There was a wonderful atmosphere with all students walking in and out of Ustad’s flat, practising in the big room
Thanks to sitar/surbahar maestro C. S. Naringrekar, Chandu called
When I first came to India in 1965 I was lucky to find my tabla guru Pandit Taranath with the help of sitar/surbahar maestro C. S. Naringrekar, Chandu called. He lived in Chembur in a house that also had his guru Ustad Zia Mohiuddin Dagar, fellow students Shivakumar-Sridhar-Ramani-family and the tabla genius Ravi Bellare in it. There was a wonderful atmosphere with all students walking in and out of Ustad’s flat, practising in the big room. Every sunday evening there was a small concert in that room where students would play one piece each, starting with the youngest and ending with Ustad or maybe an occasional visiting member of the Dagar gharana.

























Some photos taken on the roof of the “Rukmini” building in 1968.








In 1969 Ustad and Taranath stopped by in Sweden
In 1969 Ustad and Taranath stopped by me in Sweden on their way home from their first stay in U.S. They did TV, radio and a concert, recently released on Country & Eastern





Quite a few albums have come out of the recordings I did on my Nagra tape recorder, you find them at Ustad’s page on the Country & Eastern site:
Quite a few albums have come out










Ustad’s son Mohi Bahauddin Dagar
After Sayeduddins death recently, all of the former Dagar generation are deceased but fortunately Fayazuddin’s son Wasifuddin Dagar and quite a few good students are there. Ustad’s son Mohi Bahauddin Dagar is the sole musician of the Ziauddin lineage of the Dagar gharana. We are all lucky that he is doing it so well. Below Ustad is teaching him at an early age.

