Talk:Sunil Ganguly

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Articles for deletion This article was nominated for deletion on March 31, 2007. The result of the discussion was keep.

[edit] Unsourced material removed Feb 2007

I've removed the following unsourced/unverifiable material after failing to find any internet sources (and also failing to find a response at the India-related notice board). --Mereda 10:21, 28 February 2007 (UTC)

Coming from a modest background, Ganguly developed his very own style of playing the instrument. No matter what he played, his instrument seemed to sing like a human voice. For years his recordings have formed the basis of many aspiring guitarists in the country in terms of style and technique. Nuances were a child's play for Ganguly and he never went overboard doing it.
Ganguly's repertoire ranged from classical based songs to Hindi movie hits and from traditional folk songs to those composed by the greats like Dr. Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam. Major labels like HMV and Concord Records have recorded and released at least one album of Sunil Ganguly every year starting from late sixties / early seventies till about a year or two before he passed away.[1]
There were years when Radio Ceylon and All India Radio used to regularly broadcast his recordings which actually used to be a motivating factor for many aspiring young guitarists.
The Indian style of playing the Hawaiian Guitar is based around Ganguly's style and most of his contemporaries used to discreetly copy his style or claim to be based around Ganguly's school of playing.
Many references to Ganguly can be found on the internet and there are some interesting comparisons made. Perhaps it was due to Sunil Ganguly that the Hawaiian guitar rose to popularity in India but alas in these days of electronic music, the instrument's popularity has dwindled. Of course, there are still some who would like to promote the instrument, post-Ganguly. Newer styles and newer techniques have come up and some of them are again from India (Brij Bhushan Kabra, Vishwa Mohan Bhatt etc.)."