Pran Nath was born into a wealthy family in
Lahore in present-day
Pakistan. While they were avid devotees of music, inviting musicians into the house to perform nightly, his family did not approve of his desire to become a musician, so he left home at the age of 13 and took up residence with the reclusive singer
Abdul Wahid Khan of the
Kirana gharana, cousin of the more widely known
Abdul Karim Khan. Pran Nath served Khan for seven years before he was accepted as a student, and stayed with Khan for nearly two decades. Both guru and disciple were much attracted to mysticism: Abdul Wahid Khan, a
Muslim, to
Sufism; and Nath, a
Hindu, to a
Shaivite sect in
Dehra Dun. It is said that Nath lived in a cave near the Tapkeswhar temple to
Shiva for five years, serving his guru intermittently. He eventually married and reentered the world at the request (guru dakshana) of his guru, in order to ensure the preservation of the Kirana style. In 1937, he became a staff artist with
All India Radio. However, Nath stuck to Abdul Wahid Khan's extra-methodical and austere singing style, with a heavy emphasis on
alap and slow tempo, which suited his voice well but was not very popular. Like his teacher, Pran Nath's singing emphasized precise intonation and the gradual, note-by-note exposition of tone and mood in the alap section of the music. Nath supported himself as a music teacher, and worked at the
University of Delhi from 1960 to 1970. ==Life in the United States==