Showing posts with label Indian Classical Music 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Classical Music 1. Show all posts
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
Monday, April 09, 2007
Sound of the Millennium Concert, Gateway of India, Bombay, January 2000
Zakir Hussain – tabla
L. Subramaniam – violin, vocals
Sultan Khan – sarangi
Vikku Vinyakram – ghattam (clay pot)
Selvaganesh – kanjira (Indian frame drum)
Sivamani – percussion
Bhavani Shankar – phakawaj
Tafiq Quereshi – percussion
Ranjit Barot – drums
"Zakir gets together with some of India’s top percussionists and some of his instrumentalist friends to put on a show. No real set list as it is pretty much just one percussion solo followed by another. Sultan Khan and L. Subramaniam do get short solo pieces. The entire concert is called “The Sound of the Millennium”."
L. Subramaniam – violin, vocals
Sultan Khan – sarangi
Vikku Vinyakram – ghattam (clay pot)
Selvaganesh – kanjira (Indian frame drum)
Sivamani – percussion
Bhavani Shankar – phakawaj
Tafiq Quereshi – percussion
Ranjit Barot – drums
"Zakir gets together with some of India’s top percussionists and some of his instrumentalist friends to put on a show. No real set list as it is pretty much just one percussion solo followed by another. Sultan Khan and L. Subramaniam do get short solo pieces. The entire concert is called “The Sound of the Millennium”."
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Ustad Allah Rakha & Zakir Hussain Tabla Solo inTeental
Not the best visual quality, but a great sound! La qualité visuelle laisse à désirer, mais quel merveilleux son!
Monday, March 12, 2007
Friday, March 02, 2007
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Shivkumar Sharma and Hariprasad Chaurasia - The Valley Recalls
"This performance is a sequel to a blockbuster Call Of The Valley album released in 1967 by EMI. The maturing of Sharma and Chaurasia is visible in their presentation of their music and despite a huge gap since their previous duet, the clear fusing of their minds and music is simply magical! It is as natural and seamless as one could possibly imagine! Hearing this concert on a CD gave one flutters but to see it being performed visually makes one fully realise what an incredible performance this is! Apart from the pedigree, it is better to identify The Valley Recalls more as iconic in its own right rather than a sequel, per se, to what in the 1960s was a mould breaking effort to bring classical music in an idiom more widely acceptable and enjoyable."
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