Kalyan Mukherjea

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Dr. Kalyan Mukherjea
Birth nameKalyan Kumar Mukherjea
Born1943
OriginCalcutta, West Bengal, India
Died2010 (aged 67)
GenresHindustani classical music
Occupation(s)Composer, Sarod player
InstrumentsSarod
Years active1956–1995
LabelsIndia Archive Music

Kalyan Kumar Mukherjea (1943–2010) was an authority on Indian classical music, particularly the Shahjahanpur Gharana (school) of Sarod. He was also a mathematician.

Early life[]

Mukherjea was born in Calcutta in 1943. His father, A K Mukherjea, was a successful barrister who rose to become a judge of the Supreme Court of India.[1] Justice Mukherjea was also a scholar of Indian philosophy, and had made significant contributions to Navya-Nyāya literature.[2] Kalyan thus grew up in a milieu that placed considerable significance on erudition and culture.

Justice Mukherjea's close friends included musicians like the sarod maestro Radhika Mohan Maitra. Young Kalyan began training under Maitra in 1956. He also studied with the sitarist, vocalist and composer, D T Joshi.

Mukherjea's musical education continued uninterrupted throughout his performing career, but there were periods during which he was not under the direct tutelage of a master (1962–1965 and 1967–1976). These years spent in relative isolation from the Indian music scene, Mukherjea believes, contributed as much to his growth as a musician as did his formal training. Mukherjea has had a unique experience, doubling as a mathematician and an uncompromising classicist on the sarod.

As a mathematician[]

Mukherjea obtained his undergraduate degree from Cambridge University, followed by a doctorate in mathematics from Cornell.[3] In 1968, he joined the mathematics faculty of UCLA. He remained at UCLA until 1976, when he returned to India to take up a professorship at the Indian Statistical Institutes in Delhi and Calcutta.

His research interests primarily concerned topology. He had to his credit authoritative publications in Fredholm manifolds[4] and coincidence theory.[5] In collaboration with his erstwhile research student Rajendra Bhatia, he had also contributed to matrix analysis.[6]

His work had spawned a significant body of further research, by his erstwhile students as well as colleagues and contemporaries.[7][8] He had also mentored several significant contributors to the field, including Rajendra Bhatia and Mahan Mitra.[9]

As a musician[]

While at UCLA, Mukherjea served as an instructor of Hindustani instrumental music in the newly formed ethnomusicology department, and collaborated closely with Nazir Jairazbhoy in the early days of the program. His students include Peter Manuel, Professor of Music at Hunter College, CUNY, who has acknowledged his debt to Mukherjea in several publications.[10][11]

Mukherjea performances have been limited. His 25-year span as a performing artist saw him play about fifty concerts in all. It was entirely by chance that he encountered Lyle Wachovsky of India Archive Music, New York, who gave his music a global audience by publishing a full-length CD of Ragas and . Additionally, from 1983 to 1990, Mukherjea was a regular broadcaster on All India Radio, Delhi.

Mukherjea's music is rooted in tradition but does not rigidly adhere to convention. His approach values logic and aesthetic sensitivity above other considerations. A good example of this is his approach to interpreting the controversial Raga Shuddha Kalyan, which finds mention in an article by Deepak Raja on the issue.[12]

Paralytic stroke and other problems[]

In May 1995, Mukherjea's musical career came to a sudden end, as he suffered a paralytic stroke, and lost mobility of the left side of his body. Mukherjea's research in topology continued for a number of years, but waned eventually as his eyesight, already a matter of concern at the time of his stroke, began to deteriorate very rapidly into near blindness.

In the last phase of his life, Mukherjea led an active life for a person of his physical limitations. He was deeply involved in the community of visually impaired computer users, and had assisted several such individuals in setting up the "Audio Desktop" of Emacspeak. Additionally, he continued to play an inspirational role in the lives of a number of young mathematicians.

On the musical front, other than providing occasional guidance to other disciples of Radhika Mohan Maitra's gharana such as Sanjoy Bandopadhyay, he nurtured a number of his own pupils, including Arnab Chakrabarty, Anirvan DuttaGupta and Peter Manuel.

Death[]

Prof. Mukherjea died on 31 March 2010, after suffering a massive heart attack a few weeks before.[13]

Publications[]

Journal articles: mathematics[]

Bhatia, Rajendra; Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1994), "Variation of the Unitary Part of a Matrix", SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications, 15 (3): 1007–14, doi:10.1137/S0895479892243237

Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1970), "The Homotopy Type of Fredholm Manifolds", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 149 (2): 653–663, doi:10.2307/1995419, JSTOR 1995419

Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1972), "New Methods in Coincidence Theory", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 34 (2): 615–20, doi:10.2307/2038417, JSTOR 2038417

Mukherjea, Kalyan K; Sankaran, Parameswaran (1996), "Invariant points of maps between Grassmannians" (PDF), Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 124 (2): 649–53, doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-96-03152-8

Books: mathematics[]

1. Mukherjea, Kalyan:Differential Calculus In Normed Linear Spaces, American Mathematical Society, 2003 (ISBN 8185931437, Hardcover)

Writings: music[]

Radhika Mohan Maitra – His Life and Times

Discography: music[]

Raga Shuddha Kalyan, India Archive Music, 2003

Legacy[]

In 2010, The National Law School of India University named the Best Speaker trophy at the National Law School Debate, South Asia's largest Asians Parliamentary debate, after him.

References[]

  1. ^ List of Judges of the Supreme Court of India, Ministry of Law, Government of India, retrieved 22 May 2008[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Mukherjea, A K (1976), "The Definition of Pervasion (Vyāpti) in Navya-Nyāya", Journal of Indian Philosophy, 4 (1–2): 1–50, doi:10.1007/BF00211106, S2CID 189827234
  3. ^ Kalyan Mukherjea; Peter Manuel (2010). "Radhika Mohan Maitra: His Life and Times". Asian Music. 41 (2): 193 – via Project MUSE.
  4. ^ Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1970), "The Homotopy Type of Fredholm Manifolds", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 149 (2): 653–663, doi:10.2307/1995419, JSTOR 1995419
  5. ^ Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1972), "New Methods in Coincidence Theory", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 34 (2): 615–20, doi:10.2307/2038417, JSTOR 2038417
  6. ^ Bhatia, Rajendra; Mukherjea, Kalyan K (1994), "Variation of the Unitary Part of a Matrix", SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications, 15 (3): 1007–14, doi:10.1137/S0895479892243237
  7. ^ Harris, Gary; Martin, Clyde (1988), "Large Roots Yield Large Coefficients: An Addendum to 'The Roots of a Polynomial Vary Continuously as a Function of the Coefficients'", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 102 (4): 993–94, doi:10.2307/2047347, JSTOR 2047347
  8. ^ Sankaran, Parameswaran (2003). "A Coincidence Theorem for Holomorphic Maps to G/P". Canadian Mathematical Bulletin. 46 (2): 291–98. arXiv:math/0208062. doi:10.4153/CMB-2003-029-4.
  9. ^ Mathematics Genealogy Project: Kalyan Kumar Mukherjea, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 22 May 2008
  10. ^ Manuel, Peter (1989), Ṭhumrī in Historical and Stylistic Perspectives, Varanasi: Motilal Banarsidass, pp. vii, 176, ISBN 81-208-0673-5
  11. ^ Manuel, Peter (1999), Cassette Culture: Popular Music and Technology in North India, Chicago: University of Chicago Press (published 1993), p. xviii, ISBN 0-226-50401-8
  12. ^ Raja, Deepak, Raga Shuddha Kalyan: How and why it is changing, archived from the original on 23 July 2011, retrieved 24 May 2008
  13. ^ Chakarbarty, Arnab, My Mentor, archived from the original on 4 March 2011, retrieved 1 March 2011

External links[]

An All India Radio Recording (1984)

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