Debu Chaudhuri


Pandit Devabrata Chaudhuri is a Sitarist and a teacher. He is the winner of the Padmabhushan and Padmashree awards. He is the writer of six books, composer of eight new ragas and numerous musical compositions. From 1963 he has appeared in numerous radio broadcasts, and he is a disciple of Mushtaq Ali Khan. He is considered a leading Sitarist of Post War era. He is regarded as one of the leading proponents of Senia Style. He is the former Dean and Head, Faculty of Music, University of Delhi. His music is noted for its sweet singing ringing tone. He currently stays with his son, daughter-in law and niece at Chittaranjan Park, New Delhi

Birth

Pt. Chaudhuri was born in 1935 in Mymensing. He started playing the Sitar from four years of age. His first broadcast was at the age of eighteen at the All India Radio in 1953.

Training

He received his education in the University of Calcutta. He joined Delhi University as a reader from 1971 to 1982 and was the Dean and Head of Music Department from 1985 to 1988. He has served as a visiting professor at Maharishi International University, Iowa from 1991 to 1994. He received his training in Sitar under late Panchu Gopal datta and Ustad Mustaq Ali Khan.

Music

He started playing the Sitar from four years of age. His first broadcast was at the age of eighteen at the All India Radio in 1953. He created 8 new Ragas viz. Bisweswari, Palas-Sarang, Anuranjani, Ashiqui Lalit, Swanandeswari, Kalyani Bilawal, Shivamanjari and Prabhati Manjari. He has authored three books on Indian Music namely ‘Sitar and It's Techniques’, ‘Music of India’ and ‘On Indian Music’. He has recorded 24 CDs for 24 hours of the day in the United States.

Style

He is considered a leading proponent of playing the repeated articulation of the pedal tone with the tonic pitch of the second string string, by pulling the string across the fret that is allowed to die out before the basic alternation stroking is continued. He is considered one of the greatest sitar player of the era with Ustad Vilayat Khan, Ravi Shankar and Nikhil Banerjee. He is also unique in using the 17 fret sitar while most musicians use the 19 fret sitar.

Contributions

UMAK

In April 2010 he started the UMAK Center for culture in memory of his ‘’guru’’ Ustad Mushtaq Ali Khan.