Rajeev Taranath was born in
Bangalore on 17 October 1932. He received his initial training in vocal music from his father
Pandit Taranath. He gave his first public vocal performance when he was nine years old. Rajeev was singing for the
All India Radio before he was twenty. Although Rajeev held a PhD in literature, he decided to give up his career as a Professor and Head of English Literature at
Regional Engineering College, Tiruchirappalli (REC-T), which was later renamed as National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli (NIT-T), and then went to
Calcutta, where he began his musical training under the tutelage of
Ali Akbar Khan. Rajeev continued to learn from his Guru till Khan's death in 2009. He also had guidance from
Ravi Shankar,
Annapurna Devi,
Nikhil Banerjee and
Aashish Khan. He received some of India's highest national honours including the 2019
Padma Shri award and the
Sangeet Natak Akademi in 1999–2000. He researched and published the Teaching Techniques of the Maihar-Allauddin Gharana, as a Ford Foundation scholar (1989 to 1992). Taranath was respected for his in-depth understanding as he unfolded the raga, the tonal quality and power of his strokes. His distinctive style showed technical excellence, imaginative power and emotional range. According to the New York Times, "RAJEEV TARANATH'S sarod improvisations Sunday at Soundscape mixed the spiritual and the spirited". Taranath performed extensively in India and the world. He toured Australia, Europe, Yemen, the United States, and Canada. He composed the music for many internationally acclaimed Indian films including
Samskara,
Kanchana Sita and
Kadavu. He also served as the head of the Indian music programme at the World Music Department of the
California Institute of the Arts from 1995 to 2005. Taranath lived and taught in
Mysore, Karnataka until his death. He taught English literature at the
University of Aden in the 1980s. Taranath died on 11 June 2024, at the age of 91. == Discography ==