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Kirana gharana

The Kirana Gharana is a Hindustani music apprenticeship tradition (gharana) made popular by Bande Ali Khan in the 19th Century and his cousins Abdul Karim Khan and Abdul Wahid Khan. Evolved from the instrumental and vocal Gauharbani dhrupad lineages of medieval music maestros Nayak Gopal, Nayak Dhondu, and Nayak Bhanu. Later, this tradition came to be reputed for khayal, thumri, dadra, ghazal, bhajan, abhang, and natya sangeet. This gharana is known for producing acclaimed musicians like Sawai Gandharva, Sureshbabu Mane, Hirabai Barodekar, Amir Khan, Gangubai Hangal, Bhimsen Joshi, Roshanara Begum, Mohammed Rafi, Prabha Atre, Mashkoor Ali Khan Kaivalya Kumar Gurav, Pran Nath, Anand Bhate, Sanhita Nandi, and Jayateerth Mevundi. Consequently, this gharana developed a reputation for its distinctly sweet, devotional, and intense vocalism.

Background
in performance supported by his student, Sawai Gandharva, on tanpura. Awareness about the Kirana Gharana grew with the rising status of Beenkar Bande Ali Khan in the Gwalior Court and Indore Court in the mid-19th Century. Due to his fame, members of his extended family, such as vocalists Abdul Karim Khan and Abdul Wahid Khan, began describing themselves as from the same gharana. The Kirana Gharana takes its name from the birth place of Bande Ali Khan, Kairana, though the family is said to originate from Saharanpur District. Bande Ali Khan is arguably the most influential Hindustani Classical instrumentalist of the 19th Century. In its initial decades, the importance of Kirana Gharana was derived from his status. Since, the fame of Abdul Karim Khan and Abdul Wahid Khan extended the gharana's name which came to be associated with singing. ==History==
History
In the 19th Century, the Kirana gharana coalesced around Bande Ali Khan, a renowned musician of the rudra veena. The gharana's style was further developed, and established as one of the prominent styles in modern Hindustani classical music in the early 20th Century by musicians Abdul Karim Khan and Abdul Wahid Khan. The Kirana Gharana includes an extensive family of musicians and their traditions which can be distinguished by four lineages: that of Bande Ali Khan, Abdul Karim Khan, Abdul Wahid Khan, and Fayyaz Ahmed & Niyaz Ahmed Khan. Bande Ali Khan Bande Ali Khan was one of the most influential musicians in the 19th Century. Though he directly taught few musicians, his influence expanded to many other musicians and their gharanas. Those claiming to be his disciples come from Mewati Gharana, Etawah Gharana, Sonipat-Panipat Gharana, Indore Gharana, and others. Abdul Karim Khan Abdul Karim Khan was one of the most influential classical musicians in the 20th Century. He was an extremely popular musician across the subcontinent. His success proved highly influential in popularizing the Kirana Gharana. A frequent visitor to the Court of Mysore, Abdul Karim Khan was also influenced by Carnatic music. Owing to his popularity, most contemporary Hindustani musicians from Karnataka are exponents of Kirana gharana, and Kirana gharana in turn has absorbed many of the features of the Carnatic tradition. The border region between Karnataka and Maharashtra is particularly associated with this gharana. The duo earned much appreciation and respect from musicians, critics, and audiences. They represent a branch of the Kirana Gharana family distinct from Bande Ali Khan, Abdul Karim Khan, and Abdul Wahid Khan, but share the same ancestors. ==Philosophy==
Philosophy
Aesthetics Vocalism who was celebrated for the extraordinary sweetness and tunefulness of his voice. The central concern of the Kirana style is swara, or individual notes, in particular precise tuning and expression of notes. In the Kirana Gayaki (singing style), the individual notes (swaras) of the raga are not just random points in the scale, but independent realms of music capable of horizontal expansion. Emotional pukars in the higher octaves form a part of the musical experience. Another unique feature of this gharana is the intricate and ornate use of the sargam taan (weaving patterns with the notations themselves) introduced by Abdul Karim Khan under influence from the Carnatic classical style. Bandishes Mukherjee notes that Kirana Gharana musicians uniquely possess compositions by Hussain Ali Khan "Hingarang" and "Sabras." Teaching ==Ancestral pedagogy of Kirana Gharana==
Ancestral pedagogy of Kirana Gharana
This tree details the hereditary lineage of the Kirana Gharana based on several documented accounts. ==Lineage==
Exponents
19th century • Sadiq Ali Khan, learned from Ghulam Taki Khan. Associated with Qawwal Bacchon ka Gharana. • Bande Ali Khan learned from mother Gangubai Hangal. • Prabha Atre (1932⁠–2024), learned from Sureshbabu Mane and Hirabai Barodekar. • Chandrakant Kapileshwari (1935–2024), learned from father Balkrishnabuwa Kapileshwari. • Tej Bahadur Sahney (1936⁠–2012), learned from B. N. Dutta Lahorwale. • Chhannulal Mishra (1936-2025), learned from Abdul Ghani Khan. • Madhava Gudi (1941⁠–2011), learned from Bhimsen Joshi • Shripati Padigar (c. 1940s–c. 2010s), learned from Bhimsen Joshi. • Pandit Arun Bahaduri (1943–2018), learned from A. Kanan. • Nagnath Wodeyar (b. 1944), learned from Gangubai Hangal. • Niaz Ahmed (1946–2019), maternal descendant of Kirana Gharana. • Shrikant Deshpande (1948–2011), grandson of Sawai Gandharva. Learned from Bhimsen Joshi. • Ashique Ali Khan (1948⁠–1999), learned from grandfather Allah Rakkha Khan and father Mehfooz Ahmed Khan. • Sumitra Guha (b. c. 1950s), learned from A. Kanan. • Venkatesh Kumar (born 1953), learned from Puttaraj Gawai. • Shree Rani Madalsa (b. 1957), learned from Chandrakant Kapileshwari. • Pandit Vishwanath (b. 1957⁠), learned from Mani Prasad. • Nagaraj Rao Havaldar (b. 1959), learned from Madhava Gudi • Milind Chittal (b. 1959), learned from Firoz Dastur. • Padmini Rao (b. c. 1950s), learned from Prabha Atre. • Mashkoor Ali Khan (b. 1957), learned from father Shakoor Khan. • Girish Sanzgiri (b. c. 1960s), learned from Firoz Dastur. • Rafiq Ahmed Khan (Sarangi) • Kaivalya Kumar Gurav (b. 1963), learned from father Sangameshwar Gurav. • Pandit Harish Tiwari (b. 1960s), learned from Bhimsen Joshi. • Jayateerth Mevundi (born 1972), learned from Shripathi Padigar. 21st CenturySanhita Nandi (born 1970), learnt from Pandit A kanan and Ustad Mashkoor Ali khan. • Anand Bhate (born 1971), learned from Bhimsen Joshi. • Shirin Sengupta Nath (b. c. 1970s), learned from A.Kanan and Arun Bhaduri. • Sandip Bhattacharjee (b. 1980), learned from Mashkoor Ali Khan and Mubarak Ali Khan. • Amjad Ali Khan (Indian vocalist) (b. 1980), learned from uncles Mashkoor Ali Khan and Mubarak Ali Khan. • Arshad Ali Khan (born 1984), learned from father Akhtar Nawaz Khan and uncles Mashkoor Ali Khan and Mubarak Ali Khan. • Balachandra Prabhu (b. 1990s), learned from Shripathi Padigar and Jayateerth Mevundi. • Mohd Danish (b. 1996), learned from grandfathers Afzal Khan and Irshad Ahmed Warsi. ==References==
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