What made Pandit Bhimsen Joshi a legend in his lifetime was not just his individualistic and impressive gayaki. There is a special romance in the various stories that surround his evolution from a young boy obsessed with music to a celebrated figure, who, after a chance encounter with an Abdul Karim Khan thumri, ran away from home at age eleven, wandering about on his own for some four years in his quest for a Guru, doing menial jobs, working even as a domestic help to earn a living, travelling ticketless in trains, from Bijapur in Dharwad to Pune to Gwalior and then to Jalandhar where he was finally found and brought back home by his father to receive rigorous training from Sawai Gandharva. 'There was a recklessness in his approach to life which had its own magnetism. He loved life on the fast track, especially with expensive Benz cars. Stories of his periodic binge drinking are legion. But every time he caught himself and brought himself back on track — somewhat like a replay of the time in childhood when he ran away from home and returned'. Sheila Dhar shares an anecdote from that period of Panditji's life when despite having established himself as the country's foremost vocalist, he was passing through a particularly difficult time trying to stop drinking and showed up at a music festival at Harballabh near Jalandhar: