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Obituary | Kaun Gali Gayo Shyam: With Prabha Atre’s death, we have lost a rebel master

The Indian classical singer is bound by her gharana and its style of singing, or gayaki. Prabha Atre, from the Kirana gharana, who passed away on Saturday, aged 92, was fearless when it came to these boundaries.

January 13, 2024 / 22:22 IST
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Hindustani classical music doyenne Prabha Atre died, aged 92, after a heart attack on January 13 in Pune.
Hindustani classical music doyenne Prabha Atre died, aged 92, after a heart attack on January 13 in Pune.

Prabha Atre passed away, aged 92, at Deenanath Mangeshkar Hospital in Pune today, January 13, 2024, and with her passing, the void in the Indian classical music created by the passing of Ustad Rashid Khan just a few days ago has grown bigger. We stare into the abyss, having lost one more of the best musicians of our time.

The very first time one heard her on stage she gently explained, ‘The raga that I’m going to sing is called Shyam Kalyan, but there’s no connection to Kalyan raga. It is called Shyam Sarang.’

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A musician from the famed Kirana gharana actually said this. In the Indian classical tradition, every raga is bound by the notes, then the musician is bound by the gharana, and the style of singing — the gayaki — is also typical. Prabha Atre was fearless when it came to these boundaries. She was like the proverbial high wire act, her voice so magical, even the best of them could not find fault with her rendition of any raga. She could tie you to the seat with her khayals and then seduce you with thumris and then when you’d wonder how she could invent ragas like Madhur Kauns, Apurva Kalyan, Darbari Kauns, Patdeep-Malhar, Shiv Kali, Tilang-bhairav and Ravi Bhairav, you would be yanked out from inside the rabbit hole by her singing ‘Balma Matwale’ in Mishra Shivranjani.