New Delhi, Dec 21: Music sourced from the archival treasure trove of the National Centre for the Performing Arts, which includes rare recordings of legendary musicians such as Ustad Bismillah Khan, Hariprasad Chaurasia and Lalgudi Jayaraman among others would soon be out in a range of albums.
The Mumbai-based premier art and culture institution has inked a deal with Sony Music Entertainment that awards the global music giant exclusive license for a period of 20 years to commercially release some of its music from its archives.
“Masterworks from the NCPA archives”- The first set of 11 albums comprising original recordings of Pandit Jasraj, Ustad Bismillah Khan, Rashid Khan, Nikhil Banerjee, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Kumar Gandharva, Gangubai Hangal, Amjad Ali Khan, M L Vasanthakumari, M S Gopalakrishnan and Balamuralikrishna are already out in stores.
“This is one of the ways by which we would live up to our mission of preserving, presenting and promoting our culture, and in this particular case, to promote the best of Indian culture all over the world,” says Khushroo N Suntook, Chairman, NCPA.
“The royalties that the NCPA will receive from the sale of the archival music is intended to be ploughed back into the archiving and digitizing efforts, and be used to encourage young musicians with scholarships and indigenous artists,” he says.
Over next few months music recordings of other legendary artistes' is also expected to be released and made available worldwide in physical formats such as CDs, LPs etc. as well as in digital formats.
Presently, the NCPA and Sony Music have permission from the artistes (or their heirs) and accompanists for the release of their archival recordings present at the NCPA.
With over 5000 hours of exclusive audio recordings taken from live and studio performances and 1,200 hours of film footage of musicians - never released in the public arena, the NCPA's archives rank among one of the world's finest documentary resources for Indian music.
Over 200 artistes, with most of the stalwarts of Hindustani and Carnatic music genres, have been preserved in in controlled optimal conditions of pressure and humidity, in a specially-created studio environment.
“With the role of archives changing over the years and in order to make this legendary music accessible for masses across the globe, the NCPA took a decision to host a global tender application,” says Khushroo N Suntook, Chairman, NCPA.
Through this process, Sony Music was awarded the exclusive license by the NCPA for a period of 20 years, to commercially release some of the music stored in its archives.
The NCPA plans to plough back the royalty from the sale of the music to further propagate and preserve Indian classical music by setting up the Guru-Shishya Parampara method of teaching and scholarships for artistes.
After receiving permission for around 200 hours of recordings Sony Music officials say they are working towards securing permissions for more and plan to release even live recordings present in the Archives that were made during live concerts, ever since the 1970s, at a later stage.
Shridhar Subramaniam, President India and Middle East, Sony Music Entertainment, says, “The royalties we receive will be shared with the artistes, their families, accompanists and also towards promoting and preserving our rich musical heritage.”