MS & Other Musicians
The following is a
partial list of the many
musicians, poets and others
who were influential in the
musical life of M.S.
Subbulakshmi. Having been
trained initially by her
mother, the young
Subbulakshmi is said to have
learned from the many
musicians who were frequent
visitors to Madurai and to
their home. This thirst for
learning stayed with MS all
through her life as she
expanded her repertoire and
enriched her technique by
learning from a large number
of musicians and scholars;
be it Tyagaraja’s Vidulaku
from Turaiyur Rajagopala
Sharma or Dwijendralal Roy’s
Dano Danya from Dilip Kumar
Roy. Remarkably, and early
in her career, she settled
into a distinct and inimical
style of her own; a style
marked by bhava carried with
a rich voice, crisp diction,
sruthi alignment, a
deceptive simplicity which
reached the lay listener and
the connoisseur alike.
It would be impossible to
list all these individuals
here and now. Visitors to
this website are invited to
add their comments and
provide information to
enrich this content. Please
send us your comments and
contributions through the
contact page. You may also
add your comments and
suggestions on the blog set
up for this purpose. With
your help, and with the
passage of time, we hope to
fill these pages.
Madurai
Shanmukhavadivu
Excerpt
from Sruti magazine
“Subbulakshmi's family
was steeped in music. Her
maternal grandmother
Akkammal was a talented
fiddler. Her mother Madurai
Shanmukhavadivu was an
accomplished veena player
who had learnt music from
Karur Venkatramana
Bhagavatar. She was among
the first musicians of the
fair sex to be recorded on
shellac 'plates'. Some
collectors may still have
her 78 rpm recordings of
Ghanam Seenayya's Kuranji
padam Sivadeekshaparu, a
ragamalika and a tanam. It
was but natural
Subbulakshmi's first musical
mentor should be Shanmukhavadivu. Besides,
the home she grew in
reverberated with the sound
of music day in and day out.
Many a stalwart of music
would drop in for a visit
and the child MS - fondly
called Kunjamma-heard not
only music but also a great
deal of chatter about it.
Elder brother Saktivel and
younger sister Vadivambal
were also learning music. MS
absorbed music osmotically
almost. Her promise was
clearly evident and her
mother began early to
prepare her for a career in
music. She took her along to
her own concerts, to sit and
listen, and later on to sit
beside her and play the
veena along or to sing
along. Yes, her mother had
taught her to play the veena
as well as to sing."
When MS was honoured with
the Sangita Kalanidhi title
by the Music Academy of
Madras, she acknowledged her
debt to her mother, as well
as to others who had taught
her music or songs. Among
the latter, she said two
specially should be reckoned
as her gurus, namely, Musiri
Subrahmania Iyer and
Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer.
He is the Pitamaha of
Carnatic music. Nine decades
of living by, because of and
for music has earned
Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer
this respectful and
affectionate accolade....more
Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer
requested his good friend
and esteemed vidwan Musiri
Subramania Iyer to instruct
MSS. She learnt such
signature pieces such as
Thiruvadi Charanam (Kambodhi),
Rama Rama Gunaseema (Simhendramadhyamam),
Ente Veduko ( Saraswathi),
Brovavamma (Manji) ,
Bhogindra Sayinam (Kuntalavarali),
and Durusuga (Saveri) from
him....more
Madurai Srinivasa Iyengar,
Seithur Sundaresa Bhattar,
Mayavaram V. V. Krishna Iyer
Among the others who helped
her along the way, the
earliest, besides MSS’s own
mother, was Madurai Srinivasa Iyengar. He was
the elder brother of the
better known Sangita
Kalanidhi Madurai Sesha
Iyengar and a disciple, like
his brother, of Namakkal
Narasimha Iyengar. Seithur
Sundaresa Bhattar was
another early mentor. He was
a violinist who was retained
by the Seithur zamin in
Ramanathapuram district, as
a palace vidwan. Mayavaram
V. V. Krishna Iyer, more
popular as a teacher than
performer, was another who
taught MS.
Papanasam Sivan
MS learned many of
Sivan’s compositions, such
as the majestic Kartikeya
Gangeya (Todi), from the
composer himself. Kaa Vaa
Vaa in Varali was another MS
favourite set to tune by
Sivan. Sivan also composed
music for songs in two MSS
films: Seva Sadanam and
Meera
The Hindu, Sep 22,
2000The 110th birth
anniversary of Papanasam
Sivan, musician, lyricist,
composer and actor, falls on
September 26… In recent
years two of his film songs,
"Maa Ramanan Uma
Ramanan...'' and "Manamey
Kanamum...'' are sung
regularly by Carnatic
musicians in their concerts
and have won popularity.
Indeed not many are aware
that ....more
Disciple of Semmangudi
Srinivasa Iyer, Kadayanallur
Venkatraman was the composer
who collaborated most
closely with MSS in the
later stages of her career.
Among the many pieces that
he composed are the
Annamacharya composition
Bhavayami Gopala Balam,
Kurai Onrum Illai , Enta
Matramunu, and many verses
from the Balaji
Pancharatnamala. Today, many
of this shy and retiring
individual’s pieces are sung
the world over by people who
often don’t even know his
name.
...more
Saktivel
M.S. Subbulakshmi’s
brother Saktivel was a
considerable influence in
MSS’s life. He was someone
whose musicianship she
always admired and from whom
she learned to play the
mridangam in her early
years, a skill that
considerably advanced her
tala and swara technique as
a vocalist.
S.V. Venkatraman
S.V. Venkatraman composed
music for songs in the film
Meera as well as songs such
as Vadavarayai Matthaki that
became an enduring part of
MSS’s oeuvre.
The
Hindu, Dec 17, 2004“"Meera" was a musical
feast with MS singing almost
all the songs. Many songs
became hits and the most
famous of them all,
"Kaatrinile Varum Geetham"
(lyrics-Kalki Krishnamurthi)
is an immortal melody of
Indian cinema. Its tune and
melody were taken from a
song by the famous Bengali
singer, Juthika Roy, whose
gramophone records....more
But history will
remain...The Hindu, Jun 11,
2003
‘Piano’ Vaidyanathan, as
he was known, composed music
for songs in Sakuntalai and,
Meera as well as the iconic
Hari Tum Haro. Many family
members and friends remember
Vaidyanathan as a familiar
figure playing and composing
on the Steinway baby grand
at the Sadasivam’s family
home…
"It was here ( in Kalki
Gardens) that Sucheta
Kripalani called to ask MS
for Gandhi's favourite verse
from Meera, and added that
"Bapu prefers to hear you
speak the words rather than
hear someone else sing
them."...more
Vasant Desai composed the
music for the famous
benediction Maithreem
Bhajata with which MSS
concluded all her concerts.
The Sanskrit lyrics were
written by the Sadasivams’
longstanding spiritual guru
Chandrasekharendra
Saraswati, the Paramacharya
of Kanchi,...more
T. Brinda
At Sadasivam’s urging,
the celebrated vocalist T.
Brinda helped MS refine her
technique in singing padams
and javalis by instructing
her in the Veenai Dhannamal
tradition of
characteristically weighty
gamakas and mellow tempo. A
few rare radio recordings of
MSS and Radha singing
Kuvalayakshiro and Paiyyada
reflect this legacy.
T. L. Venkatrama Iyer
(Dikshithar
kritis)
Sangeeta Kalanidhi
Justice T L Venkatarama Iyer
took pioneering efforts to
learn and teach Dikshitar’s
kritis. He interacted
closely with Ambi Dikshitar
and Vedanta Bhagavatar. Dr.
Raghavan was instrumental in
the publication of the
Sangeeta Sampradaya
Pradarsini and also for the
periodic publication of
Dikshitar’s kritis in the
journal of the Music Academy
by Sundaram Iyer.
Venkatarama Iyer taught
several disciples, prominent
among them being Sangeeta
Kalanidhis D K Pattammal and
B Rajam Iyer.”
It was from this renowned
contemporary and exemplar of
Carnatic music that MSS
learned and made her own
songs such as Gopalaka (Revagupti),
Devi Brova ( Chintamani),
and Maayamma (Ahiri))....more
“M. S. Subbulakshmi once
said, "Nedunuri garu, just
for this one song in Revathi
"Nannatu Batuku Natakamu"
(an Annamacharya kriti) I
think you should be awarded
the Sangita Kalanidhi."
Nedunuri returns the
compliment gracefully, "But,
the Annamacharaya songs that
I tuned attained popularity
because she sang
them....more 
K. S. Narayanaswamy
Veena vidwan
K.S.Narayanaswamy was a
frequent visitor to
Sadasivam’s family home.
Veenai Mama, as he was
affectionately known by
family members, and his wife
spent many months as guests
of the Sadasivams, and MSS,
Semmangudi and he took part
in many informal singing
sessions. MS and he would
also often play veena
together.
In a collaboration of
titans, Dilip Kumar Roy—son
of poet-playwright-composer
Dwijendralal Ray--composed
and taught MSS many of the
songs in the Hindi version
of the film Meera. The film
propelled MS to national
recognition. MSS always
thought of him as a mentor
and guru, while Roy himself
was amazed at the purity of
her voice and her
extraordinary singing
ability. There is a lovely
little vignette told by him
(as retold by others) that
he received special
attention at local coffee
houses in the south when the
proprieter learned that he
was collaborating with MS
Subbulakshmi....more
Siddheshwari Devi taught
MSS Hindustani scales and
thumris as a visitor in the
Sadasivam’s family home,
taking great joy in her
disciple’s piety and
pitch-perfect rendition of
complex progressions at
lightning speed....more
Agnihotram Thathachari
Iyengar, Ananthasayanam
Iyengar, R. Ganapathy
Agnihotram Thathachari
Iyengar’s Sanskrit tutelage
proved invaluable for MSS in
her now-celebrated recording
of the Vishnu Sashranamam,
the thousand names of
Vishnu.
Ananthasayanam Iyengar
did the same for her
recording of the Venkatesa
Suprabhatam, chanted in
honour of Balaji, the deity
at the Tirupathi temple in
Andhra Pradesh, and now
heard all over south India
in homes and public venues.
R. Ganapathy was chief
consultant in the process of
selecting Sanskrit slokas
for iconic viruttams such as
Om Nama Pranavarthaya and
Kara charana kritamva, with
which MSS set the stage for
main compositions in
concerts.
This Chennai based
western classical musician
arranged the English hymn
sung by MSS and Radha at the
1966 UN General Assembly
Concert; the lyrics were
written for the occasion by
nationalist and close
associate of the Sadasivams,
C Rajagopalachari)....more
|