[Reader-list] Bang the Drum Slowly

Dilip D'Souza -- Sarai dilip.sarai at gmail.com
Fri May 19 23:41:13 IST 2006


Dear All,

Here's one more essay in my Sarai theme, Villages in the City.

cheers,
dilip d'souza.

----


Bang the Drum Slowly
--------------------
Dilip D'Souza


Standing on a corner near Charni Road Station one April morning, I'm
chewing on a bit of bubble gum and trying not to feel the heat.
Hanging from a nail on the large tree to my right is one of those
small but colourful portraits of gods. Another nail has a sign
advertising Star Pest Control. Behind me are the stairs to the foot
overbridge that leads to the station. On one of the pillars supporting
the stairs is a sign that says: "Required Urgently Smart Female
Computer Operator, Work Time 10 am to 8 pm."

Under the tree is an old woman, squatting on the pavement. She is
obviously suffering from a serious case of leucoderma, but that's not
really why I notice her. No, I notice her when she pours a few mugs of
water over a small area of the pavement. Then she reaches into a bag
behind her and pulls out a cake of soap. She uses it to scrub the wet
pavement. Then she reaches into the bag for a rag, with which she
wipes the soapy pavement dry.

Then she pulls towards her a small pile of dirty clothes that I hadn't
noticed before. Squatting there, she washes them, scrubbing them one
by one on her patch of pavement that is now soaped clean. Very clean.

My introduction to Thakurdwar.

Walking in from there, the lanes generally go off at right angles, so
you'd think it would be easy to keep track of them. But they wind
about, and we take so many, that I soon have no idea where we are. I
mean, we're in Thakurdwar -- or is it now Girgaum, or CP Tank perhaps?
-- but standing on one street looking up at the building opposite, I
realize slowly that I cannot retrace in my mind the route we've taken
over the last half hour or so, to get here. It surprises me, because I
pride myself on my sense of direction. But not here.

Not that I'm worried, and in fact it turns out that where we are is
only a turn or two away from a major street through the area. No, my
temporary befuddlement is just a confirmation of how close and
intricate is the web of lanes in this part of Bombay.

The building opposite is not particularly interesting. (Perhaps I am
expecting one like the great edifice at a junction nearby that says,
across its top, "Kamalabai N Brahmandkar Hall"). But behind me is a
small open doorway that I would not have looked at twice, except now I
catch a hint of movement in the darkened space inside. I do look
twice, and the movement is from a man working on a tabla.

Have to go in.

He's sitting cross-legged in the long narrow room, a wiry man in his
50s. He's applying a black paste on the sound surface of the tabla, to
produce the large round black spot that all tablas have. The paste is
made from a black powder he has in a bottle. "It's called
tabla-ka-shai, and it comes from Bhavnagar", he says. "Here," and he
hands me the bottle, "feel how heavy it is."

And it is. The little bottle is less than half-full, but it's
unexpectedly heavy. He applies the powder, then uses a large black
stone in a sort of massaging motion on the flat surface, again and
again, smoothening and polishing the black spot. Something about his
diligence reminds me of the woman, scrubbing the pavement and her
clothes. The skin itself once belonged to a goat. The strips that hold
it in place, that must be moved about to tune the instrument, are from
a cow's hide.

This is Ravindra V Patankar, third-generation tabla maker. The room is
filled with tablas and dholaks and pakhwajs (the two-sided drum known
in the south as a mridangam). There are so many that I get the uncanny
impression that the room is also filled with drumming: is that a
sawal-jawab I hear? The one he's working on is made from a bright
silver-plated pot, and ones like that are the most common in the shop.
Others are made from gleaming brass, duller copper, there are even a
couple of wood instruments. Some look new, but many have clearly been
heavily used, the best evidence for that coming from the fading,
sometimes crumbling black spots. Those have been left for Ravindra to
restore.

"It's a lot of hard work," Ravindra tells us. "For example, this one"
-- he points to the tabla he's working on -- "will take me four
hours!" He smiles wryly, looking faintly surprised himself that he
will be that long attending to this one instrument. Four hours, only
to put the black Bhavnagar powder on, stick it there with a paste made
from maida, and use this stone to smoothen it.

"It's a special stone," says Ravindra, showing me the gleaming black
thing in his hand. "You don't get it everywhere." Oh? And where did it
come from? "I don't know," he says. "I have two from my father's time.
They don't wear out easily, but if I do need a new one, I'll have to
pay Rs 250 or 300." And the skins? "Kolhapur or Solapur. We don't buy
skins from Gujarat, they are often fakes."

A smooth stone, real skins and black powder from Bhavnagar: if you
want to set up a tabla business, these are the essentials.

It was Ravindra's grandfather, Yashwant Mahadeo Patankar, who first
set up shop here, over a hundred years ago. Business was good for a
long time, because there was an abiding interest in classical music --
in the arts, generally -- in this particularly Marathi neighbourhood.
On Yashwant's death, the shop passed to Ravindra's father, Vasant, and
later to Ravindra. In fact, it is named after his father -- "Vasant
Yashwant Patankar & Sons". As he tells me with some pride: "we have a
name in this business." Today, Ravindra runs the shop with his wife
Sugandha.

But in there is the first sign that things are changing. Tucked amidst
the cornucopia of percussion instruments is a stately old ... sewing
machine. Sugandha Patankar supplements the family income -- the shop's
income -- with tailoring jobs. "It's no longer possible," explains
Ravindra, "to make enough money just on the tabla work. After me, the
shop will close down."

Why?

Three reasons.

One, Sugandha and Ravindra have only one child, a daughter about
twenty, and she is not remotely interested in his tabla business. Not
even in classical music?

His wry smile back, Ravindra responds almost apologetically: "She
likes film music."

Two, what he calls "readymade" tablas are ruining his business
("barbaad" or "destruction" is the word he uses). Few want to pay for
the careful handmade quality of his tablas. "My father taught us never
to spoil our name by caring about money," says Ravindra, "but these
days people only look at money, they don't care about our name!"

Three, there's been a serious dwindling of interest in music and the
arts over the last couple of decades, particularly in this Marathi
heartland. Many Marathi speakers have moved out of here, but is that
the whole explanation? I don't know, but I'm reminded of so many
others who mourn the fading away of Marathi literature, theatre, film
... and now this.

"Yeh kala hai," Ravindra says about his work. "It's an art. And after
I'm gone, there will be nobody to do it."

On my way out of Thakurdwar a few hours later -- oh yes, I found my
way out -- I climb the stairs to Charni Road station. Smart Female
Computer Operators are still Required Urgently, I note irrelevantly.
The old woman is still there too. Clothes done, she sits on the patch
of pavement she had scrubbed clean. In the blur of commuters who rush
past, she's almost lost.



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