The disintegration of the guru-shishya tradition in Hindustani music / Arts
The 2014 Oscar-winning drama Whiplash, about a jazz teacher’s turbulent relationship with one of his students, seems to argue that great art is a product of great fear, sacrifice and total surrender. In one scene, the teacher, Terence Fletcher, furiously hurls a chair at an ambitious first-year jazz student, Andrew Neiman, learning under him at the Shaffer Conservatory in New York City. He then whacks the boy in the face and abuses him in front of the entire class. The pupil is shown being pushed to perfection through constant humiliation.
The brutality of Whiplash, which makes it such a captivating film, would perhaps tame in comparison with some of the famous stories about the guru-shishya parampara, the centuries-old tradition of teaching classical music and dance in India. For instance, Alladiya Khan, the great doyen of the Jaipur-Atrauli gharana, was known to have forbidden Kesarbai Kerkar from having children if she wanted to learn under him. Baba Alauddin Khan, the renowned sarod player of the Maihar gharana, was so strict and unrelenting with his demands for riyaz—practice—that his son Ali Akbar ran away to Mumbai to work for a radio station while still in his teens. And in the home of his guru Sawai Gandharva, Bhimsen Joshi would have to wash the clothes of his teacher’s entire household before he could sit for his sessions.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2018-Ausgabe von The Caravan.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2018-Ausgabe von The Caravan.
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