Suramani Pandit Raghunath Panigrahi ରଘୁନାଥ ପାଣିଗ୍ରାହୀ | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Gunupur, Odisha, India | 10 August 1932
Died | 25 August 2013 Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India | (aged 81)
Genres | Odissi music |
Occupation(s) | Odissi music Guru, singer, composer |
Years active | 1956-2013 |
'Suramani' Pandit Raghunath Panigrahi (Odia: ରଘୁନାଥ ପାଣିଗ୍ରାହୀ, romanized: Raghunātha Pāṇigrāhi; 10 August 1932 – 25 August 2013) was an Odissi music Guru, vocalist, composer and music director.[1] He is most known for his renditions of Jayadeva's Gita Govinda and his vocal support for his wife, the Odissi danseuse Sanjukta Panigrahi. Raghunath belonged to a family associated with Odissi music for centuries, members of which were 19th-century Odissi poet-composer Sadhaka Kabi Gourahari Parichha and Gayaka Siromani Apanna Panigrahi who was the royal musician (raja-sangitagya) of Paralakhemundi.[2] He started his musical training from his father Pt Neelamani Panigrahi, who had been collecting traditional Odissi melodies of the Gita Govinda from the Jagannatha Temple of Puri.[3] Later, Raghunath continued learning Odissi music under Pt Narasingha Nandasarma and Pt Biswanatha Das.[4] He was widely known as 'Gitagobinda Panigrahi'.
He also sang in popular Odia, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu movies. Raghunath left a promising career in film music in Chennai to provide vocal support to his wife, Sanjukta Panigrahi, a legendary Odissi performer and composer.[5] He made a lifetime contribution of promoting, propagating and popularizing the life and works of Jayadeva and the cult of Lord Jagannatha. Sanjukta-Raghunath played for many years from the 1960s until the 1990s.
After the death of Sanjukta in 1997, he was associated with the Nrityagram and gave music for many of their productions.[6] He formed the 'Sanjukta Panigrahi Memorial Trust', in 1999, to promote the cause of Odishi dance. Since 2001, every year on her birth anniversary, the trust has been giving away scholarships to budding dancers, and awards excellence in the field of Orissi dance.[7][8]
My father Pandit Neelamani Panigrahi was a great scholar in Sanskrit, music & philosophy and was also a freedom fighter of his time. During 1936, he was encouraged to collect detailed information about singers of Gitagovinda of different states. He used to visit Shri Jagannath Temple, Puri for rendering Ashtapadis before Lord Jagannath. In 1942, my father started teaching me Gitagovinda. I took eight years to complete the twenty four devotional verses. Since then I started singing these heartfelt compositions in music conferences and in front of Lord Jagannath consistently. With the blessings of Lord Jagannath, my father made an effort to globalise Gitagovinda through me and succeeded when he got an invitation to attend the silver jubilee music conference at Madras. There he was asked to express his views about the great poet Jayadeva. He demonstrated all the verses in different styles through my blessed vocal talent. These styles were collected from Jagannath Temples, Puri & Amlapuram. These styles of presenting the verses not only captivated the people of Madras but also each and every part of the country & abroad. The immense love and appreciation from the people led me to many invitations from various temples and music festivals, flooding my music carrier.