“So kyon visre meri maye” was a Shabad being rendered on radio in a highly emotional tone and texture by an unheard of but extraordinary singer.
This highly cultured voice completely mesmerized me when I tuned into All India Radio Jalandhar-Amritsar one day way back in 1952. Later on, a voice-over announced: “You have just heard the voice of Bhai Samund Singh Ragi singing a Shabad”.
My father, during the years of his college education, had heard this
magical and emotive voice for the first time in the mid-1920’s at
Gurdwara Janam Asthan Sri Nankana Sahib, during the marathon
celebrations of the Birth Anniversary of Guru Nanak. Since that moment,
my father, the Late Sardar Sochet Singh, became a lifelong admirer of
Bhai Samund Singh. With extreme reverence, my father would refer to Bhai
Samund Singh as a Samundar of Gurmat Sangeet (an ocean of Sikh Religious Music).
In my case, too, from that ominous morning of 1952, even I became a big
fan of the sweet, melodious and enchanting voice of Bhai Samund Singh.
Whenever he happened to visit the studios of All India Radio
Jalandhar, he was accorded the respect he amply deserved.
The
authorities of All India Radio Jalandhar-Amritsar fixed Friday of every
week for Shabad Kirtan programmes at the radio station. Bhai Samund
Singh was invited at least once every fortnight to perform live at
Punjab’s only radio station.
This radio station had a large number of its own musical instruments, including several tanpuras
(a string instrument which accompanies every Sikh and sub-continental
classical musician during the rendition of classical numbers).
Bhai Samund Singh and Master Rattan of Phagwara were always requested
to choose any one of the tanpuras for accompaniment, while most other
musicians had to bring their own tanpuras.
One of the staff
artists, an accomplished clarinet player, had become a big fan of Bhai
Samund Singh. He was always insistent of accompanying Bhai Sahib during
his Shabad Kirtan. Similarly, a violinist also was always eager to
play his instrument with Bhai Sahib.
These facts and several
others were told to me by the late Sardar Jodh Singh, retired Assistant
Station Director of All India Radio Jalandhar. During the
twice-a-month visits to the radio station, Sardar Jodh Singh almost
invariably invited Bhai Samund Singh to have lunch at his residence.
They remained very good lifelong friends.
Sardar Jodh Singh
also told me that the ancestry and relatives of Bhai Samund Singh
hailed from the districts of Sheikhupura, Gujjranwala, Lyallpur and
Montgomery. Sardar Jodh Singh himself belonged to Gujjranwala district
but, before independence and the tragic Partition of Punjab, he served
as a head-master at Lyallpur (now Faisalabad) in West Punjab.
According to him, strict spiritual discipline (nitnem) and regular riyaz (practice) of the raags was a hallmark of Bhai Samund Singh’s lifestyle from childhood onwards.
Bhai Samund Singh was born in 1900 in a relatively unknown village
called Mulla Hamza in Montgomery (now Sahiwal) district of West Punjab.
This district was famous for its wealthy Sikh farming community and
was one of the favoured districts of the British rulers. Although the
Sikhs constituted barely ten percent of the population of that district,
yet financially they were very well off and controlled the economy of
the area.
Sikhism was thriving in this area of Multan division.
Several Hindu families of the area used to convert their elder son to
Sikhism. One of the role-models for the Sikh community of the area was
the family of Bhai Huzoor Singh, the illustrious father of Bhai Samund
Singh.
When young Samund was still very young, between the age
of six to ten, Bhai Hazoor Singh had set a vigorous training regime for
him. He was made to learn Japji Sahib and Rehraas by heart by the time
he turned ten.
By the age of twelve, Samund Singh had learnt at
least a thousand Shabads from the Guru Granth by heart. He had also
undergone a proper introductory training in several commonly sung
Gurmat and other ragas by that age.
Thenceforth, training in
the raags and mastering their technique became a lifelong obsession for
the young musician. Even while lying in bed, he would have his tanpura
by his side. He experimented with singing each Shabad in several raags
and taals (beats). Some of the raags were prescribed in the
Guru Granth, others were similar in “thath” and some were purely based
on the time of the day and mood when the verse was being sung.
The family lived and served in the historic shrines at Nankana Sahib
(the birth place of Guru Nanak, located in the Sheikhpura district of
Lahore Division) and the neighbourhood. At the age of twelve, Samund
Singh would perform at least one of the several “chowkis” of Shabad
Kirtan performed every day at Gurdwara Nankana Sahib.
The then
hereditary managers of the shrine were called “mahants”. They had a
host of failings which have been highlighted in several written
documents and several weaknesses in their opulent lifestyles, but they
had something good also to their credit. They were quite knowledgeable
about Sikh religious music.
They knew the correct structure of
the raags and they could quickly distinguish between an accomplished
raagi and one who wasn’t. One such manager discovered the extraordinary
talent in young Samund Singh and offered him a permanent position as
“hazuri kirtania” at the famous Sikh shrine.
Before the
Partition of Punjab, two historic shrines were especially known for
their fine traditions of Gurmat Sangeet. One such shrine was the Durbar
Sahib in Amritsar and the other was Nankana Sahib.
The Dhrupad
style of Gurmat Sangeet, prevalent during the time of the Gurus,
attained its peak in the Durbar Sahib during the time of Guru Arjan and
the decades following.
The Khayal Shelley of Shabad Kirtan
started taking shape during the time of the Tenth Master, Guru Gobind
Singh, but in Punjab it attained its peak during the reign of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh.
Bhai Samund Singh was essentially an exponent of
the Khayal Shelley school of Shabad Kirtan. He did sing some Dhrupads
too, which, due to his great voice and easy modulation, were considered
masterpieces.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, most of the rababi kirtanyas had
mastered the Khayal Shelley tradition, but somehow they had the
tendency of extending the khayal format too long and wide by starting
with a long alaap (without starting the drum beat) and gradually going into jorh alaap (including drumbeat), before starting the rendition of the Shabad in vilambhat lai (slow tempo) and then warming up to madh lai (medium tempo) and finally going into the fast climax tempo called dhrutt lai.
While doing the dhrutt lai, many times the wording of the Gurbani became less unclear.
Bhai Samund Singh, on the other hand, gave utmost importance to the
clarity of the words of Gurbani. He mastered a new format. After a short
alaap, he used to go directly into the madh lai and completed the
entire Shabad in the same tempo.
Most of the time, he
completely omitted the dhrutt lai. This resulted in a marked clarity in
the words, which was also the aim of the Guru Sahibaan. Bhai Samund
Singh’s style of rendition was named Chhota Raaga Shelley. In spite of his innovation, the rababi kirtanias continued to follow the longer Khayal Shelley format.
The rababis would indulge in a lot of unnecessary exhibition of their skills during rendition. This was called taan paltas.
But this kind of practice was alien to Bhai Samund Singh. For him, his
ultimate master, the Guru, was supreme and the raag was subservient to
the Guru’s message.
From 1912 onwards up to August 1947, Bhai
Samund Singh served as a hazoori ragi. After 1935, he became the
leading hazoori raagi at the Janam Asthan.
During his service
at Nankana Sahib, he came in contact with a number of kirtanias of
fame. A number of them were rababis – descendants of Bhai Mardana, who
accompanied Guru Nanak on the latter’s far-flung travels, with a rabab –
who were considered masters of the art of North Indian Classical
Music. His interaction with them was extremely useful to him, as well
as to them. Each one was learning something new from the vast reservoir
of knowledge attained by the other.
Among some of his
contemporary rababis were Bhai Tana Singh, Bhai Gurmukh Singh Fakkar,
Bhai Sarmukh Singh Fakkar, Bhai Pall Singh and Bhai Jaswant Singh, to
name a few.
Some rababis had retained their Islamic names and
were not practicing Sikhs. They included Bhai Naseera, Bhai Sudarshan
and Bhai Rashida. On special occasions, some rababis used to come from
Amritsar to perform at various gurdwaras in Nankana Sahib. They
included Bhai Chanan, Bhai Mehar, Bhai Faiz, Bhai Lal, Bhai Chand and
Bhai Taba.
In 1925, through British-Indian legislation, the
duly elected Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) came into
existence. It was headquartered in the Darbar Sahib Complex in Amritsar
and it had jurisdiction over most of the historic Sikh shrines located
in the Provinces of Punjab and North West Frontier Province (NWFP),
including Nankana Sahib.
The new committee quickly went to
work and made several changes, including the rotation of raagi jathaas
from one historic shrine to the other. During this time, Bhai Samund
Singh also started traveling a lot. The rich Sikh sangat of Lyallpur,
Sri Ganganagar and Montgomery was always pleased to invite Bhai Samund
Singhi to perform Shabad Kirtan in the local gurdwaras at Lyallpur,
Montgomery, Sri Ganganagar, Tobha Tek Singh, Samundri, Okarha, Mandi
Burewal and Gojra, to name a few.
There were some very staunch
Sikhs living in far-flung areas of North West Frontier Province,
Balochistan and Sindh. They would also invite Bhai Samund Singh to
their gurdwaras. This spread his name and fame in far away places.
Members of the Sikh community wherever he went gave him a lot of love
and respect.
At Nankana Sahib, the longest and the most demanding Shabad chowki was for the singing of the morning’s Asa di Vaar.
Starting well before sunrise and ending at dawn, it lasted at least
two hours. After 1935, Bhai Samund Singh was accorded more slots each
month to perform it.
He discharged this duty with utmost devotion and reverence. He mastered the technique of the rendering of “Asraje Tunde Di Dhuni” to perfection. I have heard Asa di Vaar sung
by Bhai Santa Singh, Bhai Samund Singh and Bhai Budh Singh Taan. As
far as the “Asraje Tunde Di Dhuni” is concerned, all three are quite
identical. Bhai Santa Singh’s tempo was slightly faster. If we listen to
the present-day kirtanias at the Darbar Sahib, we see that there is no
standardization of “Asraje Tunde Di Dhuni” anymore. Bhai Samund Singh
was very particular about the timing of the raag. He rarely made a
variation from the strict time regime of the raags.
All India
Radio Lahore, the then sole radio station in Punjab, opened in a state
of the art studio complex in 1937. This radio station needed a host of
artists of all kinds. In the religious category they needed “Muslim
Naat” and “Qawali” singers, “Sikh Gurmat Sangeet” singers and “Hindu
Bhajan” singers. Bhai Samund Singh of Nankana Sahib and Bhai Santa
Singh of the the Darbar Sahib were approved as the staff artists in the
very first year.
Soon they both attained the “A Class” in their
category. These two stalwarts had contrasting styles. Bhai Santa Singh
sang invariably in very high notes, but Bhai Samund Singh always sang
in a completely relaxed style in all kinds of notes, and seldom went
into the highest notes. Bhai Santa Singh mostly sang in Kehrwa Taal and
laid most stress on his highly cultured voice, but Bhai Samund Singh
used most of the taals used by the contemporary and old Sikh musicians.
Through prolonged riyaz, Bhai Samund Singh had developed such a fine murki
in his voice that he could render the most difficult modulations with
perfect ease. A lot of musicians tried to imitate him, but could not.
At All India Radio Lahore, Bhai Samund Singh came in contact with
all-time great maestros like Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Vinayak Rao
Patwardhan, Dalip Singh Bedi, Barqat Ali Khan, Din Mohammad, Kallan
Khan, Harish Chander Bali and Master Rattan. Between performances and
afterwards, they used to run into each other. Each one of them was not
afraid of asking the other about the finer points of classical music.
These discussions sometimes led to heated discussions, too, but soon
every difference of opinion used to be resolved amicably.
Bhai
Samund Singh used to commute at least once every month to Lahore from
Nankana Sahib. In the same way, Bhai Santa Singh used to commute from
Amritsar to Lahore. Bhai Sudh Singh and Pradhan Singh were also later
on approved as radio singers. A local artist, Bhai Budh Singh Taan was
the only approved radio singer, who used to perform Shabad Kirtan as a
solo artist.
While in Lahore, Bhai Samund Singh used to stay
overnight at Gurdwara Dehra Sahib and used to perform a chowki there.
Whenever Bhai Samund Singh’s voice was heard over the airwaves, the
evening crowds at Dehra Sahib would invariably swell to several times
the normal attendance.
Among the listeners would be a large number
of Muslims, Hindus and Christians. Music Director Vinod was one of the
Christians who used to listen to Bhai Samund Singh at Dehra Sahib.
In order to stay within their time constraints, All India Radio Lahore
used to determine the time limit of the Shabad to be sung. Bhai Samund
Singh, during rehearsal, used to sing each stanza at least once and if
he could not complete the entire Shabad within the stipulated time
slot, he would refuse to sing that Shabad for the radio. It principle
was to not leave any part of a Shabad unsung. His strict Gurmat
principles were always his strength and the authorities of All India
Radio never defied him.
On the radio, Bhai Samund Singh would
utilize the minimum possible time for singing Shabads, but while
performing in the gurdwaras, he was more relaxed and he took more time
to sing the same Shabad, doing full justice to each elahi (Godly) word.
He was against having katha
(a lecture or discourse) while doing kirtan. Bhai Vir Singh, the great
poet laureate of Punjabi, was very much opposed to katha by kirtanias.
He (Bhai Vir Singh) believed that katha should be the domain of the
kathakars (interpreters of the Guru’s word), as much as the kathakars
should leave the art of singing of the Shabad to the kirtanias. Each
can do a better job in his/her field of specialty.
Bhai Samund Singh agreed with Bhai Vir Singh’s advice.
Thumri
is a semi-classical form of classical music. It took concrete shape
during mid-nineteenth century. It conveys, in a most effective manner,
the subtle emotions of love, devotion and the pangs of separation from
the lover.
Gurbani, too, has numerous Shabads conveying similar
emotions; the only difference being that in Gurbani, love and devotion
are directed towards The Almighty.
The thumri had not been a
form of music in Punjab until the second decade of the twentieth
century. In fact, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, a contemporary and a good
personal friend of Bhai Samund Singh, perfected the Punjabi version of
singing of thumri during the nineteen thirties and forties. He recorded
his best renditions of thumris in the 1940s.
Bhai Samund Singh
selectively adopted the thumri style, and this innovation found its
acceptance by the Sikhs in overwhelming numbers. Some of such Shabads
were originally sung at All India Radio Lahore. During those days, tape
recordings and transcripts of programmes were not made by All India
Radio, hence none of them are available any more.
Bhai Gurmeet
Singh Shant of Jalandhar has in recent years adopted the thumri for
some of his tunes and the Sikh community has welcomed them.
It was
the communal frenzy and bloodshed of horrific proportions at the time
of creation of Pakistan that led the family of Bhai Samund Singh to
leave their ancestral homes and hearths for good and migrate to the
holy city of Amritsar. Such decisions are rather tough to make,
especially when you have spent your entire life serving at the
birthplace of the founder of your faith.
Soon after
independence and the Partition of Punjab into Indian (East) Punjab and
Pakistani (West) Punjab), Bhai Samund Singh camped in Amritsar, where
he took on the position of Hazuri Raagi at the Darbar Sahib. Another
brilliant contemporary of his, Bhai Chand (a Rababi Muslim kirtania)
was still serving at the Darbar Sahib, but was ready to leave for
Pakistan.
After going to Pakistan, Bhai Chand became a lonely and
disgraced person, who eventually could not adjust to his new
circumstances. Eventually frustratyed and financially broken, he
tragically committed suicide.
Within a couple of years, Bhai
Samund Singh decided to become a freelance raagi and shifted his
residence to Ludhiana, where he lived for the rest of his life.
He became an “A Class” artist of All India Radio Jalandhar-Amritsar,
when this newly established radio station was commissioned in 1948. Most
of the staff at this radio station had migrated from West Punjab and
some had already served at All India Radio Lahore.
For a short
while, Sardar Kartar Singh Duggal, a veteran from All India Radio
Lahore and Peshawar, served as a top official at this radio station.
Sardar Jodh Singh, a refugee from Lyallpur and Gujjranwala, also joined
as a producer of programmes in Punjabi at this new radio station.
Bhai Samund Singh was the most revered religious and classical musician
at this station. Occasionally, he was also asked to perform at the
Delhi and Lucknow stations of All India Radio.
Once while at
the Delhi radio station, his talent caught the attention of the experts
of classical music in the nation‘s capital. On their recommendation,
Bhai Samund Singh got the unique distinction of becoming the first Sikh
religious classical musician to perform a one and a half hour long
live programme in the prestigious “Weekly Akhil Bharatiya Programme of
Classical Music” on a Saturday evening.
This special had a
record listenership. He performed so well and with such a remarkable
ease that at the end of the programme, he was given a big ovation by
all. After that, he started performing more frequently at All India
Radio Delhi and other regional stations.
The Chief Khalsa Diwan
in Amritsar, the premier institution that established the Khalsa
College Amritsar and several other Sikh educational institutions, used
to hold annual Sikh Educational Conferences. Bhai Samund Singh was
always an invitee in those conferences and he invariably was the
official kirtania.
During the 1969 quincentennial celebration
of the birth of Guru Nanak, a set of five long-playing records were
released and Bhai Samund Singh was the most prominent singer featured
on this one-of-a-kind set of records.
While serving in Nankana
Sahib and singing in Lahore, Bhai Samund Singh was reluctant to allow
cutting of gramophone discs of Shabads rendered by him, but during the
1960s, his voice was featured prominently on several 33-rpm LP
(long-playing) records. Some of his All India Radio performances were
also recorded on professional fast-speed tapes.
During the
1960s, Prof. Taaran Singh, one of the heads of departments at the
Punjabi University in Patiala, wanted to record Shabad Kirtan in
original vintage tunes by the great masters of Sikh religious music. He
got especially worried after the untimely death of Bhai Santa Singh ji
at age 62 in 1966.
After obtaining due permission from the
then Vice-Chancellor of the university, he got the project going. Among
the first raagis he requested to record in their original reets was Bhai Samund Singh ji. Others included Bhai Dharam Singh Zakhmi.
Bhai Samund Singh recorded several Shabads in his inimitable style.
Later on, he suggested that Bhai Avtar Singh and Gurcharan Singh, the
illustrious sons of the late Bhai Jawala Singh of Sultanpur Lodhi, had a
vast reservoir of Gurmat Sangeet in ancient Dhrupadand Dhamarstyles,
and recommended that it deserved preservation.
On this
suggestion, Prof. Taaran Singh requested Bhai Avtar Singh and Bhai
Gurcharan Singh, who were at that time serving in various historic
gurdwaras of Delhi, to record in their original tunes for the Punjabi
University Library at Patiala.
Both Bhai Avtar Singh and Bhai
Gurcharan Singh told me that they recorded over five hundred vintage
tunes of Shabad Kirtan in their voices, accompanied by tanpura.
To the best of my knowledge, neither the recordings of Bhai Samund
Singh nor the recordings of Bhai Avtar Singh and Gurcharan Singh are
now available with the university. Such is the pathetic state of
storage and preservation in our Indian universities today!
Sohan Singh Misha, a brilliant poet of Punjabi and an academician,
served All India Radio Jalandhar in various capacities. Due to his
brilliance, he rose to become the second senior-most official at this
capital station. He was a blunt talker, too. Once he told me that he
shuns religious activity in any form, but when Bhai Samund Singh sings,
he (Sohan Singh) is transported into a world of ecstasy and romanticism
rarely experienced otherwise.
He also told me once that it would have been better if Bhai Samund Singh would have been a Ghazal
singer, too, and he (Sohan Singh) would have composed some very
soulful verses for him. I advised him not to share these thoughts with
Bhai Samund Singh, since he is a deeply pious man, and would be hurt by
his “frivolities”.
Those Pakistani Muslims who had heard Bhai
Samund Singh over the airwaves before the Partition of Punjab used to
tune in to All India Radio Jalandhar to especially listen to his
seasoned voice. All India Radio Jalandhar used to receive hundreds of
letters from his fans from both sides of the new border.
A
famous music director from Bollywood, Mohinder Singh Sarna – popularly
known as “S. Mohinder” – told me that he owed his career as a music
director to Bhai Samund Singh. When he (Mohinder) was a child, his
father was posted as a prosecuting inspector in Lyallpur, where he was
initiated into classical music by the late Sant Sujan Singh, a decendant
of Baba Nand Singh. Later on, his father was posted at Sheikhpura and
he came into contact with Bhai Samund Singh at the nearby town of
Nankana Sahib.
Here, young Mohinder became a pupil of Bhai Samund
Singh, who taught him the basics of several commonly used classical
raags. They became a stepping stone for S. Mohinder in becoming a
full-fledged Bollywood music director later in life.
The Punjabi film, Nanak Naam Jahaz Hai,
was made in 1969 and was accorded the President of India’s All India
Gold Medal for excellence in film music. Although Mohammad Rafi and
Asha Bhonsle also sang for this film, the most revered singer in the
award-winning film was undoubtedly Bhai Samund Singh. Bhai Samund
Singh’s voice in the raags of his choice was most prominently featured
in two Shabads sung for this film.
Towards the end of 1971,
Bhai Samund Singh was a very sad grand old man of Sikh religious music.
Public taste of the Sikh community had deteriorated significantly.
Mediocrity had taken hold in popular kirtan and those who had struggled
hard to hone their skills in the raags were being short-changed. Even
the authorities running the historic Sikh shrines were quite
indifferent to the merit of the hazoori raagis.
In January 1972, after a bout with ill health, Bhai Samund Singh left for his heavenly abode.
When Bhai Avtar Singh, Gurcharan Singh and Swaran Singh went to see him
during his final days, in frustration Bhai Samund Singh told them that
the golden days of good musicians are over. The SGPC is recruiting
mediocre raagis and even the sangat is giving more importance to them at
the expense of good ones.
All India Radio has been quite
irresponsible in preserving Bhai Samund Singh’s voice. Hundreds of
hours of his tape recordings were lying unprotected in the storage of
All India Radio Jalandhar. Some of these tapes were later erased to be
used for recording music of other, new artists.
After his
death, when the authorities of The Punjab and Sind Bank approached All
India Radio Jalandhar to make available all old recordings of Bhai
Samund Singh for preserving his voice on long-playing records, they
were given recordings for one and a half hour only. Rest of his music
had been destroyed, due to callous negligence and lack of
professionalism.
If all his recordings would have been preserved,
we could listen to hundreds of hours of his finest renditions. His
famous recording of Asa di Vaar by All India Radio Jalandhar has also
been lost forever.
On the one hand, the “Hindustan Recording
Company of Calcutta” has preserved the entire recording of the music of
K.L. Saigal. On the other, Sikhs have lost almost the entire treasure
of the voice of Bhai Samund Singh forever.
by HARJAP SINGH AUJLA [Courtesy: South Asia Post]
Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.