The Dagar vani is a tradition of the classical dhrupad genre of Hindustani classical music spanning 20 generations, tracing back to Swami Haridas (15th century), and including Behram Khan of Jaipur (1753-1878). For some generations its members were associated with the courts of Jaipur, Udaipur, and Mewar.[1][2][3]

The main feature of the Dagar vani is sophisticated, subtle, serene and rigorous exposition of alap-jor-jhala, including great attention to microtonal inflection delineating the subtleties of raga often otherwise overlooked or lost.

Until the 20th century, it was exclusively a vocal genre (at least in performance), but since the innovations of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar to the rudra vina, that instrument has found a place in performance, following closely the inflections and style of the vocal technique.

The genre was carried into the 20th century by seven Dagar brothers and cousins: Aminuddin Dagar and Nasir Moinuddin (Senior Dagar Brothers), Rahim Fahimuddin Dagar, Nasir Zaheeruddin and Nasir Fayyazuddin (Junior Dagar Brothers), H. Sayeeduddin Dagar, and the brothers Zia Mohiuddin Dagar and Zia Fariduddin Dagar. Zia Mohiuddin (rudra vina) and Zia Fareeduddin (vocal) were largely responsible for training today's practitioners, the most prominent of whom include Ritwik Sanyal, Pushparaj Koshti, Wasifuddin Dagar, Bahauddin Dagar, Asit Kumar Banerjee, Uday Bhawalkar, and the Gundecha Brothers.[4]

Family pedagogy edit

This visualization is based on several historical accounts.[5]

[6][7][8]
Haridas Dagar
Imam Baksh
Khan Dagar
Haider Khan
Dagar
Behram Khan
Dagar
Mohammad Ali
Khan Dagar
Mohammad Jan
Khan Dagar
Saddu Khan
Dagar
Akbar Khan
Dagar
Zakiruddin Khan
Dagar
Allah Bande
Khan Dagar
Inayat Khan
Dagar "Satshatri"
Ziauddin
Dagar
Nasiruddin
Dagar
Rahimuddin
Dagar
Imamuddin
Dagar
Hussainuddin
Dagar
Riyazuddin
Khan Dagar
Mohiuddin
Dagar
Fariduddin
Dagar
Shaffiuddin
Dagar
Sayiduddin
Dagar
Moinuddin
Dagar
Aminuddin
Dagar
Zahiruddin
Dagar
Faiyazuddin
Dagar
Fahimuddin
Dagar
Alimuddin
Dagar
Shamimuddin
Dagar
Nizamuddin
Dagar
Qayamuddin
Dagar
Sayeeduddin
Dagar
Bahauddin
Dagar
Saleemuddin
Dagar
Wasifuddin
Dagar
Imranuddin
Dagar
Javeduddin
Dagar
Wasimuddin
Dagar
Sameeruddin
Dagar
Mohsinuddin
Dagar
Roshanuddin
Dagar
Nafeesuddin
Dagar
Aneesuddin
Dagar
Saifuddin
Dagar

Exponents edit

15th century edit

16th century edit

  • Gadadhar Pandey alias Masnad Ali Khan Dagar
  • Gyandhar Pandey alias Surgyan Khan Dagar

17th century edit

  • Rahim Baksh Khan Dagar, father and guru of Baba Gopal Das.

18th century edit

  • Baba Gopal Das alias Imam Baksh Khan Dagar (c. 1720 - c. 1800)
  • Haider Khan Dagar (1750-1830), son and disciple of Baba Gopal Das.
  • Behram Khan Dagar (1753-1878), son and disciple of Baba Gopal Das.[9]
  • Addan Khan (c. 1750s - c. 1800s), daughter and disciple of Baba Gopal Das.

19th century edit

  • Mohammed Jan Khan Dagar (1795-1850), son and disciple of Haider Khan Dagar.
  • Mohammad Ali Khan Dagar (c. 1800 - c. 1870), son and disciple of Haider Khan Dagar.
  • Akbar Khan, son and disciple of Behram Khan Dagar.
  • Saddu Khan (1800-1860), son and disciple of Behram Khan Dagar.
  • Bande Ali Khan (1826-1890), learned from maternal uncle Behram Khan Dagar.
  • Inayat Khan Dagar (1835-1900), son and disciple of Saddu Khan Dagar.
  • Zakiruddin Khan Dagar (1840-1923), son and disciple of Mohammed Jan Khan Dagar.
  • Allabande Khan Dagar (1845-1927), son and disciple of Mohammed Ali Khan Dagar.
  • Haider Khan of Dhar, disciple of Behram Khan Dagar.[10]

20th century edit

  • Riazuddin Khan Dagar (1885-1947), son and disciple of Inayat Khan Dagar.
  • Ziauddin Khan Dagar (1886-1946), son and disciple of Zakiruddin Khan Dagar.
  • Nasiruddin Dagar (1895-1936), son and disciple of Allabande Khan Dagar.
  • Rahimuddin Dagar (1900-1975), son and disciple of Allabande Khan Dagar.
  • Imamuddin Dagar (1903-1966), son and disciple of Allabande Khan Dagar.
  • Hussainuddin Dagar (1906-1963), son and disciple of Allabande Khan Dagar.
  • Nasir Moinuddin Dagar (1921-1967), son and disciple of Nasiruddin Dagar. With brother Aminuddin, known as Senior Dagar Brothers.
  • Nasir Aminuddin Dagar (1923-2000), son and disciple of Nasiruddin Dagar. With brother Moinuddin, known as Senior Dagar Brothers.
  • Rahim Fahimuddin Dagar (1927-2011), son and disciple of Rahimuddin Dagar.
  • Zia Mohiuddin Dagar (1929-1990), son and disciple of Ziauddin Dagar.
  • Nasir Zahiruddin Dagar (1932-1994), son and disciple of Nasiruddin Dagar. With brother Faiyazuddin, known as Junior Dagar Brothers.
  • Zia Fariuddin Dagar (1932-2013), son and disciple of Ziauddin Dagar.
  • Nasir Faiyazuddin Dagar (1934-1989), son and disciple of Nasiruddin Dagar. With brother Zahiruddin, known as Junior Dagar Brothers.
  • Chandrashekar Naringrekar (1936-2004), disciple of Zia Mohiduddin Dagar.
  • Asit Kumar Banerjee (b. 19370, disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • H. Sayeeduddin Dagar (1939-2017), son and disciple of Hussainuddin Dagar.
  • Shantha Benegal (b. 1942), disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • Jody Stetcher (b. 1946), disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • Pushpraj Koshti (b. 1951), disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • Ritwik Sanyal (b. 1953), disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar and Zia Fariduddin Dagar.
  • Umakant Gundecha (b. 1959), disciple of Zia Fariduddin Dagar.
  • Ramakant Gundecha (1962-2019), disciple of Zia Fariduddin Dagar.
  • Uday Bhawalkar (b. 1966), disciple of Zia Fariduddin Dagar and Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • F. Wasifuddin Dagar (b. 1968), son and disciple of Nasir Faiyazuddin Dagar.
  • Mohi Bahauddin Dagar (b. 1970), son and disciple of Zia Mohiuddin Dagar.
  • Sayeed Nafeesuddin Dagar (b. 1975), son and disciple of H. Sayeeduddin Dagar.
  • Sayeed Aneesuddin Dagar (b. 1976), son and disciple of H. Sayeeduddin Dagar.

21st century edit

  • Pelva Naik (b. 1986), disciple of Zia Fariduddin Dagar and Mohi Bahauddin Dagar.
  • Anant Gundecha (b. 1996), son and disciple of Ramakant Gundecha.

References edit

  1. ^ "Dagar Tradition | Dhrupad". Archived from the original on 2019-06-23. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  2. ^ "DHRUPAD: An Ancient Tradition by Sunil Dutta". Raga.com.
  3. ^ "ITC Sangeet Research Academy :: Gharana-Details". Itcsra.org. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  4. ^ "SRA Story". Archived from the original on 2009-04-22. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
  5. ^ "Photographic image of The Dagar Saga" (JPG). Outlookindia.com. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  6. ^ Quraishi, Humra (2015). Divine Legacy: Dagars & Dhrupad. Niyogi Books.
  7. ^ Banerjee, Meena (October 12, 2018). "Veena is like an elephant: Ustad Mohi Bahauddin Dagar". Thehindu.com.
  8. ^ "The Dagar gharana (डागर घराना) or the dagarvani tradition". Dagarvani.org. Archived from the original on 2021-06-22. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
  9. ^ Society for Asian Music (1986). Journal of the Society for Asian Music. 18: 187. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ Tyagi, Manjusree (1997). Significance of Compositional Forms in Hindustani Classical Music. Pratibha Prakashan. p. 48. ISBN 9788185268637.