Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan

Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan
Sitarist Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan
Background information
Born 1929
Madhya Pradesh, India
Genres Hindustani classical music
Occupation(s) Sitarist, Composer, Innovator, Author
Instruments sitar
Labels Various
Associated acts Ravi Shanker, Vilayat Khan, Julian Bream, Dave Brubeck, Zunain Khan
Website www.jafferkhanibaaj.com

Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan is an Indian sitar player. Khan received the national awards Padma Shri (1970) and Padma Bhushan (2006) and was awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for 1987.[1][2]

Life

Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan regarded as one of the 'Sitar Trinity' of India along with Ravi Shankar and Vilayat Khan and is the youngest of them. He was born in 1929, in Jawra, Madhya Pradesh, as the son of Jaffer Khan, a versatile vocalist, sitarist and beenkar. He hails from the Beenkar Gharana of Indore. He has been a distinguished All India Radio Artiste since the early 1940s.[3] A few years before the Beatles met Ravi Shankar, in 1958, Khan collaborated with jazz pianist and composer Dave Brubeck. Brubeck who was in Bombay through the state sponsored "jazz diplomacy" - the Jazz Ambassadors Program was impressed by the improvisation in Indian music and said that the experience accompanying Halim Jaffer Khan led him to play in a different way. He says of that meeting, "We understood each other." Khan also performed with the noted English classical guitarist Julian Bream in 1963.

Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan is perhaps best known for his innovation, Jafferkhani Baaj.[4] He describes it as, "a synthesis of precision in technique, systematic thought"[5] with a vigorous playing style. Cultural anthropologist and reader at the University of Mumbai, Dr. Kamala Ganesh states: "His music making is full of eclectic yet deeply informed choices. He is a thinking musician but puts across his complex views with a simplicity and feeling which demarcate the articulate performer from the articulate theoretician.... In him, one gets an unmistakable sense... a syncretic tradition".[6] The Indian santoor player Shivkumar Sharma remembers of Khan's performance of the raga Chaayanat: "It was probably in 1955-56, I was relaxing in my terrace in Jammu. In the stillness of the night I heard the notes of Raga Chaayanat on the sitar emanate from my neighbor's radio. I immediately noticed that the tone of the sitar was completely different and the style of playing radically unique. I rushed to switch on my radio.... I was totally engrossed and was very curious to know who this maestro was."[7]

Of ragas such as Kirwani, Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan has been credited with bringing Carnatic ragas into the sitar repertoire: Kanakangi, Latangi, Kirwani, Karaharapriya, Manavati, Ganamurti, etc. but rendering them through a Hindustani sensibility and in the Jafferkhani style. He was the first Hindustani musician to collaborate with Carnatic music in a performance with renowned Veena player Emani Sankara Sastry. His early experimentation with polytonality in Indian classical instrumentation (which is largely solo performance) was achieved in his sitar quintet.

Khan has had a valuable involvement with Indian cinema. He has composed and played for epic films like Mughal-e-Azam,[8][9] Jhanak Jhanak Payal Baaje (1971), Goonj Uthi Shehnai (1959), Kohinoor (1960) and has collaborated with noted music directors such as Vasant Desai, C. Ramachandra, Madan Mohan and Naushad who has said, "he not only enriched film music, but his participation lent prestige to my songs."[10]

In 1976, Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan created the Halim Academy of Sitar in Mumbai, India.

Sitarist Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan at the Halim Academy of Sitar with Chief guest Sarodist Ustad Amjad Ali Khan, and philanthropist Neela Shinde

His legacy is being carried on by his son Zunain Khan, an accomplished sitarist himself.

Sitarist Zunain Khan, torchbearer of Jafferkhani Baaj style of sitar playing, Director HAlim academy of Sitar

Select awards

Video

Narrated by violinist Yehudi Menuhin, Deben Bhattacharya's film Raga features a young virtuosic Halim Jaffer Khan playing raga Sindh Bhairavi.

Select discography

References

  1. "Padma Awards". Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. Retrieved 17 September 2010.
  2. "SNA: List of Akademi Awardees – Instrumental – Sitar". Sangeet Natak Akademi. Retrieved 17 September 2010.
  3. , The Hindu, 19 July 1953.
  4. Mark Slobin; Frank Kouwenhoven Co-editor, CHIME; Ruth Hellier; Carole Pegg; Gerry Farrell Ethnomusicology Forum, 1741-1920, Volume 10, Issue 2, 2001, Pages 123–132
  5. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Khan, Abdul Halim Jaffer. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Kohinoor Printers, 2000.
  6. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Khan, Abdul Halim Jaffer. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Kohinoor Printers, 2000
  7. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Khan, Abdul Halim Jaffer. Jafferkhani Baaj: Innovation in Sitar Music. Kohinoor Printers, 2000.
  8. Kabir, N.M. & Akhtar, S. (2007). The Immortal Dialogue of K. Asif's Mughal-e-Azam. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
  9. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054098/awards
  10. Dhaneshwar, Amarendra. Strings Attached, "The Times of India", 19 February 2010.

External links