THE GOLDEN DRUMMING OF
SWAPAN CHAUDHURI
Following
is an article written by Jan Haag (an edited version of
this article was printed in a recent edition of the `India
Currents' magazine published from San Jose, CA).
Swapan
Chaudhuri, one of the world's greatest classical tabla
players, celebrates his fiftieth birthday this year. From
India to America, England to Mexico, Canada to Nepal,
Australia to the United Arab Emirates, in France, Germany,
Italy, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia-wherever North India
classical music is played, he is in demand as a soloist
and as an accompanist. Over the last decade, he has given
an average of 200 concerts a year. Chaudhuri's touring
schedule is the kind of which aspiring musicians dream,
but it is also a demanding, health-defying way of life.
During a typical week not long ago, Pandit (the Indian
title given to a distinguished and learned man) Chaudhuri
taught a dozen classes at the Ali Akbar College of Music
on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, then flew, on Thursday,
to Los Angeles to teach, from noon to seven, at the nearby
California Institute of the Arts. Friday, he gave a concert
in West Virginia. Saturday, he did two recording sessions
in New York City. Then, on Sunday night, he performed
at a commemorative event at Lincoln Center to celebrate
Gandhi's 125th birthday, the guest list of which included,
Dr. Venkatraman, India's former President. "It's
not the concerts that are difficult," he says, "but
the traveling, the constant traveling. And trying new
things. At times dangerous things," he laughs, his
eyes sparkling, then adds: "Tabla is limitless. I
never want to stop." In India, a number of years
ago, he gave eight performances in less than twenty-four
hours. "They were all major concerts. I started first
with Pandit Ravi Shankar at 7:00 P.M. From there, all
over Calcutta, I played with Pandit Nikhil Banerjee, Ustad
Amjad Ali, Pandit Jasraj, then a solo, then two dance
concerts with Pandit Chitresh Das, then with Pandit Bhimsen
Joshi..." his voice trails off. "How can you
even get around Calcutta that fast?" "At night
it is not so crowded." "Do you eat between concerts?"
"Before a concert I don't like to eat. I drink just
tea. You don't need food, the energy just comes. When
you enjoy something, you forget about yourself. Some kind
of special power generates in your body, you don't get
tired."
Under
the auspices of his mentor, the great sarod maestro, Ustad
Ali Akbar Khan, Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, as Director of
Percussion, has taught for fourteen years at the Ali Akbar
College of Music (AACM) in San Rafael, California. At
this school, which Ustad Khan founded twenty-six years
ago, these two incomparable musicians share their gifts
and hospitality with everyone from untutored beginner
to the very finest musicians in the world, both Eastern
and Western. Swapanji and Khansahib, as they are known
to their students, have dedicated their lives to their
art and to teaching appreciation for one of the oldest
and most complex musical systems in the world. "Come
visit the classes," is an invitation extended to
all at each AACM concert. In the small, green-carpeted
room, abundant with growing plants, where Swapanji teaches,
he is asked: "How do you feel about turning fifty?"
"I like it," he smiles. "I look forward
to getting on with the second half." His expression
becomes serious as he continues, "It is also very
frustrating. There is so much to learn. So much to know."
Seated behind his drums while he teaches, Swapanji's whole
being seems to participate in the multiple rhythms as
he keeps the beat, shows the pattern, recites the bols
(the words of the drum compositions). His hands not only
play the tabla with lightning speed, but frequently dance
in the air to indicate the movement, to show how the liquid
resonance moves back and forth between the two drums that,
together, share the single name tabla. He claps his hands
or snaps his fingers, or points in a series of elaborate
designs to remind the students of the laya, the chand
(the tempo, the pattern). Or, metal against metal, he
taps his wedding ring against the chromed body of the
left-hand drum, which is also referred to as the baya.
His dark eyes, as large as a Coptic saint's, fix a student:
"Play that first line again." A nod or a hint
of a smile may follow if each note is clear and precise.
Though always gentle in manner, he is exacting. Even when
speaking with a visitor or composing the next composition,
not a single missed beat nor a misplaced stroke from among
his students will elude his vigilant ear. His hearing,
his sense of rhythm is so developed that even the lack
of a microbeat gap will be remarked upon and immediately
corrected. In every lesson, he expects his students to
stretch their capabilities. Nor does he ever touch the
tabla, his or anyone else's, without respect and a kind
of radiant energy, a delight in what he is doing. This
energy is almost palpable, almost visible as his hands
move or rest on the drum heads. During the briefest demonstration
for a student or at any time during a concert, it is almost
as if his fingers emit light. This gift of energy, this
love, plus infinite patience, and an inconceivably large
memory bank may be what constitute the genius of a great
tabla player.
The
tabla, one drum of wood and one of metal, appears deceptively
simple, but to play it in the classical manner, with the
artistry of a Swapan Chaudhuri, requires some twenty to
thirty years of training and constant practice. It takes
great dexterity, superb control, stamina and physical
strength. He once played solo at the AACM for four hours.
"The first part," he noted, "was pure Lucknow
Gharana (his main school or style). The second half was
from the other five gharanas." The right hand drum
(singly called the tabla, but also known as the daya,
which means right), is usually carved of rosewood. It
is the higher pitched drum, and carries most of the intricately
patterned finger strokes called bols. The baya (which
means left), is a bass drum. Chaudhuri can coax the baya
to murmur, whisper, sigh, swoon, laugh, cry, or fill a
concert hall with the sound of pattering rain and rumbling
thunder. Most children are challenged, at one time or
another, to try rubbing their head and patting their stomach
at the same time. A master tabla player multiplies this
kind of feat exponentially. For instance, the right hand
plays one pattern of strokes, the left another, a foot
or knee keeps the beat of the tal (the chosen rhythm cycle).
Then, while drumming two or three separate rhythms and
intersecting patterns (which are, themselves, made up
of variable rhythms and patterns), the tabla player may
be calculating the mathematically precise pattern of yet
another rhythm. He may also be memorizing at lightning
speed (while continuing to play) the pattern recited by
a dancer, or given by a vocalist or instrumentalist, adhering,
always, to the strict rules of one of the traditional
gharanas, their stroking patterns, their intonations,
their bols. In addition, (while continuing to play) he
will tune the tabla with a small hammer from time to time.
All the while, he will be intently listening to the instrumentalist
who may change tals without warning, and who will, during
the sawal-jawab sangat, pose musical questions, issue
challenges, indulge in witty repartee and, at times, even
trickery. The list goes on and on and on... all this is
what a tabla player keeps "at his finger tips,"
so to speak, as he improvises each performance. There
are no written scores used in performances of Indian music.
There are no rehearsals. The music itself is the language
of communication, not only between performer and audience
but between the musicians, themselves. The "dialogue"
of each concert, partly traditional, partly composed impromptu
within specific rules, is all manifested under the watchful
eyes and within the acute hearing of discerning audiences,
many members of which know the ragas, know the tals, keep
the beat. It is from this kind of flowing complexity that
Swapanji also draws each lesson when he teaches. After
forty-five years of practice, experience, aesthetic musing,
each composition he offers is newly composed or recomposed
within the intricate rules and sacred traditions of the
music that in India is known as the "Language of
God."
For
a musician, Swapan Chaudhuri comes from an unusual background.
A Bengali, he grew up in Calcutta in an upper middle class
family of doctors, a joint family of about sixty people
which included aunts, uncles, brothers, cousins, thirteen
of whom were children (twelve boys, one girl)and all of
whom disapproved of music as a career. For music was,
in their society, an unsuitable profession for the eldest
son of a respected Brahmin doctor. "It was a closed
society," Chaudhuri says. "Nonetheless my father
was fond of music and studied the flute, the esraj and
vocal music. My mother sang. I was born with that. Our
house was filled with music, mostly my mother singing."
When he was five years old, Swapan's tabla training began
with Pandit Santosh Krishna Biswas, an eminent exponent
of the Lucknow Gharana, a tabla teacher of genius, a friend
of Dr. Chaudhuri's banker. For Pandit Biswas, as with
many great Indian musicians who are not from the families
of the hereditary gharanas, played the tabla as a private
art, a form of meditation and spiritual discipline. He
practiced for his own pleasure, and performed only for
his friends. "On Goddess Saraswati's puja day, a
child's wrist is held by his parents and moved to form
the letters: 'This is "au," he is told, 'and
this is "a"....' That same puja day," Swapanji
says with quiet reverence, "I tied thread to my guru
Pandit Biswas. From then on my father, a strict disciplinarian,
made me practice tabla. I had no choice. I was scared
of him, really scared. In those days as a child in India,
you did what you were told." Because he was still
too young to write, Swapanji's mother, of whom he was
very fond, took him to his lessons and wrote out the bols.
Swapan Chaudhuri's family lived in the same block as the
great musical family of Ali Akbar Khan. Ali Akbar Khan
is the son of Allauddin Khan, who was, perhaps, the most
influential force in North Indian classical music in this
century. In addition to his son and grandsons, Baba Allauddin
trained generations of great musicians, including his
daughter, Annapurna Devi, his son-in-law, Ravi Shankar,
Nikhil Banerjee, Sharan Rani, Indranil Battacharya, Pannalal
Ghosh--the list is long. While growing up, since Ali Akbar
Khan was his neighbor, Swapan used to go to Khan's house
to practice with his oldest sons, Aashish and Dhyanesh.
All became outstanding in their fields. Swapan's special
companion, indeed, one might say his "older brother,"
was Dhyanesh. Dhyanesh, until his untimely death in 1991,
was an exceptional sarod player and an excellent teacher.
By the time Swapan was ten, Ali Akbar Khan was inviting
him to the Ali Akbar College which he had recently opened
in Calcutta, precursor to the college he would open in
the United States fourteen years later. At the Calcutta
college, Swapan played theka for the instrumental and
vocal classes. Theka in North Indian classical music means,
in this context, playing the regular rhythmic cycle of
the tal on the tabla throughout the lessons which might
last for many hours. Hour after hour, the young Swapan
would play and listen to the melodic and rhythmic paths
of elaborate beauty weave in and out as he absorbed knowledge
of the music that, to this day, is passed on only via
guru-shishya-parampara, the guru-disciple-relationship,
To Western ears, Indian music may sound repetitive, but
within it are variations as multitudinous, as intricately
varied, as related and divergent as the strands of DNA
that compose the human body. Like DNA, it is composed
of two elements: melody and rhythm, spiraling around each
other. This marriage, this intertwining takes place within
a tonal environment created by a drone, usually a four
or five string tambura. Endless permutations of these
basic elements go on hypnotically, building on one another.
The melodic line and rhythm within the raga, kept by the
instrumentalist, may at times digress to a point of extreme
tension from the rhythm, tala, kept by the tabla player,
but they will come together again, often dramatically,
and resolve precisely on sam (pronounced "sum")the
first beat of a tal cycle. Throughout his childhood and
as a young man, Swapan Chaudhuri continued his practice
on the tabla. "But, I never thought of becoming a
professional tabla player. In fact," he admits, "as
I was growing up, I was told not to think of that, I was
told just to concentrate on learning and practicing."
Swapanji laughs ruefully, "Even on the day of my
final exams at the University, my father insisted I practice."
As a college student, with his family's approval and,
indeed, his own enthusiasm, he studied economics. When
he graduated from Jadavpur University, his plan was to
attend either the London School of Economics or Harvard.
He looked forward to the day when he would become a professional
economist. However, Saraswati, Goddess not only of learning,
but of all the arts invoked, as she had been on her puja
day, had a different idea.
THE
GOLDEN DRUMMING OF SWAPAN CHAUDHURI continued in 1969,
when Ali Akbar Khan returned to Calcutta from an extended
stay in America where he had just created the American
branch of the Ali Akbar College of Music, he invited the
twenty-four year old Swapan to his house to play for him.
"I played for maybe half an hour. Khansahib was impressed.
He decided that I should play with him that year in concert
at the Tansen Music Conference. It was a very important
concert, the first concert that Khansahib gave after he
returned from America. He took the risk." Swapanji
pauses, reflecting on the memory, repeating, "He
took the risk. For no one knew me at that time. But by
then my love of tabla had begun to develop. It was no
longer just what my father told me to do." The concert,
with the already world-renowned Ali Akbar Khan, was a
great success. It was after that, when musicians began
to call the young tabla player asking him to play with
them, that Chaudhuri decided to become a professional
musician. "My practice changed and increased. To
become a concert musician is very difficult. In India,
if you're not from a musician's family, it takes a very
long time to establish yourself. Slowly, over the next
few years, I began to be known. I sought out musicians.
But I was often rejected. I remember once sitting on the
stage and a musician refused to play with me." Swapanji
pauses, "But maybe it was good for me, I learned
tenacity, I learned determination, I knew that one day
those same musicians who rejected me would come to ask
me to play with them. After a long time, I began to enjoy
some success." During those years, '69 to '81, Ali
Akbar Khan invited him many times to come to America,
but Chaudhuri was determined to prove himself first in
India. "Even in '81 I didn't have the intention to
leave India, but the school needed a teacher and Khansahib
asked me to come. Also, my mother said, 'You should go
this time. You should accept.'" Swapanji hesitates
for a long moment, then adds: "It was her birthday.
We were celebrating my mother's birthday. I had played
three concerts the night before, and had to play one more
at one o'clock. Then everybody came to our house, including
Khansahib and his family. My mother cooked for everybody.
We had a nice time and signed the contract. Then at night,
just before 12 o'clock, my mother passed away. She had
a massive heart attack. It was her fifty-third birthday,
January 26th. There were seven or eight doctors in the
house, but they could do nothing."
At
the Ali Akbar College of Music, which by then was permanently
housed in San Rafael, Ali Akbar Khan had a succession
of great tabla masters: Shankar Ghosh, Mahaparush Misra,
Jnan Prakash Ghosh, Zakir Hussain. And, occasionally,
Khansahib, himself, or Alla Rakha, Zakir's legendary father,
would teach a tabla class. However, at the beginning of
1981, the school needed a new tabla master. "But
I could not leave India," Swapanji continues, "I
was too grief stricken. I could not leave my father. I
did not want to go to America. As the eldest son of a
religious family, there were many rituals I had to perform.
Khansahib was very kind, he told me to take my time, to
think about it." After several months, when Swapan's
mourning duties were completed, Dr. Chaudhuri urged his
son to join Ali Akbar Khan in California, "It was
your mother's last wish, so you must go."
"I
arrived in America on May 5, 1981. I came to the College
and I began to teach. The first concert I played in America
was on May 9th." Swapanji sips from a cup of tea
a student has brought him. "At first, being here
was a terrible experience for me. My grief for my mother,
it was a very difficult period in my life. I had left
all my friends, my family, and much of my professional
life in India. Nobody knew me. There were few Indian musicians
here. It was so different, a whole cultural difference...
"Khansahib, of course, treated me as a son, he was
so kind to me, so loving. He still treats me like a son.
I am his son. There's no doubt about it. Even though I'm
now fifty half a century, he still scolds me, he gives
me love, it is all combined. He was giving me so much
affection at that time, trying to loosen me up, like teaching
me to cook. I didn't know how to make a cup of tea. I
didn't know how to boil the water. "I was living
alone two doors down," he nods toward the east from
the College. "I was so lonely. I taught five days
a week, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,"
he counts the days on his fingers, "and watched television
on the weekends. Sometimes the students used to come,
they'd bring tea from here. But they were also busy, they
were all working. It's a hard life in America. It's not
an easy life. It took me a long time to get used to it.
"I left in November and came back again in April,
'82 for Khansahib's sixtieth birthday. We had a concert,
a great concert. That picture," he indicates a picture
above the red-carpeted dais where he sits to teach, "is
from that concert. I gave many many concerts. I threw
my whole life, my whole spirit into playing. I played
in such a way as to give the audience all my knowledge,
all my love of tabla." During the '80s, with endless
practice time and drawing on the profound emotions that
ensued from his cultural displacement, Chaudhuri's performances
became displays of a dazzling virtuosity. With an amazing
depth of emotion, a crystalline beauty of tone, a clarity
of stroke, incredible speed, awesome variety, charm, wit,
and a charismatic playfulness Chaudhuri simply mesmerized
the audiences of America. He played with the many distinguished
Indian musicians and dancers who came more and more to
perform in the West, as well as with Western musicians
trained in Indian music. Then he began to tour EURpe,
Asia, and the other continents and countries of the world.
He played not only for sarod and sitar, but for sarangi,
and santoor, for vocalists, for flutists and for dancers.
He played solos, and with symphony orchestras, string
quartets, and with other percussionists. "Each one"
he says, "is different, not only the instrument,
but the person, the situations. Each artist you play with
is unique. You have to listen very carefully for the bols,
for the instruments, the dancers, the different drums,
are all different. Each is an art in itself." And
always, he continued to play with father, mentor, guru,
Ali Akbar Khan, adding to their many years of intimate
association. Today, after several decades and fourteen
years of continuous association at the AACM, they have
become as finely attuned to one another in performance
as any of the greatest masters of Indian music. He also
began to teach at other universities in the United States,
Canada and at the Ali Akbar College in Basel, Switzerland;
but until Swapan Chaudhuri married Jane Rockwood his life
was not truly anchored in the West. Jane Rockwood Chaudhuri
is also a musician. Her studies of North Indian classical
vocal music began in 1978 with Laxmi G. Tewari at Sonoma
State University. Then, at San Francisco State University
with Jnan Prakash Ghosh, who taught both at SFS and at
AACM, she studied tabla. When Ghosh returned to India,
she came to study vocal music with Ali Akbar Khan at AACM
and tabla with Zakir Hussain. When Swapan Chaudhuri arrived,
she began to study with him and, at times, assisted in
teaching. The love of music drew the two together. Married
in 1988, Swapanji and Jane now have two young sons, Nilanjan
and Ishan. Recently, when the older child, Nilanjan, turned
five, he came to his father and said, "You started
to play when you were five. You promised me when I was
five you would teach me." "He likes a new composition
at each lesson." Swapanji chuckles. "I encourage
him to practice with his mother. She is very good. They
both devote some time each day to the tabla. When the
children are old enough, Jane would like to study again."
"Does she want to play professionally?" "I
don't think so. To be a professional is a whole different
thing. It's a commitment, a life long commitment."
Now
at fifty, secure in his accomplishment, Pandit Swapan
Chaudhuri divides his time between performing and teaching
in America, his rigorous world-wide touring schedule,
giving concerts and performing at the great festivals
all over India each year during the winter concert season,
and teaching in Calcutta. Having helped propagate the
knowledge of and love for Indian music around the world,
he also devotes an increasing amount of time to an ever
deeper exploration into the sources of his art. He finds
great meaning and beauty in the traditions handed down
generation upon generation during the tabla's four hundred
year history. Recently he has presented many of the old
compositions of the Lucknow Gharana. "I always try
to learn more through my music," he declares. "I
analyze my playing. I think the truth is that if you can
satisfy yourself, people who are listening will be satisfied.
"As you grow older, you see things differently. It's
not: 'I am controlling tabla.' It's like when you do the
puja, when you go to church, your whole attitude is very
different, you surrender yourself. I am under tabla's
control. I surrender myself because I know there is nothing
I can show to tabla. It becomes more and more like melody.
The joy, the happiness I don't think I used to get that
before." Chaudhuri says that when he plays he often
goes into a trance-like state. He does not know beforehand
what he will play, nor, at times, after a concert, is
he conscious of what he has played. "Sometimes I
don't know until I hear the tapes." In the last few
concerts he has introduced traditionally based compositions
that incorporated pakhawaj bols. The pakhawaj, a two headed
drum, is thought by some to have been "cut in two"
to become the ancestor of the tabla. Its deep base tones
are particularly associated with chanting and dhrupad
singing. These passages in the open more resonant, pakhawaj
style, played mainly on the baya, have electrified and
bewitched his audiences. When asked about them, Swapanji
shakes his head and smiles: "It was a surprise, even
to me." Then he adds: "The art is in the bass
drum, the left hand. The right is all brilliant speed
and restlessness, like a child running about, but the
depth, the mood, the rasa, the beauty that tabla speaks
comes from the left hand." Though many cannot follow
Pandit Chaudhuri's explorations into melodic and mathematical
structures, nonetheless, all can enjoy the rhythms he
discovers. Instinctively, music lovers respond with delight
as Chaudhuri arranges time and sound into myriad, magnificent,
multifaceted patterns. For pattern, rhythmic, mathematical
pattern, as ancient Indian philosophy as well as the relatively
new Theory of Chaos proposes, may be at the very heart
of creation. To hear Swapan Chaudhuri in concert is to
share his love of tabla, his love of drumming, his generosity.
At times he is like a little boy giving you a treat, his
eyes laughing from under long black lashes, at times he
is stern, at times majestic, at times he throws back his
head to laugh with delight. At times the rhythms become
so exhilarating, so intense, that suddenly the heart stills,
the breath slows and, like being in the eye of a hurricane,
it is like listening to silence. It might be said there
is here, living among us, one of those legendary figures
you read about in Indian musicology, that Chaudhuri may
have, like Tansen, the great musician of the sixteenth
century, "a power so great that he can, with his
music, talk to the birds and animals of the forest, bring
rain, as well as change the hearts of gods and men."
Joyous is the single word that springs to mind when trying
to characterize Chaudhuri's art. He plays the tabla with
a profound elegance and a contagious joy.
The
Golden Drumming of Swapan Chaudhuri is based on a series
of interviews and over a year of auditing Pandit Swapan
Chaudhuri's tabla classes. Selections from it appeared
in India Currents Magazine. Jan Haag, a freelance writer,
can be contacted via 415-457-5903 or through the Ali Akbar
College of Music, 215 West End Avenue, San Rafael, CA
94901. Copyright © 1995 by Jan Haag
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