Sham Chaurasia gharana


Sham Chaurasi Gharana is a gharana in Hindustani classical music known for the singing of vocal duets. It is also known as the cradle of drupad. It is one of the four singing gharanas of Punjab; the other three are: Patiala, Talwandi and Kapurthala. It is most notably represented in modern times by the brothers Nazakat and Salamat Ali Khan.

History

The gharana is believed to have been founded in the 16th century by Chand Khan and Suraj Khan who were contemporaries of Tansen at the court of Mughal emperor Akbar. Successive generations of musicians in the gharana specialised in the dhrupad form of singing and evolved a tradition of duet vocal performances. Meer Baksh and Khairdeen, Karam Elahi Khan, Vilayat Ali and Hadayat Khan, Ghulam Shabir Khan and Ghulam Jafar Khan, Nazakat Ali and Salamat Ali are noted practitioners of jugalbandi from this gharana.
The gharana is centred at a village of the same name in the Hoshiarpur district of Punjab ; alternate spellings include Shamchurasi.
Another explanation of the name is that sham is taken from the name of the Sufi saint, Sant Shami Shah and was named after a cluster of 84 villages which constituted a land revenue unit. in the time of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. According to one legend, the founders were given a parcel of land here as a grant to them by Mughal Emperor Akbar.
In an alternative version of the origin, the Mughal Emperor Muhammad Shah "Rangila" was said to have been so impressed by the gharana that he gave all income from the 84 local villages, known as 'Chaurasi', to the Sufi saint Sant Shami Shah.

Nazakat and Salamat Ali Khan

Around the turn of the century, the gharana was represented by Vilayat Ali Khan, who was noted for his dhrupad singing. His sons were Salamat Ali Khan, Nazakat Ali Khan, Tasadaq Ali Khan, Akhter Ali Khan and Zakir Ali Khan.
The brothers Nazakat Ali Khan and Salamat Ali Khan had their debut performance on All India Radio, Delhi in 1942, when Salamat was only 8. They went to Amritsar for a memorable concert:
After the 1947 Partition of British India, the family first moved to Multan, Pakistan and later moved to Lahore, Pakistan. They emerged as one of the leading performers of classical music in Pakistan. Famous Indian playback singer Lata Mangeshkar once reportedly said that Ustad Salamat Ali Khan was the greatest classical vocalist of the Indian subcontinent.
A number of their recordings exist from their very fruitful partnership until 1974. Subsequently, due to differences over finances, they broke up, and then Nazakat Ali Khan died in 1984, but Salamat Ali Khan continued singing along with his sons Sharafat Ali Khan and Shafqat Ali Khan, who continue the Sham Chaurasia tradition.
Salamat's second eldest son, Latafat Ali Khan is an exponent of Ghazal, Thumri and Kafi singing.
Notable students of Ustad Salamat Ali Khan include Ustad Hussain Bakhsh Gullu.

Awards and recognition

Ustad Salamat Ali Khan was awarded the Pride of Performance Award in 1989 by the President of Pakistan.