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| Bharatnatyam
in Jeans |
By
Lavina Melwani |
| The traditional and
the modern can coexist in the psyche of
one person. |
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Here's a little quiz for you: when
20 Indian American physicians gather
on a stage, do they A.) Lecture on pain
management; B) Expound on AIDS research;
C) Burst into semi classical Hindi songs,
accompanied by a Karaoke machine?
If you picked C - unlikely as it seems
- you are right!
A group of ten couples, all doctors,
have been gathering on a specially constructed
stage at one of their homes in New Jersey,
indulging in their passion for Indian
music. The Karaoke machine stands in
for the mandatory live orchestra as
these physicians turn into semi-classical
musicians for the night.
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| Performers from the Chhandam |
| School of Kathak Dance in
San |
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Indeed,
there are scores of physicians across
the country who can recite ghazals at
the drop of a hat, play the harmonium,
dance the bharatanatyam or sing bhajans
with fervor. But why stop at medical professionals?
Whether it's scientists, IT professionals,
second generation kids, engineers, housewives
or professors, they all seem to be either
going for music or dance lessons, listening
to ragas on their CD players or attending
concerts.
Indian immigrants may have brought over
their innate spirituality and their passion
for Bollywood with them, but growing up
in India, no matter what their background,
the love of dance and music came to them
by sheer osmosis.
After all, Creation began when Shiva Nataraja,
the Cosmic Dancer, danced the world into
existence and the Primal Sound, encompassing
the rhythms of creation, issued forth
from his Damaru or drum. Rhythm and movement
are everywhere in India, like air and
water, and affect even the most prosaic
shopkeeper in the bazaar or the academic
in his ivory tower.
For many Indian immigrants, their beloved
music and dance had to be kept under wraps
as they assimilated into a new world,
their passion becoming almost a clandestine
event, an underground operation shared
only with like-minded friends.
Now things, they are a changing.
There are concerts of every kind of music
from ghazals to Hindustani to Carnatic
music in many major cities, and private
music circles too. Over the past three
decades, the number of schools for Indian
performing arts, have proliferated. |
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You can scarcely pick up an ethnic weekly
without seeing advertisements for music,
dance and even language schools across the
country. Every other day you hear of yet
another young bharatanatyam dancer performing
her arangetram or initiation into dance.
Lawyers and management consultants are routinely
going in for tabla lessons or voice training.
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| The Kruti School of Dance
is among the |
| largest in Atlanta. |
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One of the oldest and noted
dance companies in California is the Chitresh
Das Dance Company (CDDC), created by the
Kathak maestro Chitresh Das who received
a Whitney scholarship in 1970 and taught
at the Ali Akbar Khan School of Music before
establishing his own school Chhandam in
1980. The school now has branches in San
Francisco, Boston, Toronto and Calcutta.
The San Francisco Bay area is a motherlode
of cultural activity with scores of big
and small music and dance companies, many
gravitating to the area because of the energy
generated by the Ali Akbar Khan School of
Music. Well established dance gurus in the
Bay Area include Katherine and K.P. Kunhiraman,
who offer Bharatnatyam and Kathakali instruction
through company Kalanjali Dances of India
and Mythili Kumar of the Abhinaya Dance
Company, as well as Pandit Chitresh Das.
New York and New Jersey, which for years
had been quite barren of these kind of grass-root
establishments, suddenly seem to be overflowing
with them, with dance and music schools
expanding in the suburbs too. In New York,
Bharatanatyam dancer Swati Bhise has been
teaching and performing for over 20 years
and last year opened Sanskriti Institute
for Indian Culture, holding classes at All
Souls School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
The school integrates the ethos of Indian
dance, music, literature and philosophy.
"I tell the children you are American,
don't try to be Indians from India,"
says Bhise, "The ethos of Sanskriti,
to understand the link between all aspects
of culture and I tell my students to use
this knowledge which gives them the strong
base to take them to the next level, whether
they want to be a poet, a writer, a musician
or dancer."
Similar action can be found in cities like
Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago and Washington
D.C., where Indians have settled in substantial
numbers. Hundreds of concerts of dance and
music, both Carnatic and Hindustani, are
presented each year by some 90 -120 local
organizers. These include noted museums
like the Smithsonian, Asia Society and Lincoln
Center, Hindu temples, universities and
music societies. Some of the cultural organizations
include The Music Circle in Los Angeles,
World Music Institute and Bharati Vidya
Bhavan in New York, Basant Bahar in San
Jose, Calif., Ragamala in Seattle, Wash.,
and in Toronto, Canada. |
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| The Ali Akbar College
of Music, which is the gold standard in
teaching, also presents concerts in San
Francisco. Ali Akbar Khan, the master
sarodist, is considered a national living
treasure in India and even in his 80's
continues to teach in the school he founded
in 1967.
He tours extensively and teaches also
in Basel, Switzerland, at a branch of
his school. Other performing institutions
include Indian Music Society of Minnesota
in Minneapolis, Minn., Kalakendra in Portland,
Ore., Kalavati in Boston, Mass., and India
Classical Music Society in Dallas, Texas.
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| The Ali Akbar Khan school
in California |
| was founded in 1967. |
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| If you thought that this
was it, there are many more names from
Ohio to Florida, places where the dhols
are being charged up and the sitar is
making sweet music: East-West School of
Music in Monroe, New York, Thyagaraja
Aradhana Committee in Cleveland, Ohio,
India Music Society in Milwaukee, Wisc.,
Sangeeta in St. Louis, Mo.,, Indian Music
Society of Houston in Houston, and Sruti
in Philadelphia, Penn.
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that have been sponsoring Carnatic musicians
consistently is the Carnatic Music Association
of North America (CMANA), founded in 1976.
Others, such as Kalalaya in California
and Bhairavi in Cleveland, Ohio, have
also sponsored concert tours of many prominent
Carnatic musicians.
Tanushree Sarkar, who received her tutelage
from Pandit Durga Lal of the Jaipur Gharana,
has been teaching Kathak and vocal music
at the Kathak Arts Center since 1976,
first in Chicago and now in New Jersey.
She says her many students include physicians
and professionals, all avidly wanting
to reconnect with their culture.
Indeed, the cultural organizations and
teaching schools are sprouting up everywhere.
The Long Island and Queens area alone
has over 40 dance schools. Rathi Raja,
director of the Young Indians Cultural
Group in Long Island, NY, (YICG) observes:
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| Master sarodist Ali Akbar
Khan. |
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"There are so many
basement operations. For every one institution
we see in the public eye, there are hundred
mini organizations, which are just organizations
of people doing something that they believe
in."
And at the same time you have concerts
by the big names like Ravi Shankar, Ali
Akbar Khan and Zakir Hussain where huge
audiences - both Western and Asian - are
guaranteed for a performance. The collaborations
of maestros like Ravi Shankar, Zakir Hussain,
Vishwa Mohan Bhatt, L.Shankar, Vikku Vinayakram
with Jon McGlaughlin and other Western
musicians have further raised the visibility
of Indian classical music.
Zakir Hussain, who came to the United
States in 1970 when he was just 18, first
performed in concert with Ravi Shankar
in New York. Between his many concerts,
recordings, commissions (he is currently
developing the music for Ismail Merchant's
Tina Turner starrer The Goddess and working
with the chamber music ensemble, Kroner
Quartet on an album dedicated to the music
of R.D. Burman), he still finds time to
teach a workshop every August. In the
future, he and his wife Antonia Minnecola
hope to establish a full-fledged center
with classes and a small theater.
Zakir Hussain, who is away touring in
Russia, responded to Little India about
the explosion of culture in America: "The
interest had been always been there and
I'm happy that the younger generation
is stepping up in the Indian community
and is showing great interest in their
own culture." |
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| Minnecola, who is Zakir's
manager as well as a dedicated Kathak dancer
and teacher, has seen the mix of Caucasian
and South Asian Americans at the sold out
concerts as well as in classes: "I'm
extremely encouraged. It's wonderful to
see the young people coming to be interested
in the music. I also feel very satisfied
as an American who fell in love with this
dance and this music myself. It's an affirmation
to me; sometimes I've gone to teach and
I've all Indian students studying Kathak
with me! It's a real testament to universality
and that we all can meet in the arts."
She gets numerous emails from Indian students
on college campuses, who are very proud
of their culture and want to present the
maestro's concerts through their Indian
associations. She says, "That's a piece
of the pudding right there, that there are
all these associations all over the place,
all over the country."
So what is happening? Is it a full scale
Renaissance, a revival of India's great
music and dance traditions? And why is it
happening now?
There's a simple, one word answer - demographics.
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| Zakir Hussain and his wife
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| Antonia Minnecola are |
| developing a performing |
| arts school. |
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| As the Indian American population
has escalated to almost two million, the
sheer numbers ensure an increased demand
for such services, as immigrants, now well
established, try to catch up on what they've
missed and their American born children,
who have come of age, reflect on their roots.
You have Indians everywhere, in major corporations,
hospitals, and college campuses and of course,
Silicon Valley. There's wealth and a hunger
to reconnect.
"Our numbers are so much higher now
that people feel hey, it's ok to be part
of the culture," says Raja of YICG.
"You have a larger pool, so you have
more people who are good in dance, in music,
in teaching. There's leadership that's thrown
out when you reach critical mass."
She points out the generation, which came
30-40 years ago, pretty much wanted to blend
in with the landscape and most of their
cultural efforts were basement operations.
Like the Irish and the Chinese before them,
they tended to congregate in enclaves. Even
though they had money and were educated,
they did not build cultural institutions.
"My theory is that they weren't so
comfortable with themselves and wanted to
blend in, and their children too,"
she says. "But what I see now is definite
pride in oneself. It's OK to be who we are,
we want to keep our traditions, we want
to preserve them, we want to learn them.
The critical mass has been reached in certain
areas." |
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Yet this verdant foliage of dance, music
and culture didn't spring up overnight.
It was nurtured by a group of pioneers back
in the 50's and 60's, stalwarts who introduced
Indian culture to audiences in the west.
The names of performers like Ali Akbar
Khan, Ravi Shankar, Ustad Alla Rakha, Balasaraswati
and Indrani Rahman are legendary and they
exposed Americans to the best of classical
Indian music and dance. Harihar Rao, 75,
came to the United States in the early 1950's
and is the artistic director of the Music
Circle, which was originally founded by
Ravi Shankar, and is the oldest institution
presenting Indian music to Westerners.
Dr. Balwant N. Dixit, professor of pharmacology
and coordinator of the Indian Classical
Music Program at the University of Pittsburgh,
has been responsible for bringing many of
the noted performers to American campuses,
and his story in America is linked intricately
with that of Indian classical music here.
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Through the Center for the Performing Arts
of India (CPAI), which he founded in collaboration
with the University of Pennsylvania and
the Indian Council for Cultural Relations,
almost every major performer from Hariprasad
Churasia to Vishwa Mohan Bhatt has showcased
his talents and given workshops on American
campuses.
The CPAI is the only university based organization
dedicated to promoting Indian classical
music and does about 120 concerts a year
across the country. Noted names like Ali
Akbar Khan and Alla Rakha have stayed with
Dixit, eaten meals cooked by him and his
wife Vidya in a total labor of love, to
bring classical Indian music to the mainstream.
Now in his 70's, Dixit continues to do this
unpaid, largely unsung work.
A dedicated chronicler of the evolution
of Indian music in the west, Dixit talked
with Little India about the early days when
violin virtuoso Yehudi Menuhin introduced
Ali Akbar Khan and Ravi Shankar to Western
audiences in the late 1950's and George
Harrison's association with Ravi Shankar
also caught the imagination of a young generation
of Americans.
Performances by Ravi Shankar and Alla Rakha
in the Monterey Pop Festival (1967) and
in the Woodstock Festival (1969) introduced
many more Westerners to Hindustani instrumental
music. These noted musicians, along with
Ali Akbar Khan performed at The Concert
for Bangladesh (1971), which was initiated
by George Harrison to raise funds for UNESCO's
humanitarian programs in Bangladesh. Yehudi
Menuhin also performed with Ravi Shankar
and Alla Rakha at the UN's Human Rights
Day concert.
After that, there were almost yearly concerts
by the big players. While Carnatic music
did not get much exposure in those days,
M.S. Subbulakshmi performed in 1966 at the
UN and at Carnegie Hall, followed by a concert
tour.
Ali Akbar Khan opened a school in San Francisco
bearing his name in 1967, and this school
over the years, has taught Hindustani classical
music to thousands of students. It became
the fountainhead for cultural activity with
faculty members like Zakir Hussain and Chitresh
Das. Carnatic vocal music made a mark in
the United States through the pioneering
work of Professor Jon B. Higgins of Wesleyan
University, who had studied this discipline
in Chennai through a Fulbright scholarship,
and was known in South India as Higgins
Bhagavatar. He established a program in
Carnatic music at Wesleyan, which is probably
among the earliest university based program
in Carnatic music in the United States.
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faculty members from American universities
visited India to learn classical music and
later became part of ethnomusicology or
world music programs on several American
campuses. The 1985 Festival of India, with
its vibrant concerts of music and dance,
further increased the visibility of the
Indian performing arts.
It was, however, the changes in immigration
law that brought in waves of Indian professionals
in the 60's, a whole new future audience.
As they established themselves financially
and professionally, many of them raised
funds to build scores of temples across
the United States. As the years have passed,
NRIs have also invested in establishing
chairs in universities and patronizing the
arts.
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| Hariprasad Chaurasia
and Subhankar Banerjee are among the
legions of classical performers brought
by Dr Balwant Dixit to America. |
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| So now you have this abundance
of riches where you can get your fix of
Indian classical music at any time and you
can order tabla lessons almost as easily
as pizza! But according to Dr. M.K. Sharma,
it's no sudden renaissance; the interest
was there all along. Sharma, who migrated
from Mandi in Himachal Pradesh in 1970,
has been teaching in three hospitals in
New Jersey, is a cardiologist, internist,
pulmonologist and a critical care specialist.
Yet music has been a part of his busy life
and that of his colleagues:
"I don't have a single friend who's
not interested in listening to music or
taking it up himself," he says. "The
majority have realized their ambition in
their medical profession and so have more
time now to devote to their hobby. I cherish
it and enjoy music very much." His
wife, an internist, is also studying the
harmonium and voice at a school that has
opened just across the street.
Indian music, dance and yoga are now sprouting
up in suburbia, in strip malls and private
homes, next to ubiquitous pizza joints and
nail salons! Classical dance and music are
no longer elitist, but within the grasp
of middle income Indians. They do not all
boast the reputation of Ali Akbar Khan's
school to be sure, for they come in all
sizes and varying expertise.
Yet as the Indian American population has
grown, there are huge cultural festivals
in places like Phoenix, Ariz., supported
by the Indian community, where thousands
turn out to watch performances of Indian
dance and music.
Atlanta, Ga, which has one of the fastest
growing Indian American populations, boasts
scores of dance, music, language and spirituality
classes and cultural events, including the
Swarnaad School of Music, Kruti Dance Academy
and Nritya Natya Kala Bharti. Ani Agnihotri,
who with his wife Kiran, organizes cultural
shows in Atlanta, says, "Our community
is not only big but very united so we put
up shows, which can compare with those anywhere."
Kruti Dance Academy, started by Dina Sheth
in Atlanta 10 years ago, is among the largest
Indian dance schools in the state. A dance
teacher for 21 years, she had lived earlier
in Northern Virginia. She teaches bharatnatyam,
folk, fusion, Bollywood and hip hop. She
says: "Culturally it has grown tremendously.
Atlanta is such a cosmopolitan city and
the cultural awareness is growing amongst
Indians now."
Today she has over 400 students and the
school has a 3,000 sq. ft facility in the
Global Mall in Norcross. Their dance dramas
are held in the prestigious Atlanta Symphony
Hall and draw a crowd of almost 1,800. Most
of her students are second generation Indians,
but she also has white, black and Hispanic
students. "I have designed a course
especially for our children to learn in
this country, which is very different from
what they'd learn in India. The course has
the complete history and awareness of the
dance form which is so much related to basically
who we are."
California too boasts of large Indian dance
academies, but no dance schools on as big
a scale are found on the East coast. Asked
about the reasons for the explosion of culture
in Atlanta, Sheth says: "A lot of businesses
have come to this area. Especially after
the Olympics, the city has grown a lot.
Now, like in any big city, there are lots
of Indians here."
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their children to Indian culture on a systematic
basis there are definitely more choices
available today than there were 20 years
ago.
Raja's Young Indians Culture Group, a not
for profit organization, started with just
30 children and has grown to over 150 children,
who are taught classical and folk dance,
music, languages, yoga and Vedic traditions
by a dedicated faculty.
The classes are held at the Herricks Middle
School, thus becoming part and parcel of
the mainstream and a community resource.
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| The young Indian Culture Club
in Long Island, NY, conducts classes
on classical and folk dance, music,
languages, yoga and Vedic traditions
at Herricks Middle School. |
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She feels that the narrow focus of saying
a cultured person is someone who knows or
appreciates dance and music is very limiting,
and that teaching native languages is just
as important. "What is missing is an
emphasis on language and without that, there
is no depth to any of the other activities.
I just feel there should be more of the
traditions, irrespective of the religion
they come from. You do Bharatanatyam, and
the patron saint is Lord Shiva. If the child
doesn't have some ongoing education of the
spiritual basis of that, then that education
is incomplete." Then she adds with
a laugh, "However, just music and dance
is better than no music and dance! I'll
take the crumbs!"
What does she think of the huge influence
of Bollywood on the younger generation in
terms of music and dance? Says Raja: "Whether
it's good or bad is not a judgment I want
to make. It keeps them in touch with popular
culture. It ties a whole lot of Indians
together. It does have a good side in bringing
people together."
Raja points out that credit has also to
be given to the Indo-Guyanese community,
which does a lot to keep Hindu culture flourishing
through classes, programs and concerts.
The Indian American community, though, needs
to pick up on the momentum and be more aware
in building for the future, like the Jewish
community. The Indian community, while building
many temples, has generally not been into
institution building.
"Every synagogue has a rite of passage
program for all the milestones of a child's
life. It's a whole cycle of life approach
and children grow up and then come back
with their children," says Raja. "Their
system works and I think it's because they've
institutionalized things and if a new person
comes in, there are places where they could
go."
Hinduism, being so elastic and expansive,
has less structure and there are no schools
for Hindu culture. Now some of the nearly
160 Hindu temples in the United States,
such as the Hindu Temple Society of North
America in New York, the Venkateshwara Temple
in Pittsburgh, or the Meenakshi Temple in
Texas, have started outreach, and have incorporated
bharatanatyam, sitar and tabla classes along
with yoga, Vedic traditions and language
for their congregations.
But the temples are still scattered and
far-flung, and what Raja would like to see
is a community center model, a gathering
place available to all members of the family
to practice whatever interests them, from
dance to music to meditation, a space where
everyone from children to seniors can be
in touch with their culture.
"Language, music, dance all have their
place but the concept of a community is
very important," she says. "In
areas where you have a lot of Indians it's
good to have an organization that can serve
the community. The children will grow up
seeing Indian culture in their mainstream
school and feel a connection to the people
who run it and can share it with their peers.
It's bringing role models in front of them."
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South Indian community has been particularly
strong in keeping the Carnatic music and
South Indian performing arts flourishing:
"They are doing a wonderful job. Music
and dance is part of the family tradition
in South India; every daughter and son learns
it right from childhood.
They are born here, brought up here and
go to India in the summer to learn. It's
really remarkable what they have done to
preserve their performing arts, particularly
Carnatic vocal music."
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| Performers from the Chhandam
School of Kathak Dance in San Fransisco. |
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are adept at Carnatic music and can accompany
even professional musicians on the mridangam,
the ghatam or the violin. You have lawyers
who can play the mridangam professionally
and you have practicing surgeons who've
been through their arangetrams. For them,
the arts are a part of life, something that
makes them complete.
When it comes to concerts, it's a similar
story. Says Dixit: "What is happening
is that these South Indian performing arts
are being supported at the grassroots level,
while it's much more commercialized with
North Indian music and dance, with only
a few stars are performing everywhere. Unfortunately,
many traditional performers in the North
Indian style are not being as well supported
as they are in the South Indian performing
arts."
Asked if he was hopeful of the future,
Dixit says, " If you ask me what was
there 20 years ago and what is going on
now, something more is going on now. If
you compare this with what's being done
in India, there is really nothing substantial
here. If you look at the dance and music
schools in a place like Malaysia, they have
been much more successful because they have
a longer tradition than the United States."
Bow now just might be the time and America
just might be the place. Even the mainstream
is enamored of everything Indian and an
intriguing array of Indian dance, music,
fashion and culture is now seeping into
the mainstream.
Bharatnatyam in jeans, even if difficult
for the mind to embrace, may be possible
in spirit, where traditional arts and modernity,
ancient languages and pop talk, commitment
to the old and new can all be in the psyche
of one person.
After all, isn't that how you would describe
an Indian?
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