Lalmani Misra

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Dr. Lalmani Misra M.A. Ph.D., D. Mus. (Veena), M.Mus. (Vocal), B.Mus. (Sitar, Tabla), Sahitya Ratna

Dean & Head, Facutly of Music and Fine Arts, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi

 Dr. Lalmani Misra
Dr. Lalmani Misra

Contents

Lalmani learnt Dhruvapada (Dhrupad) Dhamar in the tradition of Pt. Shankar Bhatt and Munshi Bhrigunath Lal. He learnt Khayal singing with Ustad Mehndi Hussain Khan, a disciple of Ustad Vazir Khan of Rampur Seni Gharana. He received training in Dhruvpad, Bhajan and Tabla from Swami Pramodanand; in sitar from Shri Shukdev Roy. Under the tutelage of Ustad Amir Ali Khan he perfected several other musical instruments.

Lalmani was appointed on the post of assistant music director in Shehanshahi Recording Company, Calcutta at the tender age of twelve. He worked in several films for the next two years. His interaction with these two, kindled an interest for orchestration in Lalmani.

He returned to Kanpur in 1940 after his father’s death. A musical prodigy himself, he experimented with ways of imparting musical training to children, at a time and place where learning of music was shunned by the chaste and noble. He opened several “Bal Sangeet Vidyalaya” – music schools for children; modified the syllabus according to the need of learner, both formal and informal; started an orchestra society. He established the reputed institution of the region, “Bharatiya Sangeet Parishad”, and a music college – “Gandhi Sangeet Mahavidyalaya”. Excited by all things musical he persisted in experimenting and his soon his innovations in technique, style and orchestration brought him repute and regard.

Playing Tarang Instruments
Playing Tarang Instruments

The renowned dance maestro Pt. Uday Shankar offered him the position of music director in his troupe. Lalmani Misra traveled with the troupe composing scores for the innovative dance presentations and ballets on mythological and contemporary themes. The troupe covered several major towns and cities of India and covered Ceylone, France, England, Belgium, America and Canada between 1951 and 1955. Not only was he adept at playing several types of musical instruments, he also had a knack for orchestration that served the needs of an innovative Dance troupe.

The experience with the troupe made him try his hand on stage as well. He created Meera opera that was staged in 1956 at Kanpur. The audience were amazed by sudden disappearance of Meera from stage, appaerently merging into the idol of Lord Krishna

On his return Lalmani Misra was appointed as the Registrar of “Akhil Bharatiya Gandharva Mandal Mahavidyalaya, Bombay” – the prestigious most body for Indian Classical Music education. On the pressing invitation of citizens and city officials, he resigned to join the college (Gandhi Sangeet Mahavidyalaya) he had founded in his hometown Kanpur, as its Principal in 1956.

Stephen Slawak and Nancy Nalbandian with Dr. Misra
Stephen Slawak and Nancy Nalbandian with Dr. Misra

Meanwhile, the College of Music and Fine Arts had been established under the Principal-ship of Gurudev Pt. Omkarnath Thakur at Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi in 1950. By 1955-56 its teething troubles were over and department was ready for expansion. A scheme for its re-organization was prepared with inspiration and encouragement provided by the then Vice Chancellor, Dr. Sir C.P. Ramaswamy Aiyar. On the insistence of Pt. Omkarnath Thakur, Lalmani Misra consented to his appointment as Reader in the college and left his native Kanpur a third time for Varanasi in 1957.

With such stalwart predecessors like Omkarnath Thakur and Dr. B.R. Deodhar, Dr. Lalmani Misra stood up to the challenge of taking a burgeoning university institution to its proposed glory. Under his able helmsman-ship, the college went from strength to strength in imparting the best education in Indian Classical music. A rigorous hands-on course in performance and composition culminating in doctoral degree (D.Mus.) was started which has earned faculty positions for almost all its students around the globe. He was visiting Professor to music faculty at Penn University, Philadelphia from 1969 to 1978. Many students came to learn intricacies of music with him. Pt. Uday Shankar sent his son Ananda Shankar to Dr. Misra who taught him the art of orchestration.

A Sarod Performance by Dr. Misra
A Sarod Performance by Dr. Misra

Multi-faceted Dr. Misra, apart from secretly perfecting the technique of Vichitra Veena after having heard a performance by Abdul Aziz Khan of Patiyala, had carried out research on history and development of Indian musical instruments. His thesis published by Bharatiya Jnanpith, New Delhi in 1973 (second edition 2002, reprinted 2004) under the title Bharatiya Sangeet Vadya dispelled the existing myths about the origin of Indian instruments and serves to this day as the primary reference work for identification, authentication and classification of Indian musical instruments. He wrote several other books. The first part of four-part treatise on techniques of strings was published as Tantri Nad. After his death in 1979 his son Dr. Gopal Shankar Misra, internationally renowned Vichitra Veena artiste and Professor, Facutly of Music and Fine Arts, B.H.U., Varanasi was working on the remaining volumes, aided by hand-written notes by Lalmani Misra when on 13th August 1999 he succumbed to heart-attack at a five day function organised in memory of his father at Bhopal. A book on essays written by Dr. Misra -- Sangeet Aur Samaj (Music and Society) were edited by his daughter Dr. Ragini Trivedi and published by Madhukali Prakashan, Bhopal in 2000. His biographical sketches and writings have been printed in several books and journals. Dr. Ragini Trivedi is working on books planned by Dr. Misra which could not be published during his lifetime.

Carrying out research in the music of Vedic age, he unraveled the mystery of Samic scale. To re-establish the lost notes of that period he created a Raga Sameshwari. Dr. Misra also first made it possible in history of mankind, the twenty two Shruti-s (not to be confused with śruti, the genre of Vedic literature) to be distinctly heard on a single Veena. The invention and key to its function has been explained in “Shruti Veena” published on 11-02-1964 by Vikram Singh, Narendra Printing Works, Varanasi.

He had created several other Raga-s like Shyam Bihag, Jog Todi, Madhukali, Madhu-Bhairav, Baleshwari etc., all in strict adherence with rigid classical norms for creation of new Raga-s. Unesco released a compact disc of his Vichitra Veena entitled The Music of Lalmani Misra in 1996.

1.Nada Rupa, Sharma, Dr. (Miss) Premlata , Ed. College of Fine Arts, B.H.U., Varanasi: 1961. Special Issue with Supplement, Vol I, No. 1, January 1961

2. Sangeetendu Pandit Lalmani Ji Misra: Ek Pratibhavan Sangeetagya, Tewari, Laxmi Ganesh. Swar Sadhana, California, 1996.

3. Shruti Aur Smriti:Mahan Sangeetagya Pandit Lalmani Misra, Chourasiya, Omprakash, Ed. Madhukali Prakashan, Bhopal, August 1999.

4. Ethnomusicologist Dr. Laxmi Ganesh Tewari

5. Sindura on Vichitra Veena, a short movie clip on [http://omenad.net Online Music Education ]

6.Chordophones in Abhinavabhāratī Article by Dr. Indrani Chakravarty

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