A Sangita Kalanidhi who inspired Ranganna, the music teacher in the novel Mohamul
The Hindu
Umayalpuram Swaminatha Iyer's legacy in music and teachings remembered through stories and memories of his disciples and students.
Among the galaxy of Sangita Kalanidhis adorning the wall of the Music Academy is Umayalpuram Swaminatha Iyer, who won the award in 1936. A disciple of Umayalpuram Krishna Bhagavatar and Sundara Bhagavatar, who were direct disciples of Saint Tyagaraja, Swaminatha Iyer continues to live on the pages of Mohamul, a novel by T. Janakiraman.
According to Janakiraman, Ranganna, the teacher of Babu, the hero of the novel, is a fictional version of Swaminatha Iyer. Janakiraman also learnt music from him.
“He was a student of Maha Vaidyanatha Iyer. He viewed life as music. I noticed the same in my father. He would not like talking loudly or even listening to anything loud,” writes Janakiraman in his essay, Novel Pirantha Kathai (The story of the birth of the novel).
“He does not want to show that he knows anything other than music. He does not feel that it was a flaw. He is firm in his conviction that if we do it [music] perfectly, nothing else matters. The way he is sitting lonely on the veranda of the house, in the purple darkness of the bedroom light, expecting nothing. His self-confidence reinforced his conviction. Maybe he is also like my father,” Janakiraman narrates the personality of Ranganna in the words of Babu.
The generation that listened to and learnt from Swaminatha Iyer is no more. Jankiraman would be 103 if he was alive and Semmangudi R. Srinivasa Iyer, who learnt from Swamintha Iyer, who died in 2003, would be 118. Even Srinivasa Iyer’s teacher Maharajapuram Viswanatha Iyer was a student of Swaminatha Iyer.
“The perfect way to learn the basic lessons of music is to be taught by him. Only after ensuring that swara sthanas are perfectly captured as suttha swaras in the throat, will he teach further. He has a soft voice. Oh. What a swaram? He will sing without any unnecessary sangathis. If we sing swaras in a threatening manner and with mathematical calculations, he will say that it was not music, but only noise. He would say, do not spoil your voice by singing in this manner’,” recalls Srinivasa Iyer in his memoirs Semmangudiyn Kural.
The simplicity that was the hallmark of Ranganna could be seen manifested in the photograph of Swaminatha Iyer taken probably in the backyard of his house on the banks of the Cauvery. He remained a repository of knowledge of Saint Thyagaraja and his krithis.