Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

This Lucknow businessman arranges marriage for poor girls

Lucknow :

A businessman, president of Daliganj Vyapar Mandal(Daliganj Traders Federation) but the identity of Daliganj resident Manish Gupta is much more than that.

Manish has been organizing mass wedding ceremonies for several years.

Here, girls who come from poor families get married in typical band-baja-barat style.

Manish has four sisters. In his struggling days, he sold even detergent powder in weekly market. He knows how difficult it was to arrange marriages of his sisters. So when his financial condition improved he decided to help in the marriages of poor girls.

He tied up with Daliganj Vyapar Mandal to get support in implementing his idea.

He also founded SarvSamaj Nirdhan Kanya Kalyan Samitia in which and only 5 couples got married. He also arranged wedding a ceremony in Ramdheen Lawn near IT Crossroad on November 2 in which 21 girls got married.

Manish told that he arranges marriage only after mutual consent of both the families. There is also a condition according to which groom will have to gift jewellery worth 30 thousand rupees to his bride.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Cities / by Navbharat Times / November 30th, 2017

Singer Yatharth Ratnum nominated for MTV EMA 2017

Mumbai :

The Stage season 1 winner Yatharth Ratnum has been nominated for MTV EMA 2017 in London as Best Indian Act.

The singer exclaimed, “This is really amazing as I got nominated for my first single Continents. It’s cool because I am nominated against real heavyweights like Nucleya, Raja Kumari, Hard Kaur and Parekh and Singh.”

The singer is all excited that he is hearing wishes and messages from all the sides on being nominated. He said. “Everyone is sending me a message saying we voted 100 times as multiple voting is allowed. It’s a good feeling for me to be there.”

Talking about his success he said, “The Stage was a much-needed show as there are so many artistes in this country and they are craving to tell their story. The Stage gave me the platform where I was able to tell my story. I come from Varanasi and to me to do western music or English music is a big deal. Stage changed my life around, gave me so much and now I get to work with top people in the industry. I really feel fortunate to be the winner of the show.”

The voting line will be open until 11 November and the final result for Best Indian Act will be announced in London on 12 November.

source: http://www.radioandmusic.com / Radio and Music.com / Home> News / by RnM Team / October 17th, 2017

Miss West Bengal ’17 votes for cleanliness in her hometown

West Bengal: Miss West Bengal ’17 votes for cleanliness in her hometown | Agra News – Times of India

Agra:

During voting for civic body elections at ward no. 74 here on Wednesday, all eyes were on Shivankita Dixit, a 23-year-old who was crowned Miss West Bengal 2017, who turned up to vote.

Dixit, a resident of Manas Nagar, has been living with her aunt in Kolkata for a year, and had participated and won the contest in that state. She then auditioned for the Miss India contest in Mumbai. She returned to her hometown to vote for the civic body elections.

Wearing tiara on her head, Dixit told TOI, “My vote was for cleanliness. I want the winning candidate to give priority to creating garbage-free localities and clean roads. A clean environment is the first step to a healthy life.”

Apart from cleanliness issue, the local businessman Sanjay Dixit daughter said, “I’m not aware of Agra city, but in my locality, the residents are conservative. They don’t allow their daughters to go out and explore the world. My vote in civic body polls is also important because the mayoral candidate which I have voted for is expected toward empowerment of girls in the city.”

Shivankita Dixit completed her graduation from Dayalbagh University and is the first beautypageant winner from Agra.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Agra News / by Arvind Chauhan / TNN / November 23rd, 2017

Lucknow-born composer attempts weaving Chinese history, philosophy into a grand musical

Lucknow-born composer and conductor Vijay Upadhyaya is trying to capture the essence of Chinese history and philosophy into a grand musical composition.

Vijay Upadhyaya’s opera Chang’an Men tells the story of Chinese history and culture through music

In Chang’an Men, or The Gate of Eternal Peace, Lucknow-born composer and conductor Vijay Upadhyaya attempts what even Chinese musicians consider a daunting exercise: distilling the essence of Chinese history and philosophy into one grand musical composition.

Unveiled in Beijing on November 13 to a packed Beijing Concert Hall, Upadhyaya’s ambitious 80-minute symphony fuses Western and Chinese styles. It features an elaborate Western choral arrangement, several Chinese classical instruments and a southern Chinese folk singer.

It was an impressive debut, despite the fact that Upadhyaya had only a week with the China National Symphony Orchestra in Beijing. “This was the first time such a composition was commissioned by the government of China to a foreigner,” he said after the concert.

A naturalised Austrian who has lived in Vienna since 1987 and heads the music department at Vienna University, Upadhyaya has been visiting China regularly for a decade. Over the past two years, he has visited every six weeks to research Chinese history and philosophy, and it took him nearly a year to write the opera. “The opera basically tells the story of Chinese history and the roots of Chinese philosophy through music,” he explained as melodious sounds drifted through the grim, Soviet-style residential complex in north Beijing that forms the base for the China National Symphony Orchestra.

Upadhyaya says his hope for the symphony, which will be performed in Vienna next, “is to not only explain Chinese culture abroad but to their own people,” especially to the younger generation that’s forgotten its roots.

The first of the symphony’s four movements draws on the Lunyu, or Analects of Confucius, expressing the five traditional virtues of noble being, righteousness, proper conduct, wisdom and trustworthiness. A quintessentially Chinese piece, it ends with a sense of aggression that Upadhyaya says is meant to represent the chaos of the Warring States period and subsequent search for order that fuelled Confucian thought.

The second movement is inspired by the I Ching or Book of Change. It is slow and melodious, following the tones of language in the tradition of performances of old Chinese poetry. The ‘guzheng’-a stringed Chinese instrument-features prominently, played by musician Wei Ji of the China Central Conservatory of Music.

While this writer found the guzheng-heavy movement to be the most powerful one, Upadhyaya appears most passionate about the third movement. It features singer Cai Yayi performing Nanyin, a type of folk music from southeastern Fujian. “Nanyin is a dying art and she is one of few authentic artists trying to preserve it,” he says.

In India, Upadhyaya performed a similar orchestral arrangement using Tamil and Malayalam folk music, and plans to do so in Telugu and Kannada. He believes China is doing far more than India in promoting traditional culture and fast-fading folk arts. The Chinese government has invited him to be part of a “1,000 experts” programme to advise the government on promoting the arts and preserving traditions. “India and China are facing the same problem, and it’s not due to any political system but because of changes such as the media and globalisation. In India, it is being killed through Bollywood. Besides the Carnatic music tradition, there is the Hindustani music tradition but folk music is dead. The diversity is dying out.”

“The difference,” he says, “is that the government of China has a programme to try and keep this alive. This is a major policy emphasis and in India we simply haven’t seen any such effort.” But music is not the only arena where he feels China’s authoritarian government is outperforming Indian democracy. It’s also doing better in the fight against pollution and gender inequality, he says. “Working in China for 10 years, I don’t believe in democracy anymore,” he said. “India and China started in the 1970s at the same point, and look at where China is today.”

He laments that political squabbles have thwarted more cultural exchanges between India and China. “There is a big acceptance and respect for Indian culture in China, but I find that India is too defensive about the whole thing. They see us as a similar culture, but there seems to be a lobby in India that is against China. Maybe there are political issues in Arunachal or Kashmir, but you can also look at the positive points, whether business or culture.”

Starting a joint India-China orchestra, he suggests, would be one small step in addressing the disharmony. But that, for now, remains an unfinished symphony.

source: http://www.indiatoday.intoday.in / India Today / Home> News> Magazine> Leisure / by Ananth Krishnan / November 14th, 2017

Sitara Devi—still twinkling on Kathak scene

New Delhi (UNI):

On Wednesday, Google marked the 97th birth anniversary of eminent Kathak dancer Sitara Devi with a colourful Doodle.

The online search engine paid tribute to the legendary dancer for her vibrant energy, awesome footwork, and exceptional ability to bring a story to life.

Such was Sitara Devi’s passion for Kathak that even at the ripe age of 94 in 2014, she performed “ada” and “tukras” while sitting in a chair at a Haridas Sangeet Sammelan festival. In between her performances, she took a pill for her heart problem all the while coaxing the audience to make demands of her. “It will make me happy if you demand some tukra or ada from me because all I want to do is dance, dance and dance,” she said.

It is no wonder then, that she was anointed “Nritya Samragini” (Empress of Dance) by none other than Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore after he watched her performance when she was just 16.

Sitara Devi’s exquisite footwork is unparalleled and her adas were legendary. She could at once be coquettish as in “sarakti jaye rukh se naqab ahista ahista” and within seconds be an adoring mother in “thumak chalat ramchandra’’.

The danseuse was born on November 8, 1920 in Calcutta (now Kolkata) around Diwali and named “Dhan Lakshmi”. She was fondly called “Dhanno”. But later, as she spread her wings she came to be known as Sitara Devi.

Soon the family moved to Varanasi. Her father, Sukhdev Maharaj, was a Sanskrit scholar and also a Kathak dancer and musician. He is considered a source of the Benares gharana of Kathak. Her mother Matsya Kumari was related to the royal family of Nepal.

Those were the days when dance was not considered respectable and the sound of `ghungroos’ was related to prostitutes. Thus, Sukhdev Maharaj was forced to move out their residence in Kabir Chaura in Varanasi.

However, Sitara Devi’s fame as a Kathak danseuse spread far and wide. When she was just 13, film maker and dance director Narendra Sharma invited her to Bombay (now Mumbai) to perform in a film. Thereafter she performed in several films including Arzoo, Aurat Ka Dil, Nagina, Phool, Hulchul, Roti and Mughl-e-Azam among others.

Sitara Devi’s closeness to the film industry led her into two marriages with film personalities. She married K Azif of Mughl-e-Azam fame and then Pakistani and Indian Film producer and director Nazir Ahmed Khan. Both the marriages ended in separation and Sitara Devi remained married to her art till the end.

She, however, is credited with introducing the famous Benares gharana of Kathak in the Bombay film industry. She trained top heroines of the day including Madhubala, and Mala Sinha in Kathak.

Sitara Devi performed all over the world including at the Royal Albert Hall, London (1967) and the Carnegie Hall, New York (1976) and worked tirelessly to popularise the dance form.

In a career spanning six decades she was bestowed the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award and Padam Shri.

However, in 2002 she turned down Padam Bhushan saying she deserved the Bharat Ratna.

She said she did not grudge the award of Bharat Ratna to artistes like Ustad Bismillah Khan, Lata Mangeshkar and Pandit Ravi Shankar but she felt she deserved it as well.

The legendary artiste lives on in the hearts of her audiences, her numerous disciples and through her talented daughter Jayantimala Rishika, also a Kathak dancer.

Sitara Devi passed away on November 25, 2014.

UNI GP RSA 1544

source: http://www.uniindia.com / United News of India / Home> Features / by Gargi Parsai / November 13th, 2017

Kabir by the ghats: Mahindra Kabira Festival in Varanasi brings together finest musicians

Indian classical music’s finest and folk/fusion rock’s dependables came together along with speakers, authors and designers to draw from the wellspring of poet Saint Kabir

At the second edition of the Mahindra Kabira Festival in Varanasi last week, there was a connection between geography, history and art that few festivals in the country can claim to make successfully. Across two days, on November 11 and 12, Indian classical music’s finest and folk/fusion rock’s dependables came together along with speakers, authors and designers to draw from the wellspring of one of India’s near-mythical status poets, Saint Kabir.

As is the tradition in classical music festivals, including the Jodhpur RIFF, there were morning and evening sessions of performances across two days. You really haven’t experienced classical music in this kind of setting until you’ve heard santoor prodigy Kumar Sarang and tabla player Shrutisheel Uddhav render raag Bhairavi or veteran vocalist Rashmi Agarwal just as the mist over the Ganga river clears behind them and the sun comes into view. Kumar Sarang and Shrutisheel Uddhav share an excited smile as they perform, closing with added vocals from Kumar, using the Kabir couplet ‘Moko Kahan’.

What followed was a dastan-e-goi by Ankit Chadha, easily one of the best highlights for any music and non-music lover. This was where the festival’s main showcase of literature, music and culture came together with great modern relevancy, Chadha sitting and boldly talking about Kabir in a way that everyone understood, laughed and nodded in agreement to.

If Chadha had attained rockstar status by the end of his session, it was a sign of things to come on the music side of the festival. The Mahindra Kabira Festival had enlisted rockstars who knew their Kabir – Hindustani vocal veteran Shubha Mudgal (who closed proceedings on day one with stirring renditions of Kabir, including ‘Saheb Hain Rangrez’), master drummer Nathulal Solanki (world-renown for collaborating with everyone from Ben Walsh to Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead, but every bit humble as he performed on day two) and of course, folk fusion rocker Kailash Kher’s Kailasa. The band who closed proceedings at the festival were received with roaring applause throughout and Kher, still a jokey humble guy, managed to bring out all the hits at their highest volume, something that may have irked some of the classical music listeners who’d stayed to check it out.

The headline sessions were interspersed with acts that would be great new discoveries for any crossover crowd that wasn’t averse to contemporary retellings. Among the strongest storytellers of Kabir (and Rahim) was singer-songwriter Harpreet, who played his heart out twice at the festival. Meanwhile, Mumbai-based fusion act Maati Baani became a new discovery for many, their friendly energy (and Varanasi-bred French clarinet/saxophone player Madhav’s impeccable skill) keeping the crowd at Assi Ghat interested.

Although Maati Baani too picked ‘Moko Kahan’, Bengaluru-based Bindumalini and Chennai-based Vedanth Bharadwaj (on day one, at the Chhota Nagpur ka Bageehca stage) were a little more even-tempered in their presentation, picking Kabir and Kumar Gandharv works with help from percussionist Ajay Tipanya. Day one’s evening session mood-setters where dependable voices such as the versatile Vishnu Mishra and Rajasthani vocalist Mahesha Ram, whose rustic yet hypnotic music had everyone clapping along.

In between, nuggets of Kabir – courtesy of celebrity designer Aabha Dalmia and writer Vinayak Sapre (who linked economics, commerce and Kabir’s poetry with mixed results)—were proof enough that here is literature and history that is striving to be current. It’ll be interesting to see how the festival curates more names influenced by Kabir. Perhaps that would be a true testament of the saint poet’s relevancy, as well as the festival.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Entertainment> Music / by Anurag Tagat / November 21st, 2017

Poet of luminous silences

Kunwar Narain’s passing is also the loss of a whole literary world. He was of a generation of Hindi writers that confidently understood that in genuine culture and thinking there cannot be any boundaries.

Kunwar Narain, one of the greatest poets India has produced, was a poet of silences. In one of his notebooks, Dishaon Ka Khula Akash, he described silence not as the mere absence of noise. It was a place where one heard different sounds and echoes, perhaps more piercingly than what passes off as sound. One of these echoes is the echo of the eternal/the endless (anant). But these internal sounds of silence, while resonant, can also be unbearable, in his words, like a “black hole capable of absorbing anything.”

It would be impudent to try and describe Kunwar Narain’s varied and magnificent corpus of work. But every single line he wrote had that power to take you to that place where you heard the sound and the echoes of what our normal sounds render inaudible. It was as if you could hear the humming of all of existence inside you, in that silence he created.

This was true of his two great masterworks, Atmajayi and Vajshrava ke Bahane. They are based on the Kathopnishad. But they are not interpretations. They resonantly use Nachiketa as the eternal seeker, yet also our contemporary. Nachiketa questions Yama on Death and Existence. He questions his father on attachment and renunciation. You follow Nachiketa in his meditative questioning. And like Nachiketa, you literally feel the circle of your consciousness expanding till you hear the sounds of all that is immeasurable.

I suspect Nachiketa fascinated Kunwar Narain because of his fundamental honesty; an honesty that tames both Yama and Vajshrava. What strikes you most about Kunwar Narain’s work is exactly that trustworthy and luminous honesty. He was part of many literary movements, and his early work was included in “Teesra Saptak,” a modernist literary movement. He had strong values, often openly acknowledging the influence of the great Buddhist Socialist thinker Narendra Dev.

But what marks him out was that while he assimilated many trends and ideas, he never became a slave to any, nor deeply identified with them. Literary movements, like ideologies, construct the world through their own prism. Once they identify their respective hammers, the whole world begins to look like a nail to them. Kunwar Narain’s honesty was to understand insights, but to always be open to the world in its particularity. In his work you feel the world prodding you into reflection; not the world as an extension of your ideological, literary or aesthetic ego.

This quality sparkles not just in the range of poems on particular emotions and things, laughter, trees, rivers, language, time. It is evident in his elegiac historical tributes. This includes an extended poem on Kumarajiva, the man who literally transformed a whole culture through translation. It is at its striking best in his political and social poems — “Aaj ka Kabirdas,” “Lucknow”, “Gujarat” and many others written in the midst of communal violence and the Ramjanmabhoomi movement. But even in these poems, with their stunning literary qualities, Kunwar Narain successfully gets you to that point of silence, what Shrilal Shukla called his “wordlessness,” where you actually begin to think.

This is the point where language does not bewitch you. Kunwar Narain had strong values, beautifully articulated. But he never confused a display of values with the need to think. He always got you to the point where you began to hear all those inner echoes that the din of conventional politics had obscured. Some might argue that his poems are not, as is true of many Hindi poets, a call to arms. They are performances in controlled contemplation. But this quality also saved him in the end from so much of the misanthropy that creeps in through a superficial engagement with politics.

It is hard not to feel that Kunwar Narain’s passing is also the passing away of a whole literary world. He was of a generation of Hindi writers that confidently understood that in genuine culture and thinking there cannot be any boundaries. He was at home in European literature, and his last published work is translations of European poets. He wrote about European cinema with as much insight as he wrote about Indian classical music. He insightfully drew a series of contrasts between Kumar Gandharva and Pandit Jasraj.

The contrast he drew was this: The former blew the universe away with his rendition of Kabir; the latter probably the best exponent of Surdas. Kumar Gandharva gave you access to an almost blinding incandescence; Jasraj, through sur and the focus on the sagun form, had to perforce, take on the aesthetic world in its particulars. In a way, Kunwar Narain’s great gift was to inhabit, if one might say, the sagun and nirgun entry points into the universe. It paid unusual attention to all aesthetic detail, at the same time as it prepared the ground for a moment where you could transcend it.

This was also a Hindi world radical in its aspirations. The Hindi literary world was always fractious. But it still managed to hold onto deep ambitions. These days it is intellectually fashionable to say writers combined tradition with modernity, or the vernacular with the cosmopolitan, or identity with plurality. But the deeper radicalism was to take you to a point where these categories begin to reveal their limitations.

The aspiration was to liberate you from the trap of categories that mutilate out possibilities. One way or the other, we insist on dividing literature into sects and warring parties; literary criticism is defined more by its resentments than its power to reveal the world. Kunwar Narain always held onto one sign of true literary greatness: He was always unhoused in any of these distinctions.

For those do not read Hindi, Apurva Narain’s No Other World is a splendid bilingual text of his father’s poems. This volume is important because it sets new standards of translating poetry.

The Hindi world has suffered from the lack of good translators. Since Hindi literary production is scattered, the anthologies put together by Yatindra Mishra are also immensely valuable. He has been to Kunwar Narain what Henry Hardy was to Isaiah Berlin, tirelessly putting together everything Kunwar Narain wrote or said. That labour gives the picture of the poet as a whole.

These works will resonate. But it is difficult not to feel a sense of silence that his passing away brings. This is not the silence Kunwar Narain brought you to, where new voices become accessible to us. This silence has, more, the foreboding of darkness.

The author is vice-chancellor, Ashoka University. Views are personal

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Opinion> Columns / by Pratap Bhanu Mehta / November 18th, 2017

Royal Orchid Hotels Enters Kanpur Market

Situated at the heart of the city, “Regenta Central The Crystal” is just a 45 minutes drive from Kanpur airport, 6 KM from railway station and situated in close proximity to the main shopping destinations.

ROYAL ORCHID Hotels announced the opening of a hotel in Kanpur‘Regenta Central The Crystal” and taking the number of properties under Royal Orchid group to 45.

Situated at the heart of the city, “Regenta Central The Crystal” is a blend of modern amenities and traditional Indian hospitality. The hotel is just a 45 minutes drive from Kanpur airport, 6 KM from railway station and situated in close proximity to the main shopping destinations.

The hotel offers affordable luxury stays with multiple dining options to choose.“Regenta Central The Crystal” offers an array of F&B options to chose like Red Olive – an all day dining restaurant serves sumptuous delicacies from around the globe, 360 Degreeze – is a roof top lounge which serves fusion food and offers breathtaking view of the city and Gravity – our upscale discotheque where people unwind to thumping rhythm and foot–tapping beats.

Chander K. Baljee, Managing Director, Royal Orchid Hotels said, “We have added four properities –Mysore, Ahmedabad, Dehradun and Kanpur – in the current financial year. We are on target to take the number of properties to 50 under the Royal Orchid Group before the end of this financial year. We will continue to pursue our model of management contracts to build our hospitality business”.

source: http://www.bwhotelier.businessworld.in / BWHotelier.com / Home / by BW Online Bureau / November 17th, 2017

Old beauties rally for a cause

Navniet Sekera (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

In a bid to spread the message of ‘Don’t Drink and Drive’ and ‘Drive Safe and Phone Later’, a vintage car rally was organised by a city club recently. The rally was flagged off by Navniet Sekera, IG 1090, from 1090 crossing and concluded at a five-star hotel in Gomti Nagar.

Rati Narain and Aditi (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

Chief guest Arvind Kumar, principal secretary Home, UP, welcomed the participants at the end point. “A lot of accidents happen on a daily basis in Lucknow because of drunk driving and also because of people using mobile phones while driving. Together, we need to spread awareness among people regarding following the traffic rules and regulations,” said Kumar while addressing the participants.

Paritosh Chauhan (R) Sona and Alka (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

The vintaged beauties attracted a large number of spectators, both at the starting and end point. Several people took selfies with the vintage cars, while their owners were spotted protecting their cars from any kind of scratches during the process.

Paritosh Chauhan (R) Sona and Alka (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

Sandeep Narain came with his three priceless beauties – 1947 MG, 1936 Packard and 1961 Fiat Pininfarina. However, due to some technical fault, his 1961 Fiat Pininfarina stopped midway creating a small traffic congestion. Interestingly, Captain Paritosh Chauhan came with six of his vintage cars.
— By Prachi Arya

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / November 16th, 2017

Kaydence Media to promote Benares Artist Punam Rai globally

In an endeavor to promote Indian talent globally, Dubai – based Kaydence Media signed one of India’s talented and upcoming artists Punam Rai.

Dubai [UAE], (ANI-NewsVoir):

In an endeavor to promote Indian talent globally, Dubai – based Kaydence Media signed one of India’s talented and upcoming artists Punam Rai.

“My life is a miracle. I am today living, moving and painting because of the blessings of God. I want my voice to be heard all over the world through my paintings. I am a victim of the evil of dowry and have lived for 15-years bed-ridden with no hope of survival. I found my strength, my voice and my life back in my art. I want to tell the world – do not let others paint your life, you are the artist of your life,” said Punam.

Kaydence Media over the next two years have planned four exhibitions in India and Middle East to showcase the artworks of Rai.

“Punam Rai is an icon for all women not only in India but across the world. Life handed her a tragedy and she has overcome it with the beauty of art. We are humbled to represent her and her artwork in India and on a global stage. We believe that her artwork is exquisite, captivating and priceless. Her artwork can compete with the best artist in the world,” said Myrtle Rodrigues, CMO, Kaydence Media.

Punam Rai recently won the World Records India, Most Unique faces created in Canvas Record on August 10, 2017. (ANI-NewsVoir)

This is published unedited from the ANI feed.

source: http://www.india.com / India.com / Home> News> Agencies / by ANI Feeds / November 09th, 2017