Tuning Into Tansen, The Melodic Legend Whose Ragas You Can Even now Hear Today!

in #akbar7 years ago

By and by, to numerous gharanas, or schools, of Hindustani music, Tansen is generally viewed as the person who began everything.

Tansen is an unpredictable puzzler in Indian history. The stories of enormity that encompass his individual incorporate unfathomable accounts of elephants that were subdued by his music, rains that poured when he sang in raga Megh Malhar, and smothered lights that were lit by his version of raga Deepak. To finish everything off, they assert he could deliver any solid, from a lion's thunder to a flying creature's trill!

Truth be told, it is hard to affirm which part of his life was reality, and which was a children's story.
A few reports guarantee that Tansen was conceived with the name Ramtanu, to a noticeable artist and performer, called Mukund Pandey. He demonstrated a remarkable ability for music as ahead of schedule as the age of 6 and was taken to Swami Haridas, a proficient performer, to take in the workmanship. It is supposed that his instruction in expressions of the human experience occurred in Gwalior.

Different stories guarantee that Tansen was conceived hard of hearing and unable to speak, and it was simply after he was honored by a holy person that he increased hearing and discourse.

In any case, prevalent sources concur that he spent a lot of his life as the court artist of Raja Ramchandra Singh. Here, he prospered, and his ability earned him the acknowledgment of Mughal ruler, Akbar himself.

Tansen, who at the time was near 60 years old, thought about resigning to an existence of isolation, yet at the support of the Raja, was sent to Akbar's court. The head presented to him the title "Mian,", signifying "learned one," and he wound up one of Akbar's Navratnas.


His ragas brought forth melodies that are still sung today, and his legacy continues through his music.