Abdul Wahid Khan

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Abdul Wahid Khan
Born 1872
Luhari village in District Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh, British India
Died 1949
Lahore, Pakistan
Genres Indian classical music, Pakistani classical music
Occupation(s) singer
Years active 77


Abdul Wahid Khan (1872–1949) was an Indian classical singer, from the Kirana gharana. He died in 1949 in Lahore, Pakistan.

Early life and background

Abdul Wahid Khan initially learned vocal and sarangi from his father, Abdul Majid Khan. Around age 12 he moved to Kolhapur to learn from Ustad Langde Haider Baksh Khan, a disciple of Bande Ali Khan.

Khansahib founded the Kirana gharana musical family with Abdul Karim Khan. Abdul Karim Khan had married Abdul Wahid Khan's sister, Gafooran Bibi. The relationship between Khan and Abdul Karim later soured when Abdul Karim neglected Gafooran Bibi and married his student, Tarabai Mane. Abdul Wahid Khan's hearing was deficient and he was sometimes referred to as Behre Wahid Khan (Deaf Wahid Khan). Wahid Khan's son Hafizullah Khan was born in 1946. Hafizullah's uncles trained him in music, and he became an accomplished sarangi player.

Singing career

Khansahib forbade recordings of his performances to avoid imitation by other singers. Only three of his performances survived, recordings of the ragas Patdip, Multani, and Darbari Kanada, accompanied by Chatur Lal on tabla. They were preserved by music producer Jivan Lal Mattoo, who secretly recorded a radio broadcast in 1947, a few days before his death, to document Khan's style.[1]

Legacy

Abdul Wahid Khansahib died in 1949 in Lahore.[1][2] A number of Wahid Khan's students became renowned musicians. They included Sureshbabu Mane, Hirabai Badodekar, Begum Akhtar, Saraswatibai Rane, Pran Nath, Ram Narayan, Shakoor Khan, Pandit Jaichand Bhatt (Khyal Singer), Pandit Sukhdev Prasad, Hafizull Khan his Son and Mohammed Rafi. See: List of music students by teacher: K to M#Abdul Wahid Khan.

Khansahib influenced Amir Khan. Abdul Wahid Khan and Abdul Karim Khan had started evolving the vilambit khyal and their work inspired Amir Khan to develop his trademark ati vilambit singing.

References

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