Heritage

The Season, 75 Years Ago

Vasudeva Sastry

I end up learning something new from each article I write and this year’s Season 75 was no different. My ‘discovery’ was K. Vasudeva Sastry. I wondered who this person was and what his credentials were for being honoured by the Indian Fine Arts Society in 1949. I ended up being ashamed by my ignorance. From an obituary in The Hindu dated 17 November 1965, I got to know a few biographical details.

Vasudeva Sastry was born circa 1896 (he was 69 when he died) and had practised as a lawyer in Nagapattinam for a while, and then became a teacher (in what subject we do not know) and later joined the Tanjavur Serfoji Maharaja Sarasvati Mahal Library. From his designations in successive publications of that institution, we can see he joined as a researcher, became a pandit and was finally a research professor. The Hindu states that – ‘he brought to light many rare pieces of literature. He has to his credit the publication of a number of rare, ancient manuscripts in music and in English, Tamil, Sanskrit, Telugu and Marathi.’

It is interesting to note that The Hindu, in a rare error, states that “in appreciation of his services in the field of music, the title of Sangita Kalasikamani was conferred on him by the Music Academy, Madras.” This was not true. This was the title by which Presidents of the annual conference at IFAS were honoured from 1952 onwards and the same title was given to earlier Presidents with retrospective effect. In fact, Vasudeva Sastry prefixed his name with that title in many of his publications.

However, he was a regular invitee to the Music Academy’s annual conferences, and we see that he presented papers in 1946, 1947 and 1949. He was a firm believer in the role of King Shahji in codifying Carnatic ragas and was a strident critic of the melakarta system. In this he did ruffle some feathers at the Academy. In music, and he had publications in other subjects to his credit, he also brought out a number of manuscripts in book form. These include Gita Govinda with Abhinaya (1950), Sangita Darpanam of Catura Damodara (1952), The Science of Music (1954), Tala Samudram (1955) and Bharatarnavam of Nandikesvara (1957). Many of these were published as part of the Madras Government Oriental Series.

The December Music Season of 1949 was a relatively quiet affair, with the big three, namely the Music Academy, the Indian Fine Arts Society (IFAS) and the Tamil Isai Sangam (TIS) going their individual but more or less identical ways. Interestingly, all three were still in rented accommodation but each was also the owner of land intended for an auditorium.

Owning Property but in Rented Homes

The Music Academy owned its property on Cathedral Road but had not yet embarked on construction of its auditorium. It was conducting its season concerts at the Rasika Ranjani Sabha and its academic sessions at the Lady Sivaswami Aiyar  Girls School. The IFAS had five grounds allotted to it by the Corporation of Madras. Its founder B.V. Gopalakrishna Rao was an employee there and taken care of the paperwork. The IFAS however, never did anything with the land, giving it up rather shortsightedly in later years. It continued to function in 1949 from Gokhale Hall. Of the three it was the TIS which had moved ahead. The previous year, it had taken on lease 23 grounds of land from the Corporation at the Esplanade Road and now, in 1949, work had begun on building an auditorium, with L.M. Chitale as the architect. The TIS founder Raja Sir Annamalai had died the previous year and the Sangam was determined that the proposed auditorium should be a suitable memorial to him. With Sir R.K. Shanmukham Chetty, the former Finance Minister of India as the President, the Sangam was forging ahead. While work was in progress, the TIS held its conference at the St. Mary’s Parish Hall, Armenian Street, cheek by jowl with the IFAS. 

Awards and Inaugurations

Then as now, the choice of awardee of the Music Academy was awaited with much curiosity and excitement. The honour of being President of its annual conference and therefore the Sangita Kalanidhi designate, went to Mudicondan Venkatarama Iyer. The Academy’s annual conference that year was inaugurated by P.S. Kumaraswami Raja, then Premier of Madras and the Sadas in January 1950 was presided over by K. Madhava Menon, Minister for Education, Government of Madras. The IFAS had not yet instituted its Sangita Kala Shikhamani but like the Academy, it too had a musician to preside over what it titled the Conference of South Indian Music. In 1949, the honour went to K. Vasudeva Sastry, eminent researcher and writer, in whose debt posterity forever will be for his seminal work at the Tanjavur Serfoji Maharajah Saraswati Mahal Library. The conference of the IFAS was inaugurated by Sir C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar who, his career as Dewan of Travancore having come to an end in 1947 was then living in self-imposed exile at Ooty. The TIS too did not have an annual award and its conference that year was inaugurated by Namakkal V. Ramalingam Pillai, the eminent poet, with S. Ramasami Naidu, former Mayor of Madras, presiding. Ramalingam Pillai had turned sixty in 1948 and since then there had been a series of events honouring him all over Madras State, which continued till 1951. The TIS seems to have happily been one more organiser. 

The Other Participants

What is interesting is a list from The Hindu, which provides us details of how many other events were taking place at the same time as the annual series of the three sabhas. The Chennapuri Andhra Maha Sabha was holding its second annual art festival between 25- 31 December at the Victoria Public Hall, with a play each night. We have no information if the series continued in subsequent years. There was an Indian Institute of Fine Arts holding its third Natyakala Conference at the Musuem Theatre, between the 27 -28 December. They had an inauguration on the 27th with Justice ASP Ayyar, ICS as Chief Guest and N. Raghunatha Ayyar, editor of The Hindu presiding. On the 28th, Ragini Devi presented a paper. And there was the Sri Thyaga Brahma Gana Sabha at Vani Mahal with its series – however this Sabha was not yet formally participating in the December season.

Some of the artists at the Sangam

As I lamented last year (and the year before last and the years before that), the IFAS souvenirs have not survived, and we have no idea who sang for them. But the Music Academy and TIS souvenirs have and so it is possible to form a detailed listing. At the TIS, the series began on 23 December and on that day alone, there were junior artists performing from 3.30 to 4.30 and again from 4.30 to 5.30 pm. It is interesting to see the names Hemamalini and Padmini in the second slot. Daughters of C.K. Vijayaraghavan ICS, they were students of Maharajapuram Viswanatha Iyer. Hemamalini, who would later become Hemamalini Arni, was also known as a dancer and a student of T. Balasaraswati.

The senior concerts at the Sangam began at 5.30 each evening and had several well-known names – M.K. Thyagaraja Bhagavatar, Chembai Vaidyanatha Bhagavatar, N.C. Vasanthakokilam (25th), M.S. Subbulakshmi, Madurai Mani Iyer, M.M. Dhandapani Desigar, and Chittoor Subramania Pillai. On the 30th, Radha (Viswanathan) and then billed as S. Radha, danced with M.S. Subbulakshmi, singing the songs. On the 31st was Balasaraswati. It is interesting to see that the TIS had no programme on the 1st and featured Chittoor Subramania Pillai on the 2nd.

One Tamil song from the bill of fare in each concert had its lyrics presented in full at the base of the relevant page in the TIS souvenir. This was the Sangam’s method of propagating Tamil lyrics at that time. It must be noted that the TIS was still permitting artists to feature Telugu and Sanskrit compositions in their performances. However, some such as M.S. Subbulakshmi and Dhandapani Desigar planned their concert entirely in Tamil.

The names of some of the accompanists are worthy of study. We see Vellore Ramabhadran’s name for the first time at the Sangam, as also Parur M.S. Anantharama Iyer. Ghatam T.S. Vilvadri Iyer had as many as three concerts, as did Kalpathi Ramanathan. Palani Subramania Pillai accompanied Dhandapani Desigar on the mridangam.

The Music Academy List

Like the TIS, the Academy too began its series on the 23rd. There were two performances on the opening night, both junior. The 5.30 slot featured Savitri Ganesan and the 6.30 slot Kousalya Ramakrishna Reddi, who gave what was billed as a vocal and veena concert. Thereafter, the junior concerts happened on some days, between 3.00 and 4.00 pm, at the Lady Sivaswami Aiyar Girls School. The senior concerts, which began from the 24th, were two each evening, at the RR Sabha, one from 5.00 to 8.00 and the second from 9.00 to 11.00. The first was a vocal performance while the second was instrumental, except for Brinda-Mukta who were featured in the 9.00 pm slot. On the 26th, the evening was given over to a Hindustani Music performance by S.N. Ratanjankar for which the explanatory notes in the Academy souvenir run to six pages and are incomprehensible for a lay person. The sitar recital by Ravi Shankar on the 29th has a similarly dense write up, again for several pages. He was not yet the celebrity he would become and so Kalki carried a photo of his, and a brief report on his performance where he is introduced as the younger brother of Uday Shankar!

The Academy’s junior list is fascinating – B Rajam Iyer, K.V. Narayanaswamy, T.M. Thiagarajan and Maharajapuram Santhanam, all of them singing for just an hour! The senior list has Ariyakkudi, Maharajapuram Viswanatha Iyer, Musiri Subramania Iyer, Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer, G.N. Balasubramaniam, Madurai Mani Iyer, the Alathoor Brothers, Brinda-Mukta and D.K. Pattammal. The instrumentalists include Dwaram Venkatasami Naidu, T.N. Rajarathinam Pillai and K.S. Narayanaswami. There are three dance programmes – by Hemamalini (Arni), T. Balasaraswati and Mrinalini Sarabhai. Chembai’s name and that of M.S. Subbulakshmi are notable by their absence. It is also interesting to see that the President of the Conference, Mudicondan Venkatarama Iyer did not present a concert.

Academic Sessions