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Author Topic: Lap Steel Guitar  (Read 2146 times)
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akbkgp
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« on: April 19, 2007, 06:12:20 PM »

Hi Everyone,

    I'm a newly registered guy having lots of thrust for classical music. I play Lap-steel Guitar from my early childhood, both hawaiian and electric. Hope for a good discussions (especially Raga) on this particular instrument, which Viswamohan Bhatt turned into MohanVeena. Also stalwarts of Bengal like Sunil Ganguli, Botuk Nandi got emmense fame for their mastering on this instrument.
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hundredstrings
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« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2007, 12:20:17 AM »

Hi akbkgp,

Welcome to the forum!  I am a big fan of slide guitar used by Vishwamohan Bhatt and others.  You may have heard about Brijbhushan Kabra as well, the father of Indian classical guitar.  He made a landmark album called 'Call of the Valley' in 1968 with santoor master Shivkumar Sharma and bamboo flute virtuoso Hariprasad Chaurasia.

Another great Indian classical guitarist is Debashish Bhattacharya.  He visited California last November and I was lucky to attend his concert.  He has invented two guitars himself and his playing technique is mind-boggling.  He was able to bring out the sounds of other popular string instruments like violin, sarod, and sitar!

I know another guitarist from Bangalore, India.  His name is Prakash Sontakke.  He is amazing too.

Hope to have a great discussion about this great topic with you and others here.
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rks
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« Reply #2 on: April 23, 2007, 08:08:22 PM »

From debashishbhattacharya.com:

Hindustani Slide Guitar

Background:

In India utilizing slides were not uncommon even in ancient instruments like Vichitra Veena and Gottu Vadyam. However, the present version of Slide Guitar was first introduced in India by Mr. Tau Moe in the late 1920s. Tau Moe and his wife Rose Moe, a well known singer with their Hawaiian Band EMMI lived in Kolkata (Calcutta) from 1941-47, during which period they made many records with HMV, EMI and toured extensively around Asia. Tau Moe's star student in India was Mr. Garney Nyss who became India's leading Slide Guitar artist.

Early sixties saw the Golden period of lap steel Hawaiian guitar in Calcutta, the cultural capital of India. Though the lap steel was used in the popular version of Western music more than in any other form of music, an experiment to relate the instrument to the main stream music of India introduced the use of slide guitar in background music of many Bollywood films as well as Bengali movies of Calcutta. Late Sangeet Acharya Jnan Prakash Ghosh often used the steel guitar for the background score of his film- music.
 
Initially popular songs found a new expression in slide guitar. The sweet tone and gliding ability of the instrument attracted players to reproduce popular songs and earn fame. The unforgettable tunes on electric guitar by the artists like Sujit Nath, Abhijit Nath, Kaji Aniruddha, the great Sunil Ganguly, Rajat Nandi still haunt our memory. This, however, neither enabled the slide guitar to come up as an independent music maker nor win acceptance as an instrument suitable for traditional Raga music. For a long time this trend did not help the composers to establish their identity as the soloists - an important aspect of Raga music. The idea of adapting and modifying guitar according to the style and technique of Indian Raga also did not occur to anyone either. It was played only with the pointer and middle finger on the first couple of strings and a melody in slow tempo was enough to express their musicality. The vast arena of classical repertoire in totality was unimaginable within the limited capacity of the guitar in India.

Evolution of Hindustani Slide Guitar

Pandit Brij Bhushan Kabra, a disciple of Sarode Maestro Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, in his early 20s, introduced Guitar as an Indian Classical instrument and raised it to the concert level and recording purposes. Thus he became the Pioneer of Indian Classical Guitar. He changed the string arrangement from 6 strings to 3 or 4 strings as main and omitted the 5th and 6th regular strings, and in 1959 added 2 chikari strings. He initiated tuning the first string D, second string A, third string D, fourth string A and the method of playing the chikari with the thumb and the main strings with the index and middle fingers. No other Indian Classical Guitarist was known to have done that at that time.

Ground Work

Being a worthy disciple of an innovative guru, the research oriented mind of Debashish kept on searching till he achieved the desired results. Unlike his peers, Debashish strongly believed in having six strings in his guitar, not three or four. By doing so he was able to include the bass strings and get the complete range of the instrument. He found plenty of scope to allow his musical imagination go wild and explore the possibilities. Armed with his wide variety of music education he evolved a Trantrakari Baaj, similar to the one that reverberated during the late sixties. To achieve this he added many features in the main body of the lap steel guitar and introduced Tarab strings (resonating strings) and the front chikari strings along with the technique of playing on it with the pointer.

Prior to this Debashish's guru Pandit Brij Bhushan Kabra had introduced the chikari strings in the rear and adapted the technique of playing with the thumb. All the guitarists of the next generation followed him and his style except Debashish. During the last thirty years there has been many experiments of adding and editing the main strings. Finally in the year 1980 he emerged with a concrete concept of the instrument and its technique. Complete with the innovative additions of side Tarab (resonating string), front Chikari with six main strings and three supporting strings, his instrument was ready to accept the challenges thrown by Raga music. He evolved and pioneered the finger style and technique to suit this to enable the guitar players to explore the heights of articulation at per the standards of Indian classical Instrumental recital.

Trinetra - The Trinity of Guitars

Trinity. According to Mythologies, both Indian and Western, it embodies power of the  whole being - the Universe and its creator. Almost a synonym of 'Trinetra' the three eyes- associated with the motherly beauty of goddess Durga and Lord Shiva - the omni-potent, it reflects reverence and unflinching faith of a child for its parents. Parents whose unquestioning love protects the roots of past that is history; nurtures the present and cherishes dreams wrapped in the mysterious folds of the future.

The history reveals that a young Hawaiian came to India with his guitar in the year 1931. Unknown in his own country today the ninety-five year old Tau Moe is a revered figure in India as he introduced the lap steel guitar and, therefore, is considered as the father of the Indian Slide Guitar. Since then the Hawaiian Guitar has come a long way.
 
Debashish Bhattacharya, the worthy disciple of Pandit Brij Bhushan Kabra, adopted this instrument, with all its limitations, as Indian classical Slide Guitar. With love and devotion he mastered all that was possible within its framework. He had always been interested in improvising and loved to compose. Indian music, which thrives on improvisation, gave him all these possibilities already built into single tradition but the instrument, ideal for Western music, tied his hands at times. Keeping intact the original sound of guitar he yearned to blend the tonal resonance of majestic traditional Indian instruments. He experimented by blending tones of Rudra-veena, Violin, Sarode and Sitar into Chaturangui - one instrument with four colours and the first of the Trinity of Guitars.
 
During one of his trips to Puri, Debashish was savoring the beauty of the famous sea beach. The restless inventor in him found the high rising waves like his own restless soul. But when it touched the sky at its meeting point in the horizon, Debashish found that there was nothing but peace and beauty. This led to the creation of Gandharvi - the rendezvous of bass and treble representing the restless earth and overpowering sky; the birth place of the celestial beauty belonging to Gandharva Loka. Melting the golden tones of Saraswathi-veena, Santoor, Sarangi and the acoustics of 12- string-guitar into one mould and reshaping it into the second of the Trinity of guitars achieved this. The acoustic steel guitar world receiveda new acoustic tone, a completely different culture of sound.
 
Indian classical music, as is practiced, arises from the meditative mood and culminates in the Anand or joy of creation. Anandi, with its exotic folk lute like tone, was conceived and designed by Debashish to capture this mood. In the Music world, Anandi is accepted as slide-Ukulele.
 
The creation of Chaturangui, Gandharvi and Anandi, a family of new generation slide guitars, is a masterpiece and Debashish is the first Indian musician to have achieved this distinction of creating the Trinity of any such instrument.
 
The Trinity of Guitars - as invented by Debashish Bhattacharya, is like the Trinetra. By preserving the traditional values the first eye allows the second one to move on to reach new vistas to amass wealth to treasure under the protection of the third eye. The grandeur of the past holds hands of the innovative present to weave magic for the future. With deep reverence for Tau Moe, Debashish intends to scale the peaks of music with the Trinetra as the beacon of Trinity of Guitars.
« Last Edit: April 23, 2007, 08:15:10 PM by rks » Logged
Sumanth Sharma
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« Reply #3 on: June 18, 2007, 12:33:24 AM »

Feel happy to hear that Prakash has made such big strides.

Am proud to say that my Sister learnt music [vocal] from his Legendary Father Raja Bhau Sontakke, a Sage really and student of Sangeet Martand Pt. Omkarnath Thakur.
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Hari Om
hundredstrings
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« Reply #4 on: June 19, 2007, 01:24:41 AM »

BTW, the above article is about Debashish Bhattacharya, not Prakash Sontakke.  BTW, Prakash is greatly inspired by Debashish and I think he has taken a few ideas/lessons from him as well.  I also know that Prakash is close to Pandit Brijbhushan Kabra as well...
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