This is the original harmonium bought in Lahore by
Mahamateshwari which she used to play in Mussoorie. There was a music teacher
who taught her many verses of Ghalib etc which were all very sad. Like
Dil hee to hai na sango khist dard se bhar na
aaye kyon
Royenge ham hazaar baar koyi hamen
sataaye kyon
It is but a heart and not a piece of stone that it be not
filled with pain,
Weep I will a thousand times, let no one come to disturb me
Amongst the other songs that she sang were:
“Shankar Bhole Bhaale, bhakton ke
rakhvaale, tumko laakhon parnaam”
O Shankar, Thou sweet and innocent
Shankar, the Preserver of devotees,
Thousands of prostrations to Thee!
“Hamaari aankhon men bas rahe hain,
Idhar hain Raghuvar, udhar Kanhayiyaa
Utthaa ke prithvi kaa bhaar donon idhar hain
Raghuvar udhar Kanhayiyaa
Thou art before my eyes, as Raghuvar on
one side, and Kanhayiyaa on the other!
Carrying the burden of the earth, yes,
Raghuvar on one side, and Kanhayiyaa on
the other
Then there would be the melancholic ghazals of Ghalib,
which a music teacher had taught her:
Then there was her song which she used to sing, while standing
after the Arti, on all HH birthdays without the harmonium:
"Prabhu mere sharan teri main aayaa"
O Lord, thou art mine, I seek refuge in Thee,
From the make and brand of the Harmonium, it looks like a
style of Harmonium called "Lahore Flute" which was intonated and made
at Anrakali Bazzar itself. The same area of Lahore were Mahamateshwariji used
to stay. "Lahore Flute" was made by Late Sardar Harcharan Singh Sachdeva, a master
in the field of Indian Musical Instruments. After partition they shifted to Delhi
and started the Lahore Music House. It still sells its Harmonium brand
"Lahore Flute". Its address is
- 3705 Netaji Subhash Marg, Darya Ganj, Next
to Moti Mahal Restaurant, New Delhi – 110002 Tel: +91-11-232-71-305
A harmonium is a free-standing keyboard instrument. Sound
is produced by air being blown through sets of free reeds, resulting in a sound
similar to that of an accordion. The air is usually supplied by bellows
operated by the foot, hand, or knees.
Mahamateshwari’s
Harmonam has the best quality Belgian Reeds. All good quality reeds used to be
imported from Belgium or Germany. Belgian and German Jubilate/Harmola Harmonium
Reeds (as seen in the adjacent photo) are brass reeds used in Indian harmoniums that were manufactured in Belgium
and Germany between 1911 and the early 1960s. In the 1930s and 1940s the
factories started exporting the reeds to India where Indian style hand-pumped
harmoniums had become very popular creating the demand and a market for the Belgian
and German Jubilate/Harmola reeds.
In the early 1960s
the factory making the Jublilate/Harmola organ reeds, having changed hands
several times and now situated in post World War II East Germany (GDR), was
taken over by the communist government and the reed making machinery was
destroyed. This marked the end of German Jubilate reed production. In the late
1970s India had also issued a ban on the importing of any Belgian or German
made Harmonium reeds to boost sales and promote the production of harmonium
reeds now being made in India. As a result the demand and the value of the
reeds increased as did the scarcity of availability. Today Belgian and German
Jubilate/Harmola reeds are highly prized and sought after by players of Indian
harmoniums in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh as well as around the globe.
Harmoniums consist of banks of brass reeds (metal tongues
that vibrate when air flows over them), a pumping apparatus, stops for drones
(some models feature a stop that causes a form of vibrato), and a keyboard.
Harmoniums are made with one, two, three or, occasionally, six sets of reeds.
Classical instrumentalists usually use one-reed harmoniums, while a musician
who plays for a qawaali usually uses a three-reed harmonium which overall makes
the sound fuller.
Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein (1723–1795), professor of
physiology at Copenhagen, was credited with the first free-reed instrument made
in the Western world, after winning the annual prize in 1780 from the Imperial
Academy of St. Petersburg.[1] The harmonium's design incorporates free reeds
and derives from the earlier regal. Alexandre Debain improved GreniƩ's
instrument and gave it the name harmonium when he patented his version in 1840.
At the peak of the instruments' Western popularity around
1900, a wide variety of styles of harmoniums were being produced. These ranged
from simple models with plain cases and only four or five stops (if any at
all), up to large instruments with ornate cases, up to a dozen stops and other
mechanisms such as couplers.
The invention of the electronic organ in the mid-1930s
spelled the end of the harmonium's success in the West. The last mass-producer
of harmoniums in the West was the Estey company, which ceased manufacture in
the mid-1950s. As the existing stock of instruments aged and spare parts became
hard to find, more and more were either scrapped or sold. The majority of
Western harmoniums today are in the hands of enthusiasts, though the instrument
remains popular in South Asia.
During the mid-19th century, missionaries brought
French-made hand-pumped harmoniums to India. The instrument quickly became
popular there: it was portable, reliable and easy to learn. In Kolkata,
Dwarkanath Ghose of the Dwarkin company modified the imported harmony flute and
developed the hand-held harmonium, which has subsequently become an integral
part of the Indian music scenario. Though derived from the designs developed in
France, the harmonium was developed further in India in unique ways, such as
the addition of drone stops and a scale-changing mechanism. It has remained
popular to the present day, and the harmonium remains an important instrument
in many genres of Indian music. For example, it is a staple of vocal North
Indian classical music concerts. It is commonly found in Indian homes.
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