September 16 2014 was 37th Death Anniversary of Kesarbai
Kerkar (केसरबाई केरकर).
Philip Ball:
"Music is the most remarkable blend of art and science, logic
and emotion, physics and psychology, known to us."
जी ए कुलकर्णी, 'घर', 'पिंगळावेळ', 1977:"…तिला एकदा तिचे घर मिळाले की मी सुटलो. मग मोडीत निघालेल्या माझ्या ठोकायंत्राची मला भीती नाही. केंव्हा का बंद पडेना ते ! मग शेजारी सिगरेटचे एक पूर्ण पाकीट असावे. एखादा दरबारी छबिना चौघडे-तुताऱ्या वाजवत डौलाने यावा, त्याप्रमाणे वाटणारा मालकंस टेपरेकॉर्डवर तासभर उलगडत असावा ..."
Yuval Noah Harari, author of 'Sapiens: A Brief History of
Humankind', 2014, in The Guardian podcast:
"...But if you take an outsider's perspective, a kind
of cosmic perspective, what did humans do for the rest of the cosmos, the rest
of the planet, then it is a very gloomy conclusion. I don't think we have done
anything positive for anybody except ourselves so..."
Maybe we have done something positive for the rest of the cosmos. By sending there the Voyager Golden Records aboard the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecrafts that were launched in 1977.
Kesarbai's is the
only Indian voice on them. The title of her song there is Jaat Kahaan Ho (जात कहाँ हो)...Where Are You Going? She seems to be asking Voyager and us.
Voyager- in August 2014 at a distance of 1.919×1010 km away from earth- may answer that with more accuracy than us, homo sapiens.
Voyager- in August 2014 at a distance of 1.919×1010 km away from earth- may answer that with more accuracy than us, homo sapiens.
Why did we send Kesarbai and a few others to the stars?
Philip Ball has written a whole book-'The Music Instinct / How Music Works and Why We Can’t Do
Without It', 2010- to answer that.
Mr. Ball writes at the start of his book:
"...Fourteen billion miles away from Earth, Johann Sebastian
Bach’s music is heading towards new listeners. An alien civilization
encountering the Voyager 1 or 2 spacecraft, launched in 1977 and now drifting
beyond our solar system, will discover a golden gramophone record on which they
can listen to Glenn Gould playing the Prelude and Fugue in C from the second
book of The Well-Tempered Clavier. You couldn’t fit much on a long-playing
record in 1977, but there was no room for a more extensive record collection –
the main mission of the spacecraft was to photograph and study the planets, not
to serve as an interstellar mobile music library. All the same, offering extraterrestrials
this glimpse of Bach’s masterwork while denying them the rest of it seems
almost an act of cruelty. On the other hand, one scientist feared that
including Bach’s entire oeuvre might come across as an act of cosmic boasting..."
Sending Kesarbai's Malkauns- as elaborated by S Anand in The Caravan, September 16 2014- too might come across as an act of cosmic boasting.
Raga Lalat and Raga Malkauns
Artist of disc jacket: Unknown to me
Picture courtesy: HMV/ EMI India and Blog Anthems for the Nation of Luobaniya