Prem Lata Sharma (10 May 1927 â 5 December 1998) was an Indian musicologist.
Prem Lata Sharma was born on 10 May 1927, in Nakodar, District Jalandhar, East Panjab. She was the only child of her parents, Pandita Lalchand sharma, Srimati, Mayadevi. Both of them were devoted Gauá¸Âëya Vaiá¹£á¹Âavas and they brought up their only child, Premlata, in a serene and pious atmosphere. She received her primary and secondary training at home in Delhi along with training in vocal music and sitar. She passed her High School Examination from Panjab University in 1938 at the age of eleven. For the next two years she studied at the University of Delhi in 1940. Then she joined the Indraprastha Girls' college for two years and graduated from Delhi University in 1942.
After this, she spent seven years studying religious literature, especially that of the Gauá¸Âëya Vaiá¹£á¹Âavas in Bengali and Samkrta, in which her father was also deeply interested. He resigned his job in the Railways and made himself free to look after the interest of his daughter in her studies. Vraj Bhà «mi was found to be a better place for intensive study of Gauá¸Âëya Vaiá¹£á¹Âavism and so the family shifted from Delhi to Mathura in 1947. At Mathura, Premlata Sharma studied and became proficient in three important languages â Braj BhÃÂá¹£ÃÂ, Avadhi and Maithili which were all assets for her later academic studies. She also continued her higher studies in Samskrta and Hindi Literature, while taking regular training in Music which had been a hobby with her since her childhood. This enabled her to pass the Inter Examination in Vocal Music of the Academy of Hindustani Music, Lucknow in 1949.
Considering the aptitude, qualities and potentialities of his daughter, Pandita Lalchand Sharma decided that she should continue her higher studies at Banaras Hindu University (BHU), where a College of Music and Fine Arts had started functioning in 1949âÂÂ50 with Pandita Omkar Nath Thakur as its Principal. Premlata Sharma was admitted to this college in the first batch of students. She was also admitted to the Women's College Hostel. Pandita Omkarnatha Thakur who knew Pandita Lalchand Sharma very well, agreed to be her local guardian.
Soon after coming to the university she got herself admitted as a casual student in the Central Hindu College and started attending the M. A. classes in Hindi. She had already completed the course and was going to appear in the University Examinations as a private candidate in Arts subjects. So she appeared in the M.A. Hindi Examination in March 1950 and passed the same. In July 1950, she joined the M.A. Classes in Samskrta as a casual student and obtained the M.A. (Samskrta) degree in March 1951.
In July 1951, she got herself registered as a PhD student in Samskrta under Dr. P.L. Vaidya who was then the Head of the Department of Samskrta in the Central Hindu College at the BHU. The subject of her research was: Special study of Rasashastra and Gaudeeya Vaishanava Darshana. For her thesis on "Studies in Bhakti Rasa based on à Ârë Rà «pa Gà ÂsvÃÂmi' she was awarded the PhD degree in 1954.
She passed the Shastracarya degree examinations in Sahitya in 1955; the Saá¹ gëtalaá¹ kÃÂra examination in Vocal Music in 1955.
She also learnt Marathi, Gujarati and some other languages during this period. She could read, write and speak fluently in Hindi, Samskrta, English, Bengali, Gujarati, Braja BhÃÂṣàand Avadhi. Panjabi was her mother tongue. She knew a little of OriyÃÂ, AsÃÂmi and Telugu too.
She had also attended classes in the Samskrta Mahavidyalaya of the BHU and in the traditional method studied 'Samskrta Poetics' from Pandita Mahadeva Sastri and Darà Âana from Pandita Ramachandra Dikshitar.
She acquainted herself with various other aspects of Darsana from Pandita Gopinatha Kaviraj and Pandita Brahmadatta JijñÃÂsu.
She also studied the Samská¹Âta texts on Music with Pandita Omkarnatha Thakur.
Her professional career commenced in August 1955 when she was appointed as a lecturer in the College of Music and Fine Arts in BHU and she taught the Theory of Music for the undergraduate and Post graduate students.
Professor Alain Danielou was head of the Research Section, the third wing of the college along with the Vocal and Instrumental section. And when he left, Dr Sharma was given charge of the section and she became its head as part of the Reader's post to which she was appointed in 1957. In 1966, a separate department of musicology was created and she became its head and the Research Section became a part of it. In 1981, she was appointed as a professor of the department of Musicology.
In 1985, she went on deputation from BHU to serve as the Vice-Chancellor of the Indira Kala Sangita Vishvavidyalaya, Khairagarh and served there until 1988. Meanwhile, at the age of 60 years, she retired from the services of the BHU on 31 May 1987.
In her academic career she initiated serious studies in the textual tradition of Indian Music, especially of Samskrta texts. She also emphasized the study of primary sources for research. The courses that were introduced by her since 1957 were PhD, M Phil. and Master of Musicology. A Diploma course in Music Appreciation attracted students from other disciplines.
She supervised the research work of many a doctoral students. Many senior International scholars sought her guidance for their research studies on Indian music. Apart from the various universities and institutions in the country, academic presentations took her to other countries like USA, The Netherlands and Russia.
Her study of Bharata's NÃÂá¹Âyaà ÂÃÂstra inspired her to initially reconstruct the Pà «rvaraá¹ ga, the preliminary part preceding the main drama. Later this was part of the three Samskrta dramas she directed, namely, Vikramà Ârvaà Âëyam and MÃÂlavikÃÂgnimitram of KÃÂlidÃÂsa and UttararÃÂmacaritam of Bhavabhà «ti. For her creations in this area, she founded an institution named 'Abhinaya BhÃÂratë' and a trust 'Bharata Nidhi' for promoting the performing arts.
She was associated with the documentation and revival of many performing arts like the Kà «á¹ÂiyÃÂá¹Âá¹Âam, and Dhrupada. She was an editor of the 'Dhrupada Annual', brought out by the Vidya Mandir Trust of the Maharaja of Banaras.
She also served as the vice-chairman of the Sangeet Natak Akademi, New Delhi and also an academic advisor to the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, New Delhi, and the Sangeet Research Academy, Kalkatta.
For the Sangeet Natak Akademi she organised three seminars, à ÂÃÂrá¹ gadÃÂva and his Saá¹ gëtaratnÃÂkara', 'Matanga and his work Bá¹ÂhaddÃÂà Âë' and 'Rasa in the Arts' and the papers presented for the first two have been published in book form.