History, asked by pankajsharma2913, 1 year ago

summary of The Sound of Music part 2

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Answered by ethan23
0

here u go (it's a short summary)

, he banned playing of pungi in his royal court. 2. ... A. Although the shehnai is

also a reeded musical instrument like the pungi, it differs in shape, size and the quality of sound produced by it. It was made with a hollow stem which was longer and broader than the pungi and had seven holes on it.

Answered by ridhikashastri1307
1
  • This lesson is an effort to understand Indian classical musicians and instruments especially the origin of the shehnai and the shehnai maestro Ustad Bismillah Khan.  
  • The shehnai replaced the pungi which had an unpleasant sound. The pungi’s tonal quality was improved by a nai (barbar) of Shah (Emperor Aurangzeb); hence it was named as ‘shehnai’.
  • The lesson beautifully deals with the early life of Bismillah Khan in Dumraon in Bihar.  
  • His grandfather was the shehnai-nawaz of the Bhojpur king’s court.  
  • Bismillah Khan took to music early in life when he was 3 years old in the company of his maternal uncle.  
  • His life is a source of simplicity and communal harmony from the very beginning when he used to sing ‘Chaita’ in Bihariji temple and practising the shehnai in Vishnu temple and Mangala Maiya temple of Varanasi.  
  • Bismillah Khan got his big break with the opening of All India Radio in Lucknow in 1938.  
  • He also played the shehnai on 15 August, 1947 from Red Fort in presence of Pandit Nehru.
  • Bismillah Khan gave many memorable performances both in India and abroad where he was honoured with so many awards.  
  • He also gave music in  two movies ‘Gunj Uthi Shehnai’ and ‘Sanadhi Apanna’.  
  • He was so fond of his motherland India, Benaras and the holy Ganga that he refused an offer to be the head of a shehnai school in the USA.  
  • In 2001, Ustad Bismillah Khan was awarded India’s highest civilian award, the Bharat Ratna.  
  • His life is a perfect example of the rich, cultural heritage of India, ‘one that effortlessly accepts that a devout Muslim like him can very naturally play the shehnai at the Kashi Vishwanath Temple’

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