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Lucknow with Begum Akhtar
Portraying India
Born Akhtaribai Faizabadi in 1914 in present-day Uttar Pradesh, Begum Akhtar became one of the most iconic voices in Hindustani classical music, earning the title “Mallika-e-Ghazal” (Queen of Ghazals). Her father, a lawyer, distanced himself from the family, and she was raised primarily by her mother, Mushtari Sahiba, who recognised her daughter’s musical talent early on. Determined to secure a future through music, her mother moved to Patna and later to Calcutta, seeking out the finest teachers to nurture it. She was barely seven when she was captivated by the music of Chandra Bai, an artist attached to a touring theatre group.
She was sent to train under Ustad Imdad Khan, the great sarangi exponent from Patna, and later under Ata Mohammed Khan of Patiala. As was the practice in those days, the Ustad (teacher) and Shagird (disciple) would live under the same roof and train for hours; training rituals used to start early in the morning and months would pass practicing a single note or a single aalap. According to Begum Akhtar, she trained like classical male singers, putting in a lot of practice time each day, first with exercises to improve her lower voice range, then progressing to more difficult vocal exercises. Her favourite raag was Gunkali, that evokes poignancy and pain.
Begum Akhtar moved to Lucknow’s Cheena Bazaar in 1934, and the city became inseparable from her identity. She embodied Lucknow’s medieval high culture in her music, verses, voice, habits, and personal style. Her singing created visions of what made Lucknow’s culture popular and admirable. From a young age, she performed publicly, first as a child singer on the stage and later in mehfils and theatre. Her first public performance was at the age of fifteen in Calcutta in 1934, where Sarojini Naidu, a revered poet appreciated her singing. She evolved a distinct style of vocal genres thumri and dadra, characterized by a break in her voice during high-pitched notes. Begum Akhtar chose her ghazals carefully, developing her own musical settings for poems that touched her heart deeply. She became a mediator and transmitter of Urdu verse. She also sang in multiple languages including Bhojpuri, Awadhi, Urdu, Bengali and Gujarati.
Her student noted that she had “a pain in her voice” – an indescribable quality that made her interpretations deeply moving. As a spontaneous performer, she sang whatever audiences requested. She would often say, “I have always tried to pay back the love that I have received through music.” She became a regular performer on All India Radio, where her voice reached millions. She toured internationally as part of cultural delegations to Pakistan (1961), Afghanistan (1961), and USSR (1963). Her performances drew enthusiastic responses, particularly her famous dadra “Hamri atariya pe aao sanwariya.”
“Ghazal, that death-sustaining widow, sobs in dingy archives, hooked to you. She wears her grief, a moon-soaked white, corners the sky into disbelief."
— Agha Shahid Ali’s elegy ‘In Memory of Begum Akhtar’
She was awarded the Padma Shri in 1967 and received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for vocal music in 1972. She was posthumously awarded the Padma Bhushan by the Government of India. At the age of 60, during her last concert in Ahmedabad in 1974, Begum Akhtar, dissatisfied with her voice during the performance, put so much stress on herself while raising the pitch that she fell ill. She breathed her last in the arms of her friend.
Her grave lies next to her mother in the bylanes of Lucknow, at her ancestral home. Begum Akhtar rests in musical eternity, lovingly shaded by a lush tree that blossoms in the month of October and wraps the entire mausoleum with its lingering essence.
Discovering Lucknow
At Tushita, we marvel at India with you. After 45 years of travelling the country, we’re still enamoured by its beauty every day. From Ladakh, where Tushita was anointed by a Buddhist monk in 1977, to Tamil Nadu, where we worked with locals to showcase one of the oldest cultures in the world, we are partners in your journey to discover our part of the world.
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