Music runs in their genes. Mangala Ramamoorthy talks to the famous sarangi Sabri Khan family |
Music that bonds Sarangi maestro Ustad Sabri Khan (right) with son Kamal Sabri Khan and grandson Suhail Yusuf Khan
The globetrotter has just wrapped up another journey. This time it was to the just-concluded Oslo World Music Festival, Norway. The occasion was even more special as it was for the first time that three generations of the musicians from the family performed together on a platform abroad – the Ustad along with his son Kamal Sabri Khan, an established musician himself, and Suhail Yusuf Khan, who is Ustad's grandson and Kamal's nephew. "You know, Suhail is the eight generation musician in the family, I being the sixth," says the Padma Sri awardee.
Promoting sarangiOslo World Music Festival saw musicians from across the world and genres, and the family is happy that sarangi found a place there. "The festival brings together in not-so-commonly known music and the best performers together. And sarangi hasn't been promoted as much as many other string instruments. May be the organisers wanted to introduce it to the audience there," explains Ustad Kamal, who has learned the instrument under the tutelage of his illustrious father.
Different generations, even different sensibilities but one thing that is same is the instrument and their dedication to it. "Every musician has a different style but the technique is the same," informs Sabri Khan. Seconds Kamal, "The basic principles can never change but over the years each of us has developed a trademark style. The first generations were definitely more traditional."
Every kind of music has a place in today's world. In a world where rock and pop rule the roost, what prompted the youngest Khan to take to the same instrument as his grandfather. Legacy or interest? The reticent 19-year-old Suhail answers, "It is the first music that I heard when I was born and somewhere unknowingly it became a part of my life. As a result this instrument became more important than any other."
The eldest Ustad himself played different musical instruments like sitar, sarod and clarinet, though sarangi was his priority always. "Unfortunately not a single university in the country teaches sarangi. But people abroad love this instrument and the resonance it leaves but there are not many who appreciate it in India. Once, there was a 24-hour non-stop programme in Paris," elucidates the guru who gets shishyas from across the globe, especially from places like China and Japan. He adds, "The rate at which we are absorbing the Western culture and they ours, very soon we will have to go abroad to learn our own music."
Fusion is the buzzword of the century and sarangi took the same route as sitar or even santoor. "My father has played with all big names. We have always collaborated with musician whenever possible. My album Dance of the Deserts was on the same lines. If you want to be a world musician then you cannot afford to stick to your music alone. You have to make space and adapt yourself to other kind of music," says Kamal.
And when you talk about collaborations, you cannot afford to forget the fact that sarangi for long was just meant to be an accompanist to vocal. It was only in the late 19 th Century that Ustad Shakoor Khan and Ustad Bundoo Khan gave it the soloist outlook. "Since it is the only instrument that can get closest to the human voice, it made for the best accompanist, which I think is a compliment for sarangi and not a drawback. To be a good soloist, one has to establish as a good accompanist, as otherwise the knowledge becomes limited," clarifies Kamal, one of the four sons of the maestro.
Sabri Khan saab seals the argument when he says, "Sarangi is what it is, the instrument with 100 colours. Play it the way you want. It can complement any kind of music, and is still as enjoyable."
http://www.hindu.com/mp/2007/11/05/stories/2007110550790100. htm