Born in
Barisal, East Bengal (now
Bangladesh)
on July 31, 1911, Amulya Jyoti
(nicknamed Pannalal) Ghosh was a
child prodigy. He inherited his
love of music and the bamboo
flute (bansuri)
from his grandfather, Hari Kumar
Ghosh who played sitar,tabla,and
pakhawaj and learned sitar from
his father, Akshay Kumar Ghosh.
He also learned music from his
maternal uncle, Bhavaranjan
Mazumdar who was a vocalist. The
family first lived in the
village of Amarnathganj and
later moved to the town of
Fatehpur.
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Two apocryphal incidents
happened to young Pannalal which
had an influential bearing on
his later life. First, at age 9
while looking for a stick,
Pannalal found a flute floating
in the river. He retrieved the
instrument and so began his
lifelong relationship with the
bansuri. Two years later at age
11 Pannalal met a sadhu who held
both a conch and a flute. The
sadhu asked Pannalal if he could
play the flute, and young
Pannalal obliged. The sadhu gave
him the flute and told the boy
that music would be his
salvation.
There was a political unrest in
1928, and every youth was
possessed with the freedom
movement. Pannalal also joined
this freedom movement. He
enrolled in a gymnasium where he
learned martial arts, boxing,
and stick fighting and practiced
physical culture. Pannalal was
very fond of physical culture.
He became the best student and
champion of this gymnasium. He
became more involved in the
freedom movement and the British
Government started keeping a
watch on his movements. So at
the age of seventeen Pannalal
left Barisal and went to
Calcutta in search of
livelihood. In the teeming
metropolis he found himself
without any credentials except
that he was a boxing champion
and had won the All Bengal
competition in boxing. With his
skill as a boxer and martial art
expert he landed a job as a
coach in an athletic club. One
year later, at the age of 18,
Pannnalal lost his father.
At this
time Pannalal, who was already
playing sitar, began to focus
his attention on bansuri.
Economic necessity drove him
into performing music for the
silent films in Calcutta. At an
All India music competition he
met music director and composer
Anil Biswas and began to play in
his musical productions. It was
during one such production when
Anil Biswas was directing music
for a dramatization of a work by
the renowned poet
Kazi
Nazrul Islam
that Pannalal decided that he
needed a bigger flute who's
pitch and sonority would be more
appropriate for both classical
and light music. He met an old
Muslim toy vendor who was also
proficient in making flutes.
With his help Pannalal
experimented with various
materials including metal and
other types of wood, but decided
bamboo was still the most
suitable medium for a larger
instrument. He finally settled
on a bansuri which was thirty
two inches long, with a sa
(tonic) at kali doe (the second
black key on the old harmonium
scale). As a flute of this size
was hitherto unknown, a rumor
arose that Pannalal had had
surgery to cut the webbing
between his fingers to
facilitate the large span
required to cover the finger
holes of the instrument. Of
course, he had no such surgery,
but through dedicated riyaz
(practice), Pannalal invented
and perfected the technique to
play the large instrument. At
this time he would get his
bamboo to make flutes from
discarded packing materials
found at Diamond Harbor, the
large port of Calcutta.
Deforestation had not yet
consumed the forest around
Calcutta, and the bamboo was
believed to have grown close to
the city itself. He practiced
hard and perfected the technique
of vocal music on flute. At this
time he realized the need for
meend from madhyama swar to
nishad or dhaivat shrutis in
ragas like Bihag, Yaman,
Bageshree and many others. He
experimented and invented the
seventh hole of madhyama.
He became famous for his flute
playing and started getting
performances at the major music
conferences. At this time he
came in close contact with great
maestros like Ustad Inayat Khan
(sitar), Ustad Dabir Khan
(Been), Ustad Amir Khan (sarod),
Ustad Badal khan (sarangi), and
vocalists such as Ustad Faiyaz
Khan, Ustad Abdul Karim Khan,
Ustad Majid Khan, Pt. Tarapoda
Chkraborty, Pt. Bhismadev
Chattopadhyay and many others.
His quest for knowledge and
purity of tradition made him
acquire intricacies of music
from these erudite musicians.
In 1936 Pannalal began working
with Raichandra Boral, music
director of the well known 'New
Theater' and one year later he
met his first guru, Kushi
Mohammed Khan - the 'Harmonium
Wizard'. In 1938 as music
director of the dance troupe of
the princely kingdom of
Seraikella State, Panna Babu (as
he was affectionately known) was
one of the first classical
musicians to visit and perform
in Europe, which he found rather
agitating and unsettling. Soon
after his return to India his
guru expired. Thereafter he
underwent training from Girija
Shankar Chakravarti. In 1940,
Pannalal moved to Bombay on the
advice of his first disciple
Haripada Choudhary (who had
himself recently moved to
Bombay). There he joined the
Bombay Talkies film studio and
gave music to quite a few films
including 'Basant.' Panna Babu's
wife, Parul Biswas, (sister of
Anil Biswas), was a graceful
singer of kirtans who became one
of the first well known playback
singers for the new 'talking'
films.
Pannalal
first met the legendary
Ustad
Allaudin Khansahib,
(reverentialy known as 'Baba')
in 1946, when Baba came to
Bombay with his disciple,
Pandit
Ravi Shankar.
Initially, when Pannalal asked
Baba to teach him Khansaheb
replied, "You are already great,
you don't need to study more."
Pannalal implored Baba to please
teach him so that he could learn
"authentic music and sur." In
1947, Pannalal's lifelong
yearning to learn music from a
true guru was fulfilled when
Allaudin Khansaheb , convinced
of Pannalal's sincerity to
learn, accepted Pannalal as his
disciple. Pannalal then
accompanied Baba to his home in
Maihar, where he received
intensive taalim (training) from
Khansaheb for the next six
months. Under Baba's firm yet
understanding tutelage, he
blossomed into the wizard of the
bamboo reed.
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