Rashid Khan

Musician

Popular As Rashid Khan (musician)

Birthday July 1, 1968

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Sahaswan, Budaun, Uttar Pradesh, India

DEATH DATE 2024-1-9, Kolkata, West Bengal, India (55 years old)

Nationality India

#54986 Most Popular

1909

He received his initial training from his maternal grand-uncle, Ustad Nissar Hussain Khan (1909–1993).

He was also the nephew of Ustad Ghulam Mustafa Khan.

As a child he had little interest in music.

His uncle Ghulam Mustafa Khan was among the first to note his musical talents, and for some time trained him in Mumbai.

However, he received his main training from Nissar Hussain Khan, initially at his house in Badayun.

A strict disciplinarian, Nissar Hussain Khan would insist on voice training (Swar Sadhana) from four in the morning, and make Rashid practise one note of the scale for hours on end.

A whole day would be spent on practising just a single note.

Although Rashid detested these lessons as a child, the disciplined training showed in his easy mastery of taan and layakaari later.

It was not until he was 18 that Rashid began to truly enjoy his musical training.

1968

Rashid Khan (1 July 1968 – 9 January 2024) was an Indian classical musician in the Hindustani tradition.

He belonged to the Rampur-Sahaswan gharana, and was the great-grandson of gharana founder Inayat Hussain Khan.

He was married to Soma Khan.

In a story told in several versions, Pandit Bhimsen Joshi once remarked that Rashid Khan was the "assurance for the future of Indian vocal music".

Rashid Khan was born in Sahaswan, Badayun, Uttar Pradesh on 1 July 1968.

1978

Rashid Khan gave his first concert at age eleven, and the following year, 1978, he performed at an ITC concert in Delhi.

1980

In April 1980, when Nissar Hussain Khan moved to the ITC Sangeet Research Academy (SRA), Calcutta, Rashid Khan also joined the academy at the age of 14.

1994

By 1994, he was acknowledged as a musician (a formal process) at the academy.Rashid Khan total net worth is said to be US$4 million which is INR 30 crores.

The Rampur-Sahaswan gayaki (style of singing) is closely related to the Gwalior gharana, which features medium-slow tempos, a full-throated voice and intricate rhythmic play.

Rashid Khan included the slow elaboration in his vilambit khayals in the manner of his maternal grand-uncle and also developed exceptional expertise in the use of sargams and sargam taankari (play on the scale).

He was influenced by the style of Amir Khan and Bhimsen Joshi.

He was also a master of the tarana like his guru but sang them in his own manner, preferring the khayal style rather than the instrumental stroke-based style for which Nissar Hussain was famous.

There was no imitation of instrumental tone.

His renderings stood out for the emotional overtones in his melodic elaboration.

He said: "The emotional content may be in the alaap, sometimes while singing the bandish, or while giving expression to the meaning of the lyrics."

This brought a touch of modernity to his style, as compared to the older maestros, who tended to place greater emphasis on impressive technique and skilful execution of difficult passages.

Rashid Khan also experimented with fusing pure Hindustani music with lighter musical genres, e.g. in the Sufi fusion recording Naina Piya Se (songs of Amir Khusro), or in experimental concerts with western instrumentalist Louis Banks.

He also performed jugalbandis, along with sitarist Shahid Parvez and others.

Rashid Khan died on January 9, 2024, at a private hospital in Kolkata.

He had been battling cancer for a long time.

After being diagnosed with prostate cancer, Khan sought medical attention at the Tata Memorial Cancer Hospital.

He later chose to pursue exclusive treatment in Kolkata.

Khan initially showed positive responses to the treatment.

But his condition got worse on 23 December 2023, and he was admitted to the hospital, where he was placed on a ventilator for oxygen support and died at the age of 55.

2006

He was awarded the Padma Shri, as well as the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 2006.

He was awarded the Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian award, in 2022 by the Indian Government in the field of Art.