|
Nepal: The History EndsTuesday,
23 November 2004, 5:13 pm Article: Indra
Adhikari |
Nepal: The History Ends
By Indra Adhikari
Nepalese mourned the thirteenth day of the dead music veteran
Shiva Shankar Manandhar on Sunday. They promised to keep up his
aspirations of music promotion in the country.

Bhuwan Chand, the co-star of Aama film gives
final farewell to shiva shankar. photo by Sagar
Shrestha.
Shiva Shankar Manandhar, who has influenced virtually every
aspect of Nepalese music for 50 years, died of lung cancer last
week. He was 72.
During the past four decades, his name has probably been
mentioned more often in books, journals, lectures and conversations
about Nepalese music than any other musician. His music was both
patriotic and sentimental?among the most touching songs of his
generation?and spoke to people of all ages. If he is remembered by
posterity it will be for his contribution to the development of
Nepalese music while preserving its heritage and originality.
Shiv Shankar's co-workers describe him as a man of destiny and
remarkable generosity, someone who was down-to-earth and deeply
committed to his work. Premdhoj Pradhan recalls the days when Shiv
Shankar would work for a week to give a song one final touch. He was
even stubborn and demanding with words, forcing them to do as he
willed. He worked odd hours; he worked without food. He would refuse
to meet visitors without an appointment.
Those who have associated with him closely say he was a man with
an impeccable sense of timing, in his music and his work. His habit
of sticking firmly to a schedule helped him to build Radio Nepal,
which had just been formed when he joined it in 2007 B.S. There was
fierce competition for positions there, as it was the only medium at
the time that reached the general public. Radio Nepal attracted
great talent but also needed an able person to coordinate and manage
it. Shiv Shankar proved to be the right person for the position.
Commercial music in Nepal was in its infancy when Shiv Shankar
started his career. Except for a few performances on public stages,
there was little opportunity for music to grow. Indian music enjoyed
a dominant position. Promoting Nepalese music to new heights was the
goal; Radio Nepal became the medium, and Shiv Shankar became the
model. He was an impresario, producer, composer and arranger who did
much to expand the popularity of Nepalese music.
According to Pradhan, Shiv Shankar was the father of the adhunik
geet, the modern Nepalese song. The trend he started led to the
revolution in the music industry and eventually to the rise of pop
music that has won the hearts of youngsters. In his four decades of
service to Radio Nepal, Nepalese music grew into full flower. In the
beginning, when there were only lok geet, folk songs. The
introduction of modern styles drew criticism, but Shiv Shankar
eventually won listeners over. His fans, music lovers and aspiring
musicians sent him letters: He replied to all with handwritten
responses that were invariably positive and encouraging.
Shiv Shankar always favored change. He encouraged emerging
artists and promoted music, even pop songs, always stressing
originality and musical roots. He was fond of using the newest
technologies available to make the work easier and the music better.
He taught his prot駩s fairness and loyalty, concentration and
dedication to their work.
Shiv Shankar's career began in his late teens; he joined Radio
Nepal at 19, along with Koili Devi, Natikaji, Pannakaji, Hari Prasad
Rimal and Bhairab Bahadur Thapa. His first song, "Yo Kholako Pani,
Euta Rumal Dhundaima Din Jane," was recorded in 2015 B.S. in Mumbai.
In 2021 B.S. Shiv Shankar played the lead role in "Aama," the first
film made in Nepal. Although he did not act in any other film, the
exposure advanced his career, and he, in turn, worked to advance the
Nepalese film industry. Shiv Shankar wrote the music for more than
1,200 songs, sang more than 300 of those and composed music for more
than a dozen films. For his contribution he was showered with many
laurels, the most recent of those was the Natikaji Memorial award,
which was presented to him just days before his death.
Shiv Shankar was not motivated by personal success and cared
little for money. He was simple, quiet and shy. He liked to dress in
simple clothes; his favorite dress was a brown safari suit. He was
known to enjoy a drink and was a heavy smoker. The lung cancer that
killed him was probably a result of smoking, even though he quit the
habit three years ago at the request of his friends.
He was very devout, passing most mornings in his prayer room.
Until recent years a walk in the mornings was a part of his daily
schedule, and he was active in his neighborhood in Kalimati.
Shiv Shankar was born to Man Bahadur and Ram Maya on Falgun 12,
1989 B.S. on the day of Shivaratri, at New Road in Kathmandu. He
attained his bachelor's degree in music from Kalanidhi Indira
Sangeet Mahavidhyalaya and then devoted himself to his chosen
career. In his 41 years of service at Radio Nepal, Nepalese music
grew into full bloom. Hundreds of his students followed his lead:
The strength and variety of Nepalese music today will give peace to
his departed soul.
On the last day of Tihar, at around six in the evening, Shiv
Shankar passed away at the Bhaktapur Cancer Hospital. His three
sons, Gauri, Ravi and Shashi, performed his last rites at Aryaghat
on Monday evening, the day following his death. Shiv Shankar's
demise has brought to a close an important chapter in the history of
Nepalese music. But his life's work has opened many more.
*** Donate to World Vision ***
*** Donate to
Tear Fund ***
10 Beirut
Apartment Buildings To Be Bombed For Every Haifa Missile Strike -
IAF Officer - A high-ranking IAF officer caused a storm on
Monday in an off-record briefing during which he told reporters that
IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Dan Halutz had ordered the military to
destroy 10 buildings in Beirut in retaliation to every Katyusha
rocket strike on Haifa. The officer said that the equation was
created by Halutz and that every rocket strike on Haifa would be
answered by IAF missile strikes on 10 12-story buildings in the
Beirut neighborhood of Dahiya, a Hizbullah stronghold. See...
10 Beirut
Buildings Bombed For Each Haifa Missile See also...
150
Terrorists Liquidated Since Soldier Kidnapping
Dahr Jamail Reports From Beirut & Baghdad - Hundreds
of Lebanese refugees languish in a city park in downtown Beirut.
Fleeing southern Lebanon, as well as south Beirut, thousands have
already made their way through this camp as they are farmed out to
schools, abandoned buildings and anyone ... See... Dahr Jamail:
"Aren't People Seeing All of This?" ---/--- "Habibi, to live in
Baghdad now is to live in a big prison," he told me recently, "You
stay in your home, and that's it. You only go out when you must. So
many are being killed daily, and you only hope that your day to die
is not today." See... Jamail:
Lebanon Bleeds, Iraq Burns, People Flee
BREAKING NEWS LINKS:
New York - Security Council
Calls for Comprehensive Israeli Inquiry Into Killing of UN
Peacekeepers New York, Jul 27 2006 6:00PM Voicing its shock and
distress at the Israeli Defence Forces' (IDF) killing of four
unarmed United Nations military observers in southern Lebanon on
Tuesday, the Security Council today called on the Israeli Government
to conduct a full investigation. See... Call for
Israeli Inquiry Into Peackeeper Killing
ALSO
United Nations - UN to Send
More Emergency Supplies to S Lebanon
United Nations - UN-Israel
inquiry into peacekeeper deaths proposed
United Nations - UNSG Shocked
By Coordinated Israeli Attack on UN
Vatican -
The results of the crisis talks in Rome regarding Lebanon were
significant, said the Vatican secretary for relations with states,
even though an immediate cease-fire was not achieved. See... Cease-fire
Is Possible and Necessary, Says Vatican
Rome -
Deploring the "horrendous and dangerous" situation in Lebanon,
Secretary-General Kofi Annan today proposed a three-part strategy
involving an immediate cessation of hostilities and wide-ranging
political and economic commitments to solve a crisis that has killed
hundreds of people and forced around 800,000 others to flee their
homes. See... Annan
recommends three-pronged Lebanon solution
ALSO:
United Nations - Annan
Remarks to Conference on Lebanon
Tyre, Lebanon
- Dirty bandages hid the worst of 8-year-old Zainab Jawad's swollen,
bloodied nose Monday. Her arm, fractured in two places, was strapped
to her chest. See... Israel Drops
White Phosphorus Bombs On Children
New York - The
United Nations Security Council today discussed the future of the UN
Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) as the force reported further
heavy exchanges of fire between Hezbollah and Israeli Defence Forces
(IDF) close to its positions in the south of the country. See... Council
Debates UN Force in South Lebanon
ALSO:
United Nations - Disproportionate
Force Used in Gaza, Says Official
United Nations - UN Food
Agency Supplies Are Distributed in
Lebanon
Washington - A delegation from Saudi
Arabia asked President Bush on Sunday to push for a cease-fire in
the conflict between Israel and the terrorist group Hezbollah -
something the United States has refused to do. See... Saudis Urge
Bush to Push for Cease-Fire in the ME
Rome - With
violence continuing to tear through Lebanon for a twelfth day,
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan leaves for Rome today
for an international meeting aimed at resolving the crisis,
expressing hope that concrete measures will emerge from discussions
there. See... Annan Heads
to Rome in Search of Lebanon Measures
See also... Full
Coverage: Israel Attacks Lebanon (Part III), (Part
II) & (Part
I)