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UstadImdad Khan (1848 – 1920) was asitar andsurbahar player. He was the first sitar player ever to be recorded.[1]
Imdad Khan is considered one of the founders of theEtawah gharana (Imdadkhani gharana) ofHindustani classical music.[1]
His two sonsEnayat Khan andWahid Khan, his grandsonsVilayat Khan andImrat Khan, and great-grandsonsShahid Parvez,Shujaat Khan,Nishat Khan,Irshad Khan,Wajahat Khan,Shafaatullah Khan, Azmat Ali Khan and Hidayat Khan have all upheld his musical tradition, musical luminaries themselves.[1][2]
Zila Khan the Sufi, classical and semi classical singer is the first female artist from this gharana, she is Vilayat Khan's daughter whom her father formally made a student also.[1]
Imdad Khan taught the sitar and surbahar to his two sons,Enayat andWahid Khan, whom he used to refer to as his two hands. Although both of them played the sitar and the surbahar,Enayat Khan specialized on the sitar andWahid Khan on the surbahar.[1][3]
Imdad Khan was born inAgra, as the fourth generation of what was to become theImdadkhaniGharana (school) orEtawah gharana, named after a village outside Agra where the family soon moved. He was taught by his father, Sahabdad Khan, a trained vocalist and self-taught sitar player, but Imdad came to greatly develop and define the family style and techniques. Imdad Khan was also trained by the legendary beenkar Bande Ali Khan (disciple and son-in-law of Haddu Khan). In the 19th Century, the instrumental classical music of North India was dominated by theSenia style, passed down through the musical dynasty ofMiyan Tansen's descendants, who played in thedhrupadang. Imdad instead evolved a style based on the newer, more popularkhyal singing. It is said that in his youth atEtawah, Imdad practiced on the sitar in a state ofchilla (isolation) for some twelve years. When he moved with his family toKolkata, the house in which they lived was named "Riyaz" (practice).[1]
The Imdad Khan family is of HinduRajput lineage.[4] The family is of Hindu origin and later converted to Islam. In an informal continuation of his rajput lineage UstadEnayat Khan (father of Ustad Vilayat Khan) kept a Hindu name of Nath Singh. Ustad Vilayat Khan himself composed many bandishes using the pen nameNath Piya.
Imdad attained great fame in his lifetime: he served as a court musician inMysore andIndore, and he was the first sitar player ever to be recorded. Some of these recordings have been released on CD, on theGreat Gharanas: Imdadkhani compilation in RPG/EMI'sChairman's Choice series.[1]
^ "Hamare Sangit Ratna", a treatise on great Ustads of India