Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Natya Gaaner Parampara

The Poila Baisakh, this year, couldn't have been better spent than what we enjoyed at Academy during the noon. Ambarish Bhattacharya and Sohini Sengupta presented one of the unique demonstrations of songs on stage titled, Natya Gaaner Parampara, a tribute to the composers and their musical creations for the Bengali theatres over the years. The programme was simply marvellous.

Mesmerising the audience with numbers, primarily designed for various plays, the performance celebrated the musical diversity that enriched the Bengali theatres through the ages. Melody, traditionally played as conventional Rabindrasangeet, was rendered by

Ambarish with his brilliantly supporting musical ensemble in a way, designed reportedly, by the great laureate himself, for drama! Sohini gave her voice to a Swatilekha Sengupta composition, yet to be included in a play and perhaps displayed the latest upto which Bengali music for the stage has evolved. Spanning, literally, over centuries, from the early nineteenth to the twenty-first, the depth of the musical contribution in Bengali theatres seemed never to be better explored! Songs were selected from plays of Shishir Bhaduri, Ajitesh Bandyopadhyay and presented to give us a taste of the yonder years of which we only might have heard! The Marjina Abdullah duet by Bhattacharya and Sengupta
from the play, Alibaba, displayed the perfection of comic timings in harmony. Rarest of the rare numbers, a song with music composed by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay belonged to the category of serious lyrics, while a parody composed by Jyotirindranath Tagore reflected the sobriety in satire, the golden art of forgotten old! The children in the audience also had something for them too, as besides the other hilarious pieces, a charmingly addictive cuddly rhythm, from Astronauter Thikana, displaying a novel and diverse manifestation of vocal skill, not only refreshed the younger batch, but this seemingly effortless singing, being far from a childish attempt, promised moments of innocent mirth and smiles on all the faces that listened.

Thus, the programme truly displayed the spectrum of theatrical ballads, composed for all the human sentiments and spanning over more than a century, a tradition of tunes, distinctly Bengali and one, which is evolving continuously in all the varied musical shades.

Harmonising majestically with their instrumental adroitness, Rajeeb Chatterjee on octapad, Dipankar Chattopadhyay on keyboard, Abhijit Basu on tabla and conducted by Subir Sanyal on harmonium, the accompaniment was both superb and absolute. The lighting arrangement by Sadhan Parui and the decor by Ayan Ghosh transformed the stage to the gorgeous gramophone period while the sound arrangement of Santu Das and Soumitra Das (Das & Co) preserved the acoustic elegance with modern appendages. Supervised by Arghya Dey Sarkar, this Nandikar production will remain memorable to music lovers for days to come if not years!

The magnetism of music was apparent in the way the audience synched gradually and actually played the main cast in the culminating Dhana Dhanye Pushpe Bhora when the real artists suggested the leads while the majority of the audience sang the entire song, standing, in a unique display of passion and musical harmony, a gesture so theatrical but so earnest - tradition is indeed so alluring!

Caveat: A soothing gesture of offering ORS to each and every audience in the waiting area of Academy by staffs of Nandikar was not only welcome in the scorching heat but won the heart even before a single note had started quenching the musical thirst.

pictures: Amrita De

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh! Just so wonderfully described that I could see the entire Programme through your eyes. Please book tickets if the same programme takes place somewhere near to our locality like Madhusudan Mancha or Nazrul Mancha. Your writing style deserves appreciation. God bless you.

anirban said...

🙏

Anonymous said...

āĻ¤োāĻ° āĻ˛েāĻ–াāĻŸা āĻĻেāĻ–ে āĻŦুāĻāĻ˛াāĻŽ āĻ–ুāĻŦāĻ‡ āĻŽāĻ¨োāĻŽুāĻ—্āĻ§āĻ•āĻ° āĻšāĻ¯়েāĻ›ে ।āĻ¯āĻĻি āĻ•āĻ–āĻ¨āĻ“ āĻŽāĻ§ুāĻ¸ূāĻĻāĻ¨ āĻŽāĻž্āĻšে āĻ†āĻ¸ে āĻ…āĻŦāĻļ্āĻ¯āĻ‡ āĻļুāĻ¨āĻ¤ে āĻ¯াāĻŦ। āĻ°িāĻŽāĻ˛িāĻ° āĻĻেāĻ“āĻ¯়া āĻ›āĻŦিāĻ—ুāĻ˛ āĻ–ুāĻŦāĻ‡ āĻ¸ুāĻ¨্āĻĻāĻ° āĻšāĻ¯়েāĻ›ে

Anonymous said...

āĻ…āĻ­িāĻ¨āĻ¨্āĻĻāĻ¨ āĻ“ āĻļুāĻ­েāĻš্āĻ›া

Viji said...

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this blog post after watching Yeh Shaadi Nahi Ho Sakti TrailerThe movie is available for online streaming on ZEE5, and I must say, I'm quite impressed with the platform's content.