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Courtesan who didn't care for kings

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  • Courtesan who didn't care for kings

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    May 16 2010

    Courtesan who didn't care for kings


    Gauhar Jaan: `Greatest woman singer of thumri and khayal'

    Sing into that horn as loud as you can. Don't shake your head or your
    hands,' the singer was told. It was November 11, 1902. The occasion
    was momentous. Indian classical music was embracing technology as the
    biggest singing star of Calcutta, Gauhar Jaan, had agreed to preserve
    her voice on a three-minute shellac disc, defying superstition. At the
    end, she was to announce her name to identify herself to the
    disc-makers in Germany.

    Thus was born the country's first gramophone celebrity, who would soon
    have her picture on matchboxes made in Austria and picture postcards
    here. A book called My Name is Gauhar Jaan traces the life of one who
    has been hailed as `the greatest woman singer of thumri and khayal'.

    `Commanding an extravagant fee of Rs 1,000 per concert, Gauhar was
    known as much for her flamboyance as her music,' says Vikram Sampath,
    author of the book launched in Calcutta recently.

    `The memoirs of Frederick Gaisberg, who was sent by Gramophone and
    Typewriter Ltd to make the recordings, indicate that she never
    repeated her costumes. During performances, rifle-wielding soldiers
    often guarded her jewellery.'

    Gauhar used to ride around in her six-horse phaeton. Once as she
    passed the Governor, he stopped and doffed his hat at her, taking her
    to be a royal. But later, on learning she was a tawaif, he slapped a
    fine of Rs 1,000 on her for flouting a rule forbidding commoners from
    riding a carriage. Gauhar paid the fine and carried on with her
    practice. Apocryphal stories abound, as of the party she threw for the
    city at an expense of Rs 20,000 when her cat had a litter.

    A court musician for royals like Nawab Wajid Ali Shah who had settled
    in Metiabruz, Gauhar was choosy in her heyday. She refused to sing for
    the king of Datia, a `small' princely state of Madhya Pradesh. When
    the King pressured her, she demanded a special train to take her
    111-member entourage.

    `It included 10 dhobis, four barbers and 20 orderlies, five maids,
    five horses and syces, other than her disciples. The king had to
    comply,' Sampath smiles.

    Born Angelina Yeoward to Armenian parents, Gauhar Jaan reached the
    pinnacle of success, singing even in the presence of Emperor George V
    in Delhi. `But like other courtesans of her time, she lived in luxury
    and died in penury, paupered by court cases.' A CD with the book
    brings to life India's first recorded voice.

    SUDESHNA BANERJEE
    http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100516/jsp /calcutta/story_12452444.jsp
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