Bani Kumar

Baidyonath Bhattacharya (23 November 1907 – 15 August 1978) popularly known as Bani Kumar[1] was a radio broadcaster, playwright, composer, radio script writer from Kolkata, India and a contemporary of Pankaj Mallick and Birendra Krishna Bhadra. He worked for the All India Radio, India's National Radio broadcaster for several years during its early, starting 1930s, and during this period he produced and adapted several plays songs etc.[2]

Kābya Sarasbatī

Bani Kumar
Baidyonath Bhattacharya
Born(1907-11-23)November 23, 1907
Kanpur Village, Howrah
DiedAugust 15, 1978(1978-08-15) (aged 70)
NationalityIndia
Other namesBani Kumar (in radio station) ‘Ānandabardhana’, ‘Biṣṇu-gupta’ (in literature)
Occupationradio broadcaster, Lyricist, Producers, composer
Known forMahisasuramardini (1931–present)
Parents
  • Bidhu Bhushan Bhattacharya (father)
  • Aparna Bhattacharya (mother)

He is most known for his script writing and composition of India's oldest radio programme, Mahishashura Mardini (1931), a collection of shlokas and songs broadcast by All India Radio Calcutta (now Kolkata) at 4:00 am, in the dawn of Mahalaya.[3][4]

Early life

Bani Kumar's original name is Baidyanath Bhattacharya. He was born on November 26, 1947 in Kanpur village of Howrah. His father, Bidhu Bhushan Bhattacharya was a sanskrit scholar and historian and mother Aparna Bhattacharya. Bani Kumar was the eldest son of their two sons and two daughters. Their ancestral house was at Antpur in Hooghly district.[5]

Academic life

Bani Kumar received his primary education at Howrah District School. There he concentrated on poetry with the influence of a teacher and poet Karunanidhan Bandyopadhyay. He then graduated in English from Presidency College. His father and grandfather had a knowledge of Sanskrit, so he studied Sanskrit and got the title Kābya Sarasbatī.[5]

Career

He could not afford to study under the stress of the domestic life, he started working in the mint. He left the job and joined the radio station when the Calcutta Radio Station was established at 1 No. Garstin Place in the year 1927. At that time Raichand Boral, Pankaj Mallick, Birendra Krishna Bhadra and other artists joined there in the interest of Nripendranath Majumdar, the officer in charge of the Indian ceremonial division of the radio station.[6] Baidyanatha joined as a writer staff artist and began his radio career under the name of Bani Kumar. He is best known as the creator and compositor of the Mahisasuramardini radio program.[7]

In the time of 1930s, some objected to Bhadra doing the Canḍīpāṭha as he wasn’t a Brahmin. But Bani Kumar strictly refused to replace Bhadra and the programme was going on as schedule.[8]

gollark: For a few versions potatOS contained a DRMish blob hooked to incident reports, for example.
gollark: The question is whether your software will actually attract any malicious people.
gollark: Wait, some cryptographers came up with "indistinguishability obfuscation" a while ago, maybe that will turn into something useful for apious copy protection schemes in a few decades.
gollark: Until someone comes up with working homomorphic encryption.
gollark: It's inevitably doomed to failure if anyone actually cares enough, but who knows if they will.

References

  1. "Inquizzitive". www.telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  2. "Mahalaya 2018 | Know the brains behind Mahishasuramardini recital — a timeless classic". The Statesman. 2018-10-08. Retrieved 2020-03-30.
  3. Mahalaya ushers in the Puja spirit The Times of India, TNN 19 September 2009.
  4. Hindustan year-book and who's who, Volume 60. Publisher: M. C. Sarkar., 1992. pp 227, Death date ref.
  5. khabor2014. "বাণীকুমার ও মহালয়ার ভোরে 'মহিষাসুরমর্দিনী' | KhaborOnline". Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  6. "আগে কী নামে সম্প্রচারিত হত প্রভাতী মহিষাসুরমর্দিনী?". www.dailyo.in. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  7. Sengupta, Debaleena (2011-09-25). "The voice carries on". Business Standard India. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  8. "Voice from the sky". www.telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
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