Skip to content

Indian Women's Topics

Female editor emcita

  • Home
  • 2022
  • August
  • 15
  • The First Indian Woman To Hold a Concert, How Padma Bhushan Hirabai Transformed Music

The First Indian Woman To Hold a Concert, How Padma Bhushan Hirabai Transformed Music

Posted on 2022年8月15日 By lotx
Indian Women's Topics

Long before world-renowned musicians and performers like Ed Sheeran and Miley Cyrus — or, closer to home, Sona Mohapatra and Arijit Singh — enthralled audiences with their captivating performances, there was Hirabai Barodekar.
Hirabai was a Hindustani Classical vocalist and a recipient of the prestigious Padma Bhushan. She defied patriarchal norms and paved the way for female singers to perform on stage. She is credited for brewing a silent social reform in the 1900s by becoming the first woman artist to organise a paid concert in India. Also a pioneering female thespian, Hirabai mitigated the moral code of disallowing women artists to act in plays in the 19th century. In his book Drama Queens: Women Who Created History on Stage, Veejay Sai says she drove the narrative of women in the artistic field.
Hirabai discovered her love for singing at a very early age, and performed her first public concert at 16 in Bombay (now Mumbai). Sixteen years later she would bag a prestigious offer to sing at the All-India Music Conference in Calcutta (now Kolkata).
However, her breakthrough came in 1947, the year India gained Independence. She was bestowed with the honour of singing the national song, Vande Mataram during the programme held at Red Fort, where Jawaharlal Nehru raised the national flag. Her performance evoked an immense sense of patriotism and loyalty in the hearts of the audience, which she believed was the most rewarding part of being on the stage.
“When your mind is troubled and distraught, you could do no better than to listen to Hirabai’s music. It has an uncanny quality of conveying a sense of peace,” Ramakrishna Buva Vaze, the maestro of the Gwalior gharana said while describing Hirabai’s act.
Though she was born in a family of connoisseurs of classical music, Hirabai created her own niche, and cemented her place in the performing arts.
Guess the lottery result, make lottery posters for free Lottery Box -India’s most professional lottery interactive community.
Hirabai was born prematurely in Miraj, a city in Southern Maharashtra, to parents Ustad Abdul Karim Khan and Tarabai Mane in May 1905. According to Mohan Nadkarni, an author and well-known musicologist, Hirabai was left unattended after the nurse thought she was too weak to survive. The nurse instead attended to Tarabai, who was also in a critical condition.
“While attending to the patient, however, the doctor glanced at the baby out of sheer curiosity. And, within moments, [the baby] gave out a shrill cry to proclaim, as it were, her existence,” Nadkarni wrote in 1980.
Though Hirabai came from a family of professional singers, her mother wanted her to become a doctor. But true and loyal to her genes, the stalwart would somehow find ways to spend time with her brother, Suresh Babu, who was learning music under Abdul Karim Khan at the time. Even at a tender age, Hirabai was sincere and carried utmost respect for music. She would keenly observe her brother, and then practice the patterns and sequence in isolation.
Tarabai saw this and could not ignore her daughter’s talents. She finally gave in, and permitted Hirabai to pursue her passion for music. Thus began Hirabai’s career in music, under the tutelage of her uncle, Abdul Wahid Khan of the Kirana gharana. Her unwavering dedication in music was seen when she rigorously practised one raga  (Patdeep) for three months.
Hirabai’s parents separated when she entered her teens. She and her siblings chose to stay with their mother.
Hirabai began her training at a time when the idea of a woman performing on stage in front strangers was frowned upon. Despite this, she fearlessly trained under several gurus, from her eldest brother Sureshbabu Mane to Pandit Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze (doyen of Gwalior gharana) and Pandit Govindrao Tembe (for NatyaGeet).
Hirabai quickly adapted and made the gharana her home. The comfort and confidence with which she sang Kirana transfixed the audiences and music connoisseurs alike. Her rendition of Taar Shadaj deserves a special mention here, because not only did it make her popular, it also enhanced the position of Kirana gharana. She was a versatile singer and though khayal-singing was her forte, she shone in thumri, bhajan, bhavgeet and natyageet.
A disciplined professional, her simplicity and generosity made a mark when she got her first break in 1921. She was invited to perform at the anniversary celebrations of Gandharva.
Mahavidyalaya, an institution established in Bombay to promote and propagate Indian classical music and dance.
She unleashed her artistic self by exploring other mediums like drama, films and radio. Her performances would often carry social messages. By featuring plays that had performers from different castes, she further broke many barriers. She acted in movies like Pratibha, Janabai and Suvarna Mandir.
To pass on her expertise and provide a platform to budding female artists, Hirabai established her own company, Nutan Sangeet Sangeet Natak Mandali.

Tags: History

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Rejected By NASA, Kalyan’s Sanjal Gavande Helped Build Jeff Bezos’ Space Rocket
Next Post: ‘I Know What Starvation Does’: 62-YO Nagpur ‘Ajji’ Sells Dosas For Just Rs 10 ❯

You may also like

Indian Women's Topics
Rejected By NASA, Kalyan’s Sanjal Gavande Helped Build Jeff Bezos’ Space Rocket
2022年8月15日
Indian Women's Topics
Assam to Lakme Fashion Week: The Amazing Tale of Bodoland’s Women Weavers
2022年8月15日
Indian Women's Topics
Once Women’s Corpses Were Disrobed in Goa; This Teacher Changed This & So Much More
2022年8月15日
Indian Women's Topics
Exclusive: India’s 1st All-Women Rock Band Will Have You Grooving to Gender Justice
2022年8月15日

Tags

A Better World Agriculture Art Assam Awareness Blog Changemakers Chhattisgarh Children community development CSR Corner Digital India Education Empowerment Entrepreneurs Environment Famous Personalities Food Gender Issues Girl Child Gujarat healthy living Himachal Pradesh History India Inspirational inspiring Jharkhand Karnataka Kerala Kolkata Ladakh Lede Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Manipur Mumbai Music News Rajasthan Space Uttarakhand Videos Women Women Empowerment

Recent Posts

  • This Menstruation Warrior’s Efforts Have Helped More Than 10,000 Women
  • Hadiya Finds Freedom to Study, Now It’s Time That She Lives Life on Her Own Terms
  • Watch: They Tried to Murder Her, but This Mother Fought the World for Her Girls
  • An Unconventional Crop That Now Earns Lakhs Annually for This Bihar Woman Farmer
  • Why We Should Celebrate Our Feminist Changemakers!

Archives

  • August 2022

Categories

  • Indian Women's Topics

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2023 Indian Women's Topics.

Theme: Oceanly News by ScriptsTown