Music enthusiasts in for
a rare treat, thanks to AIR
source.http://www.thehindu.com/
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In 1954, when Jawaharlal Nehru’s
Information and Broadcasting Minister B.V. Keskar offered All India
Radio’s (AIR) platform to Indian classical music, not only did he
privilege classical music over film music, he also tried to give it a
wider audience.
Now, 62 years later, AIR’s annual event — Akashvani Sangeet Sammelan —
started by Keskar, makes one more attempt to reach across to an even more
diverse audience.
On October 10, in a departure from tradition, 63 artists with their 150
accompanists, will perform across 24 cities from morning to night and this
musical treat of classical and folk renditions will be broadcast by AIR
over a month.
Taking a stab at integration, the programme will see artists from the
north perform in the south and vice versa. Those performing in Delhi
include the Gundecha brothers and the Chennai-based Jeyaraaj Krishnan and
Jaysri Krishnan.
The October event has been held keeping in mind factors like power outages
in States. The performers will be by Top A and B grade artists, say
officials.
The programme of classical music was the brainchild of Keskar who started
it with the objective of popularising classical music from AIR’s platform.
Old-timers say had it not been for Keskar, Indian classical music would
not have reached a wide audience.
Initially, say officials, AIR only invited internationally renowned
experts. As the Sammelan spread to other cities, it was decentralised and
broadcast by regional networks started.
AIR is also planning to record tribal music for posterity in its archives.
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