Indian classical music gharanas represent centuries-old traditions of musical excellence — lineages of guru-shishya (teacher-disciple) transmission that define the distinct styles and schools of Hindustani and Carnatic classical music.
The word “gharana” literally means “house” or “family” in Urdu, reflecting these schools’ hereditary artistic foundations. Questions on gharana names, associated cities, instruments, key musicians, and the distinction between Hindustani and Carnatic traditions appear regularly in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, and State PSC exams under Art and Culture. This page gives you a complete list of all major gharanas with their specialties, origins, and exam-ready facts for 2026.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Two traditions — India has Hindustani (North Indian, Vedic-Persian fusion) and Carnatic (South Indian, ancient Sanskrit texts) classical music.
- “Gharana” meaning — From the Urdu word “Ghar” (house/home); refers to a music school passed down through family and guru-disciple lineages.
- Ravi Shankar — Belonged to the Maihar Gharana; trained under Ustad Allauddin Khan; popularised sitar globally.
- Bhimsen Joshi — Belonged to the Kirana Gharana; known for khayal singing with intense emotional depth; Bharat Ratna 2008.
- Sangeet Natak Akademi — India’s national academy for performing arts; awards the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award (Fellowship = highest honour) for lifetime contribution to classical music.
Candidates often confuse Purandaradasa (Father of Carnatic Music; 1484–1564) with the Carnatic Trinity (Tyagaraja, Dikshitar, Syama Sastri — 18th–19th century). Purandaradasa systematised Carnatic music education but predates the Trinity by 200+ years. Also note: M.S. Subbulakshmi was the FIRST musician AND the FIRST woman to receive the Bharat Ratna — both facts are tested together.
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🎵 Part A — Major Hindustani Classical Music Gharanas
| # ↕ | Gharana ↕ | Origin City / Region | Speciality | Type | Notable Artists | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gwalior Gharana | Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh | Khayal vocal; oldest Hindustani vocal gharana | Vocal | Ustad Haddu Khan, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (trained here initially) | Oldest khayal gharana; “father gharana” from which many others emerged |
| 2 | Agra Gharana | Agra, Uttar Pradesh | Khayal and dhrupad; virile, bold style | Vocal | Faiyaz Khan, Vilayat Hussain Khan | Known for “bol-baant” — syllabic structure in taans; Dhrupad influence |
| 3 | Kirana Gharana | Kirana, Haryana (now Punjab area) | Khayal; lyrical, deeply emotional style | Vocal | Abdul Karim Khan, Bhimsen Joshi, Gangubai Hangal, Kishori Amonkar | Bhimsen Joshi = Bharat Ratna 2008; one of India’s most revered gharanas |
| 4 | Jaipur-Atrauli Gharana | Jaipur, Rajasthan | Khayal; dhrupad-influenced; complex laya | Vocal | Alladiya Khan, Mogubai Kurdikar, Kishori Amonkar | Kishori Amonkar its modern embodiment; strict rhythmic discipline |
| 5 | Patiala Gharana | Patiala, Punjab | Thumri and khayal; romantic, emotive | Vocal | Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Raza Ali Khan | Bade Ghulam Ali Khan’s thumri = peak of this gharana; light classical |
| 6 | Mewati Gharana | Mewat, Haryana/Rajasthan | Khayal; devotional bhava (emotional colour) | Vocal | Pandit Jasraj, Motiram, Maniram | Pandit Jasraj’s “Haveli Sangeet” style; devotional khayal |
| 7 | Rampur-Sahaswan Gharana | Rampur + Sahaswan, UP | Khayal; Dhrupad influence; serious style | Vocal | Wazir Khan, Mushtaq Hussain Khan | Royal patronage from Rampur Nawabs; linked to Gwalior |
| 8 | Bhendibazaar Gharana | Bhendibazaar, Mumbai | Khayal; sur (tone) purity; nasal twang | Vocal | Nazarali Khan, Anjanibai Malpekar | Influenced Mumbai’s light classical and film music traditions |
| 9 | Dilli Gharana | Delhi | Dhrupad and Khayal; royal Mughal era origins | Vocal | Tanras Khan, Tansen (historical lineage) | Oldest connection to Mughal court; Tansen’s musical lineage |
| 10 | Maihar Gharana | Maihar, Madhya Pradesh | Instrumental; multi-instrument school | Instrumental | Allauddin Khan, Ravi Shankar, Ali Akbar Khan, Nikhil Banerjee, Annapurna Devi | Allauddin Khan = most revered instrumental teacher; Ravi Shankar trained here |
| 11 | Senia Gharana | Pan-India (Tansen lineage) | Dhrupad; oldest formal musical lineage | Vocal | Tansen (Akbar’s court), Baiju Bawra (contemporary) | All classical music traces lineage to Tansen; Darbari Kanada raga |
| 12 | Etawah Gharana | Etawah, Uttar Pradesh | Sitar; pioneered modern sitar technique | Instrumental | Imdad Khan, Inayat Khan, Vilayat Khan | Vilayat Khan’s “gayaki ang” — vocal style on sitar; greatest sitar player |
| 13 | Benares Gharana | Varanasi (Benares), UP | Tabla, Thumri, Kathak dance | Tabla | Sidhar Khan, Bikram Ghosh (later lineage) | Benares thumri = most important gharana for thumri singing |
| 14 | Delhi Tabla Gharana | Delhi | Tabla: crisp, ornamental style | Tabla | Ghasit Khan, Natthu Khan | Oldest tabla gharana; pure Delhi style |
| 15 | Punjab Tabla Gharana | Punjab | Tabla: powerful, booming bass | Tabla | Lal Mohammad, Feroz Khan | Dhrupad accompaniment specialty; powerful bass strokes |
| 16 | Ajrada Tabla Gharana | Ajrada, UP | Tabla: between Delhi and Punjab style | Tabla | Kallu Khan, Habibuddin | Between Delhi and Punjab in style; scholarly approach |
| 17 | Farrukhabad Tabla Gharana | Farrukhabad, UP | Tabla: all-round accompaniment | Tabla | Haji Vilayat Ali, Masit Khan | Most versatile for accompaniment; Zakir Hussain lineage connection |
| 18 | Lucknow Tabla Gharana | Lucknow, UP | Tabla: delicate, court style | Tabla | Mian Bakhsh Khan | Associated with Lucknow’s Nawabi culture; intricate, soft style |
🎶 Part B — Carnatic Music: Key Traditions and Composers
| # | Category | Name | Period / Region | Contribution | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Carnatic Trinity | Tyagaraja | 1767–1847, Tiruvayyaru, TN | Composed ~600 kritis; devotion to Rama | Most prolific; saint-composer; Pancharatna Kritis (5 gems) |
| 2 | Carnatic Trinity | Muthuswami Dikshitar | 1775–1835, Tiruvarur, TN | ~450 kritis; incorporated Western harmony elements | Composed in Sanskrit; mantric quality; promoted Veena |
| 3 | Carnatic Trinity | Syama Sastri | 1762–1827, Tiruvarur, TN | Swarajatis and kritis | Oldest of the Trinity; composed in Telugu and Sanskrit; fewest kritis |
| 4 | Patron Saint | Purandaradasa | 1484–1564, Karnataka | “Father of Carnatic Music”; systematised lessons; composed Geetams | Predates Trinity by 200+ years; basis of Carnatic music education |
| 5 | Concept | Kalpanaswaram | — | Improvised note sequences in Carnatic | Equivalent of taan in Hindustani; unique to Carnatic tradition |
| 6 | Concept | Raga Alapana | — | Improvised exposition of a raga without tala (rhythm) | Common to both traditions; foundation of any classical performance |
🎸 Part C — Key Indian Classical Instruments and Their Gharanas
| Instrument | Type | Associated Gharana / School | Famous Players | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sitar | Chordophone (plucked) | Etawah (Vilayat Khan), Maihar (Ravi Shankar) | Ravi Shankar, Vilayat Khan, Anoushka Shankar | Ravi Shankar = Bharat Ratna; popularised sitar globally; Beatles connection (George Harrison) |
| Sarod | Chordophone (plucked) | Maihar Gharana | Ali Akbar Khan, Amjad Ali Khan | Evolved from Afghan rabab; no frets; deep resonant sound |
| Tabla | Membranophone (percussion) | Delhi, Benares, Punjab, Ajrada, Farrukhabad, Lucknow (6 gharanas) | Zakir Hussain, Alla Rakha | Zakir Hussain = Grammy winner; died December 2024 at age 73; most famous tabla player globally |
| Sarangi | Chordophone (bowed) | Delhi, Jaipur, Lucknow | Ram Narayan, Sultan Khan | Most expressive bowed instrument; supports vocalists; called “100-stringed” colloquially |
| Bansuri (Flute) | Aerophone | Hindustani tradition | Pannalal Ghosh, Hariprasad Chaurasia | Hariprasad Chaurasia = Padma Vibhushan; Bansuri = North Indian bamboo flute |
| Shehnai | Aerophone (double reed) | Benares tradition | Bismillah Khan | Bismillah Khan = Bharat Ratna 2001; shehnai = auspicious instrument; played at Red Fort |
| Violin | Chordophone (bowed) | Carnatic tradition (adapted from Western) | Lalgudi Jayaraman, M.S. Gopalakrishnan | Widely used in Carnatic; unique sideways playing posture adapted from Western technique |
| Mridangam | Membranophone | Carnatic tradition | T.V. Gopalakrishnan, Palghat Mani Iyer | Primary percussion in Carnatic music; barrel-shaped; equivalent of Tabla in North India |
| Veena | Chordophone | Carnatic tradition | Balasaraswati, S. Balachander | National instrument of Carnatic music; 24 fixed frets; 4 main strings; associated with Saraswati |
| Tanpura (Tambura) | Chordophone (drone) | Both traditions | Used by all vocalists | Provides drone/base note; 4 strings; provides no melody — only continuous pitch reference |
📊 Part D — Hindustani vs Carnatic Music: Key Differences
| Feature | Hindustani (North Indian) | Carnatic (South Indian) |
|---|---|---|
| Region | North, East, West India | South India (TN, AP, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala) |
| Origin influence | Vedic + Persian/Mughal fusion | Ancient Sanskrit + Bhakti traditions |
| Main vocal form | Khayal, Dhrupad, Thumri, Dadra, Ghazal | Kriti, Varnam, Padam, Javali, Swarajati |
| Main percussion | Tabla | Mridangam |
| Primary string instrument | Sitar, Sarod, Sarangi | Veena, Violin |
| Wind instrument | Bansuri (flute), Shehnai | Nadaswaram |
| Raga system | 10 parent scales (Thaats by Bhatkhande) | Melakarta system (72 parent ragas) |
| Improvisation | Heavy (alap, jod, jhala, gat) | Less open-ended; composition-centred |
| Tradition bearer | Gharanas (schools) | Bani or Sampradaya (schools) |
| Greatest historical figure | Tansen (Akbar’s court) | Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, Syama Sastri (Trinity) |
| Time theory | Ragas associated with specific times of day/season | Less strict time association |
🏅 Part E — Bharat Ratna Recipients in Classical Music
| Musician | Instrument / Form | Gharana / Tradition | Bharat Ratna Year | Key Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M.S. Subbulakshmi | Vocal (Carnatic) | Carnatic | 1998 | First musician + first woman to receive Bharat Ratna; first Indian musician at UN General Assembly (1966) |
| Pandit Ravi Shankar | Sitar | Maihar Gharana | 1999 | Globalised Indian classical music; collaboration with Beatles; performed at Woodstock (1969) |
| Bismillah Khan | Shehnai | Benares tradition | 2001 | Shehnai at Red Fort on Independence Day; “Shehnai maestro”; elevated folk instrument to classical level |
| Lata Mangeshkar | Playback singing | — | 2001 | Nightingale of India; 30,000+ songs; India’s most beloved voice |
| Bhimsen Joshi | Vocal (Khayal) | Kirana Gharana | 2008 | One of India’s greatest khayal singers; emotional depth and sur purity |
| Zakir Hussain | Tabla | Farrukhabad / Punjab traditions | Posthumously 2025 | Greatest tabla player globally; Grammy winner (including 2024); died December 2024 at age 73 |
⚖️ Compare Two Gharanas
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
The word Gharana literally means “house” (from Urdu “ghar” = home) — each gharana is named after the city where the tradition originated or flourished under royal patronage. The critical distinction: gharanas represent hereditary transmission through family lines AND guru-shishya relationships. Key pairings: Gwalior = oldest khayal; Kirana = emotional depth; Patiala = thumri excellence; Maihar = instrumental; Etawah = sitar gayaki ang.
The Trinity of Carnatic Music — Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, and Syama Sastri — all lived in the same era (late 18th to early 19th century) in the Thanjavur/Tiruvarur region of Tamil Nadu. Tyagaraja is the most prolific (~600 kritis); Muthuswami Dikshitar incorporated Western music elements and composed in Sanskrit; Syama Sastri is the oldest and composed the fewest but equally revered kritis. All three are saint-composers who composed out of devotion (bhakti).
Tansen is the most important historical figure in Hindustani music — one of the nine gems (Navratnas) of Akbar’s court and considered the greatest musician in Indian history. The Gwalior, Agra, Delhi, and Maihar gharanas all trace their lineage to Tansen’s tradition (called Senia Gharana). Darbari Kanada — one of India’s most revered ragas — is credited to Tansen. Baiju Bawra was his contemporary rival. The Tansen Samaroh (music festival) is held annually in Gwalior near his tomb.
Ravi Shankar (Maihar Gharana sitar) collaborated with Beatles’ George Harrison, performed at Woodstock (1969), and received the Bharat Ratna (1999). Zakir Hussain (tabla, Farrukhabad/Punjab traditions) was the world’s most famous tabla player — he won multiple Grammy Awards (including in 2024 at age 73) and died in December 2024 at age 73, making the 2025 Grammy his posthumous recognition. Both are among the most frequently tested cultural figures in competitive exams.
M.S. Subbulakshmi was the FIRST musician (and the FIRST woman) to receive the Bharat Ratna in 1998. She was also the first Indian musician to perform at the United Nations General Assembly (1966). A Carnatic vocalist known for her bhakti music — particularly Venkateswara Suprabhatam and Vishnu Sahasranamam. The “first musician + first woman Bharat Ratna” combination is directly tested in competitive exams.
Carnatic Trinity — numbers:
“Tyagaraja = 600 kritis (most); Dikshitar = 450 kritis; Syama Sastri = oldest (fewest)”
→ Tyagaraja tops numerically; Syama Sastri is oldest chronologically.
Bharat Ratna musicians in chronological order:
“MS Subbulakshmi 1998 (first + woman) → Ravi Shankar 1999 → Bismillah + Lata 2001 → Bhimsen 2008“
Key gharana–musician pairs:
“Kirana = Bhimsen Joshi + Kishori Amonkar + Gangubai; Maihar = Ravi Shankar + Ali Akbar; Patiala = Bade Ghulam Ali Khan; Etawah = Vilayat Khan; Mewati = Pandit Jasraj“
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The Gwalior Gharana is considered the oldest Khayal singing gharana — often called the “father gharana” from which many other vocal gharanas evolved. Its style is characterised by a clear, open voice, strong gamak (ornamental notes), and emphasis on swar (melodic note). It flourished in Gwalior under the patronage of the Gwalior rulers (Scindias).
The Trinity of Carnatic Music comprises Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, and Syama Sastri — all from the Thanjavur/Tiruvarur region of Tamil Nadu in the late 18th–early 19th century. Tyagaraja is the most prolific with approximately 600 kritis, including the famous Pancharatna Kritis. Muthuswami Dikshitar composed ~450 kritis. Syama Sastri was the oldest and composed the fewest.
Pandit Ravi Shankar belonged to the Maihar Gharana and was trained by Ustad Allauddin Khan — the legendary multi-instrumentalist. Allauddin Khan’s other students included Ali Akbar Khan (sarod) and Annapurna Devi (surbahar). Ravi Shankar received the Bharat Ratna in 1999, performed at Woodstock (1969), and collaborated with Beatle George Harrison — bringing Indian classical music to global audiences.
M.S. Subbulakshmi was the first musician — and the first woman — to receive the Bharat Ratna, in 1998. She was also the first Indian musician to perform at the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 1966. A Carnatic vocalist of extraordinary depth, she is best known for her renditions of “Vishnu Sahasranamam” and “Venkateswara Suprabhatam.” The “first woman Bharat Ratna” and “first UN performance” facts are frequently tested together.
The Kirana Gharana (from Kirana village, Haryana) is known for its slow, deeply emotional khayal singing with intense sur (tonal) purity — the voice “dwells” on notes with great feeling. Great Kirana singers include Bhimsen Joshi, Gangubai Hangal, and Kishori Amonkar. The Patiala Gharana (from Patiala, Punjab) is famous primarily for its thumri singing — romantic, expressive, lighter classical — with Bade Ghulam Ali Khan as its greatest exponent.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
A Gharana (from Urdu “ghar” = house/home) is a school or tradition of Indian classical music passed down through hereditary family lines and guru-shishya (teacher-disciple) transmission. Each gharana is typically named after the city or region where it originated or was patronised — such as Gwalior, Kirana, Jaipur, Patiala, or Maihar. Gharanas define distinct stylistic approaches: Gwalior is the oldest khayal gharana; Kirana is known for emotional depth; Patiala for thumri excellence; Maihar for instrumental mastery. In Carnatic music, the equivalent concept is called a “Bani” or “Sampradaya.”
The two classical music traditions differ in origin, influence, structure, and instruments. Hindustani music (North Indian) was shaped by the fusion of ancient Vedic traditions with Persian and Mughal influences — it features highly improvised forms like khayal, dhrupad, and thumri, uses tabla as primary percussion, and organises ragas through the Thaat system (10 parent scales, by Bhatkhande). Carnatic music (South Indian) is more composition-centred, rooted in bhakti saint-composer traditions (Trinity), uses mridangam as primary percussion, and organises ragas through the Melakarta system (72 parent ragas). Carnatic gives less room to open-ended improvisation than Hindustani.
Tansen (c. 1500–1586 CE) was one of the nine gems (Navratnas) of Emperor Akbar’s court and is considered the greatest musician in Indian classical history. He is credited with composing and systematising several ragas, including Darbari Kanada — one of India’s most revered ragas. The Gwalior, Agra, Delhi, and Maihar gharanas all trace their musical lineage to Tansen’s tradition, called the Senia Gharana. The Tansen Samaroh (music festival) is held annually in Gwalior near his tomb. In competitive exams: Tansen = Akbar’s court + Darbari Kanada + Gwalior tomb.
Classical music and gharanas appear in UPSC Prelims (Art and Culture), SSC CGL, Banking GK, State PSC, and cultural awareness sections. Common patterns include: Carnatic Trinity (Tyagaraja, Dikshitar, Syama Sastri), gharana-musician pairs (Kirana = Bhimsen Joshi; Maihar = Ravi Shankar; Patiala = Bade Ghulam Ali Khan; Mewati = Pandit Jasraj), Bharat Ratna in music (M.S. Subbulakshmi 1998 = first + first woman; Bhimsen Joshi 2008; Zakir Hussain posthumously 2025), Tansen (Akbar’s court; Gwalior; Darbari Kanada), M.S. Subbulakshmi as first UN performer, and Zakir Hussain (tabla; Grammy; died December 2024). This page covers all major music culture GK for 2026 exams.