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Home > Travel >  Seduced by the Manganiyars

18th May 2012

Images by Ankur Malhotra

Seduced by the Manganiyars

by Priyanka Sacheti

Speaking over a crackling phone line from his native village Keraliya (near Pokhran, 80 km from Jaisalmer) Daevo Khan, Manganiyar musician and conductor of the acclaimed show The Manganiyar Seduction, explains the universe of Manganiyar musical traditions.

“The Manganiyar community has been singing songs since the time of Lord Krishna,” Daevo Khan begins, speaking in a mixture of Marwari, Hindi, and English. Originally, he explains, they were known as Gandharvas, then they were then referred to as Mir during Mughal emperor Akbar’s reign. They finally acquired their present moniker, Manganiyar, when princely states began to rule what is now Rajasthan; their name denotes the term ‘to beg’.

That's because, although the Manganiyars are now a known folk musical community spread out in Rajasthan’s Jaisalmer and Barmer areas performing a rich repertoire of ballads for their Rajput patrons, they once “played to appease the goddesses, and it is said that when we performed, even [the goddesses] stopped in their celestial chariots above to listen” says Khan. He adds that if goddesses themselves are happy with the music that the Manganiyars create, it is their hope that ordinary mortals down on earth too will be satisfied. Such statements reflect their syncretic religious identity; the Manganiyars are Sufi Muslims and yet sing songs in praise of Hindu deities with much fervor.

Daevo Khan wields the responsibility of being the conductor of The Manganiyar Seduction, a show by the acclaimed Indian director, Royston Abel, who has directed award-winning production Othello in Black and White. Daevo initially met Abel in Delhi while working on Jiyo, a play dealing with out of work street performers. Then, when travelling with the production in Segovia in 2006, Abel once again met Daevo, who along with another Manganiyar artiste performed a new folk song every day for two weeks. “It was an absolutely intense encounter,” says Abel, “their music took me to a different place altogether, it was one of the most amazing experiences that I ever had.”

Abel was so inspired by their music that upon his return to India he came up with a new project: he went on to Jaisalmer where he selected 43 artistes from the 300-400 odd who had auditioned and, in two weeks, created an initial version of what was going to become The Manganiyar Seduction. He presented it in Delhi as the opening act of Osian’s Cine Festival 2006, which showcased a range of Asian cinema: the show was received very well, enabling him to garner more funding; he then spent a year and half structuring the full version of the show.

Combining the startling visual pyrotechnics inspired by the Amsterdam red-light area and the Hawa Mahal of Jaipur along with the Manganiyar performers’ haunting music, the show has been described as a sensory feast. “We haven’t done a show till date where we have not received a standing ovation,” says Abel who has presented The Maganiyar Seduction all over the world. “I describe the show as a virtual whirlwind of sorts, working in spirals and completely immersing the audience into the Maganiyars’ music; in other words, they experience what I did [so] in those two weeks [in Spain],” he says, referring to his introduction to Maganiyar music. Abel is now working on a future project, The Maganiyar Longing, which will open in 2012. “The success of The Maganiyar Seduction has become a parameter for me,” he says.

Describing his métier as that of working with traditional performers in a contemporary style, creating theatre in their music, Abel says that collaborating with the Maganiyars has been a memorable journey and that Daevo was the essential bridge between himself and them. “Apart from being the one who introduced me to the Maganiyars in the first place and being the best khartal [traditional Maganiyar instrument] player in the country, he also possessed a hunger in him to challenge himself,” says Abel to explain his decision to make Daevo the conductor of the show. He elaborates that Daevo was also crucially in alignment with Abel’s vision and was able to communicate it to his fellow Maganiyars, thus facilitating its execution. 

Such innovative representation of folk and classical music performances is essential towards attracting those who may otherwise not gravitate towards such music. “Folk maa hai, classical beta hain; folk se hi classical niklega [folk is the mother, classical is the son; classical ultimately originated from folk] says Daevo Khan, who has performed with many Indian classical musicians. “I performed alongside artistes such as Anindo Chatterjee on tabla and Ustad Shujat Khan on sitar,” says Daevo, who has also played along with Pandit Ravi Shankar and Ustad Zakir Hussain. “I enjoy such moments a lot, I get inner peace while doing so.”

Daevo describes the Manganiyars’ musical legacies as a gift of god which the community has nurtured and sustained over the centuries. “When we visited America, [scholars] asked us how is it that even a small child is so easily able to pick up the musical traditions. I said that when a pregnant woman sings, the child absorbs it through the womb and thus [the child] arrives in the world, crying in tune,” he says. His eleven year old son is already an accomplished artiste and performed twice abroad. Manganiyar women also sing, and two of them participate in The Manganiyar Seduction. 

 “I am dedicated towards ensuring that our music remains traditional and uncorrupted; I have heard ten generations worth of music and would like to preserve it,” he says in oblique reference to many folk numbers who have migrated to Bollywood. 

Daevo is presently absorbed in creating a new show, Folk Rajasthan, which will use traditional folk percussion instruments as its basis. Another project that he’s contemplating performing is to do with Virh or the pathos of separation; it would be a performance striving to conveying the intensity of that emotion through music. Apart from time devoted to conceptualizing shows and performances, Daevo Khan has also established Swaroop Musical Institute in the premises of his own home in Keraliya where he teaches orphaned children showing inclination for learning music from his and surrounding villages.

 

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WATCH THE TRAILER OF THE MANGANIYAR SEDUCTION

The original score for The Manganiyar Seduction is available from Amarrass Records

 

 
 
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