The Voice of Change

For T. M. Krishna, the world is a stage, and he has chosen to play the subversive’s part

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For T. M. Krishna, the world is a stage, and he has chosen to play the subversive’s part

Like any other classical form, Carnatic music is first a language. T. M. Krishna began to learn it when he was five. By the time he was 12, he was performing for live audiences, and by his late twenties, Krishna was already being hailed as one of the greats. Having mastered the conventions of Carnatic music so thoroughly, he could fill almost any concert hall. For this celebrated vocalist, however, neither mastery nor renown was enough.

Success didn’t satisfy him—it made him introspect instead. Today, at 45, Krishna is arguably Carnatic music’s most familiar exponent, but his reputation isn’t that of a conformist—he is a rebel with the courage to defy tradition through performances that reinterpret both Carnatic form and content. Krishna’s battles, though, are fought on two fronts: aesthetics and ethics.As he questioned implicit class and caste hierarchies that define both the art he practises and the world in which he lives, Krishna didn’t just talk about his conclusions, he also wrote them down. In 2013, when he released his book, A Southern Music, the world of Carnatic music was up in arms. He had accused it of discrimination, and no matter the extent of the backlash, he would not back down.

Over time, Krishna’s critiques have become even sharper. His tweets attack orthodoxy and bigotry in all its forms, political and cultural. His music, meanwhile, makes us revise notions of the sacred and sublime. In 2016, he received the Ramon Magsaysay Award for using art to “heal India’s deep social divisions”. Speaking to Reader’s Digest, he opened up about his politics, pluralism and his preferences.

 

You were in college when you decided to become a professional musician. What were your initial impressions of the world of Carnatic music? Did you find it stifling?

I grew up in an environment rooted in a kind of inte...

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