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P. S. Narayanaswamy - Wikipedia Jump to content

P. S. Narayanaswamy

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P. S. Narayanaswamy
P. S. Narayanaswamy
P. S. Narayanaswamy
Background information
Birth name Puliyur Subramaniam Narayanaswamy
Born ( 1934-02-24 ) 24 February 1934
Konerirajapuram , Thanjavur ,
Madras Presidency , British India
Died 16 October 2020 (2020-10-16) (aged 86)
Genres Carnatic music
Occupation(s) Musician

Puliyur Subramaniam Narayanaswamy (or Narayanaswami ; 24 February 1934 ? 16 October 2020) was a Carnatic music vocalist.

Career [ edit ]

He learnt music from Tiruppambaram Somasundaram Pillai, T. M. Thiagarajan and later from Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer . He was also a highly acclaimed teacher. [1]

He was awarded the Bala Gana Kala Rathnam at the age of 12. He worked in All India Radio. [2] In 1999, he was conferred the title, 'Sangita Kala Acharya' by the Music Academy. [3] He was awarded `Padma Bhushan' by the Government of India in 2003. [1] [4] [5] [6] His well known disciples include (alphabetically) A.s.Murali, Akshay Padmanabhan, Abhishek Raghuram, Akkarai Sisters, Amritha Murali, Bharathi Ramasubban, C.R.Vaithyanathan, Gayathri Venkataraghavan, Kalavathy Avadhooth, Kunnakudi Balamuralikrishna, Nisha Rajagopalan, Ranjani-Gayatri sisters, Bharat Sundar, Sunil Gargeyan, Vishnudev K S, Janani Iyer, and Prithvi Harish

He died on 16 October 2020 due to old age. [7]

References [ edit ]

  1. ^ a b "Saluting a great teacher" . The Hindu . 20 February 2014 . Retrieved 26 August 2015 .
  2. ^ "Musician-teacher par excellence" . The Hindu . 13 June 2003. Archived from the original on 19 November 2004 . Retrieved 26 August 2015 .
  3. ^ "Sangita Kala Acharya" . The Music Academy . Retrieved 25 February 2019 .
  4. ^ "Kalam presents Padma awards" . Rediff. 3 April 2003 . Retrieved 26 August 2015 .
  5. ^ "Words of wisdom from a vidwan!" . Narayana Vishwanath . New Indian Express . 10 December 2011. Archived from the original on 3 October 2015 . Retrieved 26 August 2015 .
  6. ^ "Vocalist, dance exponent honoured" . The Hindu . 15 December 2005 . Retrieved 26 August 2015 . [ dead link ]
  7. ^ "Jasraj to PS Narayanaswamy, heavy losses to India's cultural scene" . 25 October 2020.

External links [ edit ]