Changes between Version 2 and Version 3 of Keshavrao Vaman Bhole


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Timestamp:
Jun 12, 2013, 8:39:51 AM (11 years ago)
Author:
UshaR
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  • Keshavrao Vaman Bhole

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    4 Music director born in Amravati, Maharashtra. Exposure to Western orchestras accompanying silent films prompted him to experiment successfully with orchestral compositions: ‘The tones of the instruments, their timbre and how such diverse instruments could play together without sounding atonal, engaged my mind,’ he wrote in his book Mazhe Sangeet: Rachana Ani Digdarshan (1964). First introduced piano, Hawaiian guitar and violin for Vartak’s vanguard play Andhalyanchi Shala, staged by the Natyamanwantar group (1933). The music also performed the unusual function of tying the play to a fixed running time. Moved to [[Prabhat Studio]] (1933), replacing the more orthodox [[Govindrao Tembe]], and scored some of the studio’s best-known hits. For [[Amritmanthan]], the actors rehearsed to a score played live, tuning their performance rhythm to the music. The scales were also chosen to counterpoint the actors’ speaking voices. Bhole’s impact on performance idioms is most evident in [[Sant Tukaram]], where [[Vishnupant Pagnis]]’s outstanding achievement owes much to the score. Left Prabhat with [[Raja Nene]], [[Dharmadhikari]] et al., working with them independently for some years. 
     4Music director born in Amravati, Maharashtra. Exposure to Western orchestras accompanying silent films prompted him to experiment successfully with orchestral compositions: ‘The tones of the instruments, their timbre and how such diverse instruments could play together without sounding atonal, engaged my mind,’ he wrote in his book Mazhe Sangeet: Rachana Ani Digdarshan (1964). First introduced piano, Hawaiian guitar and violin for Vartak’s vanguard play Andhalyanchi Shala, staged by the Natyamanwantar group (1933). The music also performed the unusual function of tying the play to a fixed running time. Moved to [[Prabhat Studio]] (1933), replacing the more orthodox [[Govindrao Tembe]], and scored some of the studio’s best-known hits. For [[Amritmanthan]], the actors rehearsed to a score played live, tuning their performance rhythm to the music. The scales were also chosen to counterpoint the actors’ speaking voices. Bhole’s impact on performance idioms is most evident in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant_Tukaram|Sant Tukaram]], where [[Vishnupant Pagnis]]’s outstanding achievement owes much to the score. Left Prabhat with [[Raja Nene]], [[D. J. Dharmadhikari|Dharmadhikari]] et al., working with them independently for some years. 
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    66'''FILMOGRAPHY:''' 1932: Sant Sakhubai; Krishnavatar; 1934: Amritmanthan; 1935: Chandrasena; 1936: Rajput Ramani; Sant Tukaram; 1937: Kunku/Duniya Na Mane; 1938: Mazha Mulga/Mera Ladka; 1940: Sant Dnyaneshwar; 1941: Sant Sakhu; 1942: Daha Wajta/Dus Baje; 1944: Ramshastri; 1945: Taramati; 1947: Kuber; 1948: Bhagyarekha; 1951: Parijatak/Shri Krishna Satyabhama.