Doraiswamy Iyengar

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Doraiswamy Iyengar
File:DoraiswamyIyengarPic.jpg
Born
Mysore Venkatesha Doraiswamy Iyengar

1920
Died28 October 1997(1997-10-28) (aged 76–77)
Bangalore, India
NationalityIndian
OccupationMusician
Known forVeena
AwardsPadma Bhushan
Sangeetha Kalanidhi

Mysore Venkatesha Doraiswamy Iyengar (1920-1997) was a Carnatic musician and one of the greatest exponents of the veena in modern Indian history.[1][2] Born into a family of classical performing artists, he was a son of Venkatesha Iyengar, a learned vainika and royal musician at the court of the Princely State of Mysore.[citation needed]

Doraiswamy started learning the veena from his father at an early age and soon became a disciple of Veena Venkatagiriyappa, one of the foremost vainikas of the day in Mysore.[citation needed] He performed in the presence of the then Maharaja of Mysore at the age of 12.[citation needed] Spellbound, the Maharaja presented him with a fifty-rupee silver coin and urged Venkatagiriyappa to nurture Doreswamy as he was bound to bring laurels to the Mysore State.[citation needed]

He gave his first public performance in 1943 at the Bangalore Gayana Samaja.[citation needed] He participated in music conferences including one in Shiraz, Iran, in 1969, where he was also invited to perform at the Shiraz Persepolis Festival of Arts.[citation needed] Over the course of his career, accolades poured in. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the President of India in 1983,[3] the Sangeetha Kalanidhi of the Madras Music Academy (1984), the Sangeetha Kalasikhamani of the Indian Fine Arts Society (1994), the Sangeetha Kalaratna of the Bangalore Gayana Samaj, and the Chowdiah National Memorial Award.[citation needed]

Doraiswamy received a BA degree from Maharaja's College, Mysore.[citation needed] He served as the Music Director at the All India Radio in Bangalore.[citation needed] The University of Mysore conferred upon him an Honorary Doctorate in 1975.[citation needed]

In an age when most of the other vainikas had started using the contact microphone, Doraiswamy remained a purist and stuck to the ‘acoustic’ Veena.[citation needed] His style of playing is sometimes referred to as the Mysore Style.[citation needed] This distinctive style is marked by the movements from one note to another being achieved with the playing fingers (the index and middle fingers of the left hand) parted. This, along with his prolonged, medieval string plucking style enabled him to achieve the continuity of sound so essential to Carnatic music.[citation needed]

The veena is regarded as a solo, non-orchestral instrument and is accompanied only by percussion instruments. However, concerts of Doraiswamy Iyengar, accompanied by Mysore T Chowdiah on the violin, became very popular.[citation needed] He participated in many Jugalbandis, including with famous Hindustani classical instrumentalists such as Ustad Ali Akbar Khan.[citation needed] He composed music for dance dramas, especially those of P. T. Narasimhachar, a renowned Kannada poet.[citation needed] Doraiswamy also composed songs for a few Kannada films, notably Subbashastri, starring Kalyan Kumar.[citation needed] Doraiswamy was regularly accompanied on mridangam by Karnataka State Awardee V S Rajagopal.[citation needed] The noted vainika C. Krishnamurthy was one of Doraiswamy Iyengar's main disciples.[citation needed]

Doraiswamy died aged 77 in Bangalore, India.[citation needed] He is survived by his son D. Balakrishna, who was a career banker with the Reserve Bank of India but is among the foremost veena performers of the day and is the torchbearer of his father's unique Mysore style.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 December 2003. Retrieved 26 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Latest Volume14-Issue23 News, Photos, Latest News Headlines about Volume14-Issue23".
  3. "Padma Awards" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 October 2015. Retrieved 21 July 2015.

External links[edit]