Courting the Courtesans, a music and storytelling efficiency by singer and author Abhilasha Ojha, shall be staged at Depot 48, New Delhi on August 3.
The present seems on the lives of India’s courtesans and their vital position in shaping Hindustani classical music. By means of ghazals, thumris, and dadras, together with tales and analysis, Ojha brings consideration to the ladies whose voices and skills have typically been forgotten.
Right here, she shares what impressed the present, her technique of curating it, and what audiences can count on on the night time.
As somebody deeply rooted in storytelling via journalism, what impressed you to transition into efficiency and take up music?
Abhilasha Ojha: Music is my old flame — I used to be singing as a toddler, and I’m grateful to my lecturers in Mayo School Women’ College, Ajmer, for all the time encouraging me to carry out on stage as a solo artist.
I misplaced contact with music after I turned a full-time journalist, working in nationwide dailies equivalent to Indian Specific, Hindustan Occasions, Enterprise Commonplace Newspaper, and Mint. Later, I joined DAG, a number one artwork gallery, as manufacturing editor.
I discovered my manner again into music virtually a decade in the past after I was coping with a private disaster. Music pulled me out of melancholy, turning into my lifelong companion, the point of interest round which my life continues to revolve.
I’m blessed to have discovered my Guruma, Indra Mukherjee, who launched me to the Banaras gharana type of thumris. It’s to her credit score that I began understanding the context of ladies’s roles in shaping this style of Hindustani classical type of music.
My writing expertise taught me the worth of analysis and documentation, permitting me to delve deeper into songs by not solely understanding their melodies but in addition discovering out extra concerning the songs’ origins, their genesis, and the contribution of ladies, notably a number of of the unnamed courtesans, in shaping the cultural context of Indian historical past.
To me, writing and music are my kids that I’ve to boost and nurture lovingly. I’m doing it to the perfect of my means.
Although I got here from a household the place music was not inspired as a full-time occupation, I’m so grateful to my mother and father for making ready me to have a profession as a author whereas fulfilling my ardour as a musician.
Moreover, it was my husband, Jai Arjun Singh, who confirmed me a model new manner to have a look at cinema and songs. He — together with my circle of shut associates and musicians — stays my greatest supporter.
Courting the Courtesans’ sounds fascinating. What drew you to the tales of courtesans, and the way do you purpose to convey authenticity to their voices via your singing? Might you additionally share a bit about what audiences can count on on the upcoming occasion on August third?
Abhilasha Ojha: I cherished studying Saba Dewan’s Tawaifnama some years in the past. It gave me a context into the lives of courtesans that had fascinated me, particularly when my Guruma began instructing me easy methods to sing thumris.
The one ones to obtain training, personal land of their names, and people who might discuss to males of standing, together with royalty, guiding them with their political opinion, the courtesans had been properly regarded in society till the British stripped them of their standing, rights, and labelled them as low cost.
On the similar time, they had been additionally labelled the “different lady” by legally wedded wives of royalty. The decline of those girls who fought battles, had been nationalists in their very own proper, courageous sufficient to have a voice, is what compelled me to know their tales higher.
Their contribution to shaping the cultural and political historical past of India must be unravelled and understood.
It was the courtesans who had been propagating ghazals, thumris, dadras, and varied different types of classical music in their very own proper. Whereas I’m specializing in north India, in South India, too, the contribution of ladies courtesans has been immense.
My endeavour is to introduce audiences, even when briefly, to the contribution of many of those nameless girls. In modern occasions, we discuss of ladies having jobs, properties, the suitable to training, elevating kids all by themselves… properly, these girls had been simply that — fairly potential, the OG Feminists.
The present options ghazals, thumris, and dadras—genres steeped in emotion and historical past. How did you go about choosing the musical items for the efficiency?
Abhilasha Ojha: It was actually troublesome to make the setlist with my musicians — how does one straddle “well-liked” songs with “vital” songs? I’ve a mixture of well-liked ghazals, however together with that, I’ve some dadra and thumri songs to showcase how lots of the so-called “erotic” songs may be seen as steeped in bhakti.
Tanish, my brilliantly gifted sarangi participant, advised a well-liked Punjabi tappa to be sung. I used to be reluctant since I didn’t suppose it could match into the curatorial theme.
It was solely after I researched the style that I discovered that tappa was popularised by camel riders and baijees within the Punjab area; lots of the courtesans in Punjab had been invited to sing these as marriage ceremony songs. Now, girls of royalty weren’t allowed to sing, so it was apparent that the courtesans had been invited to sing these as marriage ceremony songs.
With the current launch of Umrao Jaan and restored screenings of Guru Dutt’s movies, how do you suppose cinema has formed—or even perhaps distorted—public perceptions of courtesans?
Abhilasha Ojha: There’s a phenomenal dadra by Shobha Gurtuji, “saiyan rooth gaye” from the movie Maen Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki. The picturisation is of a courtesan sporting somewhat outrageous garments — it robbed the track of its richness, in my view.
Additionally, there aren’t too many movies created from the attitude of the courtesans. Ruth Vanita’s ebook Dancing with the Nation: Courtesans in Bombay Cinema, which I referred to for my present, makes a number of attention-grabbing factors about how courtesans are depicted in movies.
In Pakeezah, as an illustration, and lots of different movies, the final word decision for the protagonist lies in the truth that she, regardless of being a tawaif, stays a virgin and ultimately will get married right into a revered household.
Movies like Mandi, Bazaar, Sardari Begum, have nonetheless tried to unravel vital elements of ladies rising from the kothas, even guaranteeing that the music does justice by the use of lyrics and timeless melodies.
Muzaffar Ali’s Umrao Jaan, which I noticed not too long ago on the massive display screen, is a vital movie advised from the courtesan’s perspective — identical to the movie, Umrao Jaan’s music was daring, refreshing, and borrowed liberally from folks and conventional kinds of gayaki.
Ustad Ghulam Mustafa Khan sa’ab, as an illustration, has sung Raag Mala, which is a crucial method to grasp in Hindustani classical music.
When Rekha sings the traces “mere liye bhi kya koi, udaas, bekarar hai? (is there somebody unhappy and pining for me too?)’ within the track, Ye Kya Jagah Hai Doston, it has the power to maneuver the viewers to tears.
What do you hope audiences will take away from Courting the Courtesans, past only a musical expertise?
Abhilasha Ojha: I’m so grateful that Depot 48 has trusted me with this idea. It’s one of the crucial vital venues for artistes and music lovers in Delhi, which permits musicians to experiment in a number of genres of music, Indian and Western.
Courting the Courtesans in Depot 48 is a precursor to what I need to do within the coming months: constructing a tightly knit narrative to introduce a few of the uncommon songs that the courtesans sang, together with private tales of lots of the courtesans which might be thus far misplaced within the pages of historical past.
I hope that the viewers understands how vital it isn’t to label or decide these girls as “free characters”, “the opposite lady”, and many others. I additionally need to have a look at the position of courtesans / tawaifs outdoors of the royal courts.
What can I uncover about many of those nameless girls who had a lot power, character, and a lot expertise?
I hope the viewers may even ponder over these questions after they attend the present; I hope to hunt some solutions myself via my present on August third.
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