The 100th Birth anniversary of Pandit Pannalal Ghosh, the legendary flutist which was on July 31 this year, went largely unnoticed. A boxer turning to flutist seems to be some kind of anachronism but that precisely was the turn of fortune that gave music lovers of this country an all-time great flutist. Pandit Pannalal Ghosh belonged to a time when music was popularized by the All India Radio (AIR). His concerts over the AIR earned him much fame.
The events that influenced Panna babu to take to flute are rather interesting. First, at the age of nine while he was looking for a stick to herd the cows, he found a flute floating in the river and he picked it up. Second, two years later, he found a sadhu who held a conch and a flute and asked whether he could play the flute. When Pannalal obliged, the sadhu blessed him and said that music would be his salvation.
The Parva Picks |
---|
Raag Deepavali: Pt Pannalal Ghosh |
Basant: Music by Pt Pannalal Ghosh |
The Colors of Yaman: Pt Pannalal Ghosh |
Though Pannalal had played the flute in several film songs accompanying Lata Mangeshkar, he found film work distasteful. He took to spiritualism and took the vows of Ramakrishna. When he expressed his desire to take to sanyas to his Guru Swami Birjanandji Maharaj, the Guru advised him that he could attain Moksha only through music. Pannalal continued and his impressive rendition of Raag Darbari Kanada in the 1956 national programme on AIR won him accolades.
His untimely death in 1960 put Hindustani and film music into a state of shock. But the melodious sound of flute in ‘Ek Bangla Bane nyara’ and ‘Mohe panghat pe nandlal’ reverberates till now.