Sumati Mutatkar
Sumati Mutatkar | |
---|---|
Born | Madhya Pradesh | September 10, 1916
Died | February 28, 2007 Kolkata | (aged 90)
Genres | Hindustani classical music |
Occupation(s) | vocalist, musicologist |
Sumati Mutatkar (1916–2007) was an Indian classical music vocalist and musicologist from the Agra gharana of Hindustani classical music, and a Professor of Department of Music in University of Delhi.[1]
She was awarded the highest award of the Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama, for lifetime achievement, the 1979 Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship[2] and the Padma Shri in 1999, by Government of India.[3] She was also awarded the Kalidas Samman by the Government of Madhya Pradesh in 2001-2002.[4][5]
Early life and training
She was born in Balaghat in the then province of C.P. and Berar, the oldest child of Gajanan Amberdekar, a judge, and Sundari Subedar.
She received her musical training in Hindustani classical music under various teachers including, promarily under Pandit S.N.Ratanjankar, and later from Pandit Rajabhaiya Poochwale of Gwalior gharana, Ustad Vilayat Hussain Khan of Agra gharana, and Pandit Anant Manohar Joshi and Ustad Mushtaq Hussain Khan (d. 1964) of the Rampur gharana.[6] She was also a student of Bhatkhande Music Institute at Lucknow under S. N. Ratanjankar.[7]
Career
In 1953, she joined as the Director of Music at the All India Radio (AIR) and subsequently became Deputy Chief Producer of Music. Later, in 1968 she joined the Faculty of Music and Fine Arts, at the Delhi University, eventually retiring in September 1981 as the Dean of the Faculty. During her tenure, she supervised numerous research programs in the field of music, as well published several books on the subject.[1]
In Delhi, in her last years, she was considered a storehouse of musical knowledge and history and was visited by many musicians who often were in search of obscure information or compositions. Her love before music had been English literature, and later she had acquired a formidable command over Sanskrit language and literature.
She died on February 28, 2007, at a private hospital in Kolkata, after a brief bronchial illness at the age of 91; she was survived by her daughter.[8]
Bibliography
- Shrikrishna Narayan Ratanjankar 'Sujan': a many splendoured genius. Lotus Collection, 2001. ISBN 81-7436-175-8.
- Geet Nijhari : Sumit Mutakar Rachit Bandisho Ka Sangrah ( Hindi) . Kanishka Publishiners, 2002.
- Aspects of Indian music. Sangeet Natak Akademi, 2006. ISBN 81-7871-096-X.
- Sumati-Sangitabharanam: Gems of Indian Music and Musicology (Prof. Sumati Mutatkar Felicitation Volume), by Abha Kulshreshtha, Sumati Mutatkar, Jagdish Sahai. 1994. ISBN 81-85268-31-2.
References
- ^ a b OBITUARY: In Memoriam Professor Dr. Sumati Mutatkar
- ^ "SNA: List of Sangeet Natak Akademi Ratna Puraskar winners (Akademi Fellows)". Official website.
- ^ "Padma Awards". Ministry of Communications and Information Technology.
- ^ "Rashtriya Kalidas Samman (in Hindi)". Department of Public Relations, Madhya Pradesh Government.
- ^ "Kalidas award for Yamini Krishnamurthy". The Hindu. August 29, 2001.
- ^ Mukherji, p. 134
- ^ Ghosh, p. 29
- ^ Remembering Sumati Mutatkar ITC Sangeet Research Academy.
- Ghosh, Tapasi (2008). Pran piya Ustad Vilayat Hussain Khan: his life and contribution to the world of music. Atlantic Publishers. ISBN 81-269-0855-6.
- Kumar Pradas Mukherji (2006). The Lost World of Hindustani Music. Penguin Books India. ISBN 0143061992.
- Hindustani singers
- 1916 births
- 2007 deaths
- Indian women musicologists
- University of Delhi faculty
- Recipients of the Padma Shri in arts
- Recipients of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship
- Agra gharana
- 20th-century Indian singers
- 20th-century Indian educators
- Singers from Madhya Pradesh
- All India Radio people
- 20th-century Indian women
- 20th-century women artists