisted of a unique combination of the qualities 
of novelty and perfection in exposition of the Indian ragas. His alap, meends, 
mukris, gamaks, zamzamas, ulta zhala created an atmosphere of ideas and feelings 
which was at once serious and moving. Pathak's individual talent along with the 
tradition of this Gharana has produced a living legend. Based on his extensive 
and erudite research of the Carnatic (South Indian) and North Indian styles of 
music he had made immense contribution to classical music by way of his 
compositions and introductions of new Ragas like Latangi, Charukeshi, 
Sanmukh-priya, Amrit-versa, Bakra-madhama Tori, Mukhari, Lilawati, Ahiri 
etc.
Awarded of 'Sur Sadhak' title from Calcutta Conference, he had two discs to 
his credit. Pandit Pathak renders even rare and difficult ragas with commendable 
fluency, and will be held in high esteem in the minds of true music 
lovers.
After having been nominated for the head of the department in the Music 
faculty of Khairagar University in Madhya Pradesh for some years, Balaram Pathak 
shifted in 1980 from Calcutta to New Delhi. Balaram Pathak participated to the 
most prestigious annual music festivals of the country and has been regularly 
performing for All India Radio (A.I.R. Calcutta, A.I.R. Delhi).
Specially delegated by the 'Government of India', Pandit Pathak visited the 
European countries. He was awarded the prestigious Sangeet Natak Academy Award 
in 1989. He has a unique credit of inventing the 'Raag Bahadur Shastri', 
dedicated to our late Prime minister, Lal Bahadur Shastri.
Pandit Balaram Pathak expired on 15th February 1991, in New Delhi. 
Patrick Moutal 1986 (Ocora LP 558 672-73)
from: 
http://www.ashokpathak.com/Ashok_Pathak_pages/Balaram_Pathak.html
7 comments:
Bravo, bravo, bravo!
Very important musician! Thanks so much. Please track down more!
Very nice! Thank you Sir!
pathak -- genius sitar player; but these tracks were available before in the internet...would like to see the other ragas ... "Latangi, Charukeshi, Sanmukh-priya, Amrit-versa, Bakra-madhama Tori, Mukhari, Lilawati, Ahiri ", if anybody has them. Tawfiq & Danny -- thank you for posting all the other wonderful music i.e nb's malkauns and mushtaq ali's bhairavi are absolutely mindblowing. thanks again & god bless!!!
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