Within months, protests against the procedure spread across the country as musicians felt slighted. Maestros such as sitarist Ustad Vilayat Hussain Khan, his disciple Pandit Arvind Parikh and Jaipur Atrauli Gharana vocalist Vidushi Kausalya Manjeshwar, formed the Bharatiya Sangit Kalakar Mandal to coordinate with other musicians. Many decided to stop broadcasting on the radio. "[For many days] some 15-20 of us including Kishoritai Amonkar and Bade Ghulam Ali Khansahib, sat in our cars outside the gate of the AIR building on Queen's Road (now, New Marine Lines in Mumbai) and requested the musicians walking out to stop working for Akashvani," recalled Parikh, now 97.
"The agitation ended in 1955 and a settlement was reached. The audition policy was altered to incorporate a screening process, which was not demeaning to performers," wrote music scholar and tabla player Aneesh Pradhan in his book, Chasing the Raag Dream.
This story, parts of which are likely apocryphal, showcases how Mumbai functioned as the beating heart of classical music in the country since the 19th century. Among the brightest stars of that tradition, Ustad Zakir Hussain, died earlier this week. Hussain, born in Mumbai's Mahim, was the son of Ustad Alla Rakha Khan, a tabla virtuoso, who accompanied sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar. Simla House, Hussain's home in Mumbai, was witness to over 50 years of this history.
The city's imprint
Pandit Amarendra Dhaneshwar, born shortly after independence in 1951, said the city had a lot to offer to the music lover - film music, bhajans, stage songs and bhavgeet. Dadar was home to some of the leading vocalists of Hindustani classical music such as Vidushi Kesarbai Kerkar, Pandit Sharadchandra Arolkar, Vidushi Prabha Atre, Pandit Yeshwantbuwa Joshi and Pandit Jasraj, among others.
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