POPULARITY
Waarheen nu? De keuzemogelijkheden zijn soms te groot voor dat ene moment waarop je moet beslissen. Dan rest er weinig anders dan op de zevensprong stil te staan, om je heen te kijken, nog eens goed te luisteren en je hart te volgen. Want die bordjes, ach, dat zijn maar bordjes. 23.04 CD Srikandi (Challenge Classics CC72986) George Crumb: Sonate voor solo cello - II Tema pastorale con variazioni Duo Saraswati (Jan van der Plas) 4'24” 23.10 CD Srikandi (Challenge Classics CC72986) Benjamin Britten: Cello Sonate in C opus 65 - V Moto perpetuo Duo Saraswati 2'23” 23.15 eigen opname Guy Ropartz: Stuk voor trombone en piano in es-klein Sebastiaan Kemner; Andrea Vasi 7'09” 23.25 eigen opname Robin de Raaff: Encore II Joe Puglia 1'51” eigen opname Silvia Borzelli: presto continuo 4'44” eigen opname Kate Moore: E is for Elijah Joe Puglia 6'26” eigen opname Jan van de Putte: and then my song started dreaming Joe Puglia 3'42” 23.48 eigen opname Hariprasad Chaurasia: Prarthana Niti Ranjan Biswas - tabla, Hariprasad Chaurasia - bansuri (bambooflute), Ruven Ruppik - dimri 6'00" eigen opname Konrad Boehmer: Sestina (1977) Cèlia Tort Pujol [hobo] 6'43” De Klassieke Top 400: de 400 mooiste klassieke muziekstukken, uitgekozen door de luisteraar hoor je van maandag 14 t/m vrijdag 18 oktober 2024. Je kunt stemmen voor de lijst van donderdag 26 september t/m vrijdag 4 oktober. Stem via npoklassiek.nl/stem!
This time around we start with a rendition of "Portrait of Jennie" with strings followed by a portrait by a string player named Jenny… a portrait of Ornette Coleman by violinist Jenny Scheinman to be precise. That's followed by tributes to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Steve Lacy and Hariprasad Chaurasia, as well as a love letter to NYC. The playlist features Franco Ambrosetti; Jenny Scheinmann; Lux Quartet; Dan Weiss; Roberto Ottaviano, Danilo Gallo, Ferdinando Faraò; Nasheet Waits [pictured]. Detailed playlist at https://spinitron.com/RFB/pl/19310530/Mondo-Jazz (from "Portrait of Jennie" to "Snake Stance"). Happy listening! Photo credit: Jimmy Katz
Flûtiste, enseignant, interprète, compositeur, Pierre Hamon est un artiste incontournable de la scène actuelle des musiques anciennes et traditionnelles. Initialement autodidacte, il commence par parcourir le répertoire des flûtes à bec, avec une inclination toute particulière pour la musique médiévale. Sa curiosité musicale et son intérêt pour les instruments traditionnels le mènent parallèlement à explorer de nouveaux territoires sonores, par la pratique de nombreuses flûtes et aérophones extra-européens, puis dans son travail de composition, empreint des cultures millénaires qu'il fréquente. Tout au long de cet épisode, Pierre nous offre un regard fascinant sur la musique et son pouvoir de transcendance. Ensemble, nous avons évoqué : ses débuts, concomitants au renouveau de la musique ancienne sa fascination pour la musique médiévale son apprentissage (peu académique) de la flûte bansurî au contact de musiciens hindoustanis puis du maître Hariprasad Chaurasia la transposition de ces apprentissages dans son propre enseignement le mystère et la puissance de la musique l'arrivée de la composition dans son parcours… … et mille autres choses que je vous laisse découvrir !
I'm delighted to feature the master bansuri player Milind Date, who joined me from his home in Pune, India, and played his flutes as well as shared his perspectives from his life in music. As always, check the timestamps below for both the music and the many topics we covered. Milind spoke to me about his studies with the legendary Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia, of his fusion projects especially in South Korea, he had a great story about a memorable concert he played in Toronto, he talked about his extensive travels in India and internationally. He has a large and varied discography, and has composed music for many films: https://www.milind.date/ Like all my episodes, this is available both as a podcast and video, with a transcript all linked to my website: https://www.leahroseman.com/episodes/milind-date-bansuri-player Please help me continue this series! https://ko-fi.com/leahroseman Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (01:46) bansuri flute (03:28) Sunand Bhairav (04:50) early rock music influences, fusion music Hariprasad Chaurasia (11:01) Korean tours and collaborations (17:59) solo 6 month trip in India 2021 (26:11) folk tune from Uttarakhand region (30:01) different folk traditions in India (32:18) Milind's collection of flutes in different keys (35:01) differences between Hindustani and Carnatic music (38:09) system of gharanas, studies with Hariprasad Chaurasia (55:49) Zakir Hussain (01:05:31) writing film music, notation, Western classical musicians (01:11:31) around the world tour 2013 (01:12:58) performances in Canada (01:20:00) music as meditation (01:23:14) teaching and learning (01:29:56) flute performance --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/leah-roseman/message
This episode is a live session from Jaipur Literature Festival 2023!
Our guest today is Abhay Nayampally who was hugely influenced by his musician parents and entered the magical world of music. Having grown up playing instruments such as the Tabla and Piano right from the tender age of 5, he took a fancy to the Guitar around his early teens exploring it through jazz and blues. Abhay then felt the need to explore it in a rarely visited genre on the guitar, South Indian Classical music. Abhay, along with a significant number of Solo concerts under his belt around the world, has also had the privilege of sharing a stage and playing alongside some of the best-known Indian Classical and Jazz artists in the world some of whom include Ustad Taufiq Qureshi, Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia, Pt. Purbayan Chatterjee, Shankar Mahadevan, Pt. Yogesh Samsi, Louis Banks, Sivamani, Gino Banks, Rakesh Chaurasia, and Suresh Wadkar to name a few. He has also recorded for movies and ad campaigns with some of the best-known composers in the music industry including a few award-winning movies. He's also the recipient of the title Sangeeta Kalaratnam which when translated means, ‘Jewel of the Art of Music.' Abhay met his Guru and Mentor, the legendary Mandolin Maestro Vidwan U Srinivas under whose incomparable and invaluable tutelage, Abhay cemented his new style of playing and developed it into a polished and fine art form unique to the electric guitar. He is now currently the only Carnatic Guitar Artiste in the world performing and teaching the U Srinivas Bani (style) of playing the electric guitar. In 2021, Abhay released his self-titled debut Solo Carnatic Guitar album co-produced with internationally acclaimed composer/producer Sandeep Chowta which opened to a tremendous response. His album claimed the Number One Album Spot for the Apple Music All India Indian Classical Charts for more than a month & also made it to the final Grammy Ballot Round for the Best Global Music Album Award. He aims to bring Carnatic Classical, an ancient Indian art form, to modern audiences, within India and globally, making it more approachable, familiar, and modern without compromising on the traditional aspect of the music. Listen in as Abhay shares his amazing journey as a musician, his days with his Guru Vidwan Mandolin U Srinivas, the making of his debut album & his onward journey with music. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-third-eye1/message
This week: Amar el Achab; Abdelaziz Mahmoud; Amir ElSaffar's Two Rivers Ensemble; Lata Mangeshkar & Mukesh; gamelan angklung (from the Ketewel village, Java); Gamelan from the Musicians of Surakarta; Kishori Amonkar w. Hariprasad Chaurasia; Nayyara Noor; Abdullah Ibrahim; Doug Carn; much more... Always FREE of charge to listen to the radio program on WRFI, or stream, download, and subscribe to the podcast: via PODBEAN: https://conferenceofthebirds.podbean.com/ via iTUNES: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/conference-of-the-birds-podcast/id478688580 Also available at podomatic, Internet Archive, podtail, iheart Radio, and elsewhere. PLAYLISTS at SPINITRON: https://spinitron.com/WRFI/pl/15600267/Conference-of-the-Birds and via the Conference of the Birds page at WRFI.ORG https://www.wrfi.org/wrfiprograms/conferenceofthebirds/ We will continue to update playlists at confbirds.blogspot.com 24-48 hours of the program's posting online. Join us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/conferenceofthebirds/?ref=bookmarks FIND WRFI on Radio Garden: http://radio.garden/visit/ithaca-ny/aqh8OGBR Contact: confbirds@gmail.com
"I think the message that I wanted to leave people with was “Can you swap anxiety with curiosity?” This is something I've been trying to do for myself: when you're in an anxious situation, can you take a curious approach and say “What is going on? What can I learn from this?”, whether you can postpone the anxiety to when it is more useful to be anxious, is something that I was keen to get out in this piece"That is J Ramanand, the Co-Founder and Upleveler at Choose to Thinq, which enables organisations and individuals become future relevant.Ramanand is a master quizzer, quizmaster and an expert at using the power of curiosity to help others uplevel themselves in a 'shape-shifting' world.So here's a confession. I've always been in awe of quizzes.For one, the sheer thrill of quizzing.Even though I've participated in just a handful of quizzes throughout my life, I still remember the memory of the dopamine hits when I would get an answer right. It must be amazing to get these hits much more often in life!The second reason relates to the skill of quizzing. Now, many of you may know this, but for those who don't: Good quizzes are not reliant on memory. As Ramanand says, they have 50% of the answer hidden in the question itself… and the participant can use the powers of deduction to arrive at the answer.Now, while the ability to deduce an answer with the given clues is one key quizzing skill, the real skill for me is the craft of creating good quiz questions. And it is this craft which has several parallels with storytelling. Both skills use the power of surprise, familiarity and curiosity to deliver an engaging experience to the audience.Ramanand is uniquely placed to shed light on these two related skills: - He is a die-hard quizzer - incidentally he was the youngest winner at BBC's Mastermind India and has appeared as an expert on the show Kaun Banega Crorepati (India's version of Who wants to be a Millionaire) - He's a sought-after quizmaster: for the last couple of decades he's been setting questions on an average of at least one a day. That's thousands of questions! - He's an engaging and thought-provoking writer - He works closely with the leadership at different organisations in helping them navigate the ‘shape-shifting world' as he calls it and stay future relevantI had a ton of fun geeking out on quizzing and storytelling techniques with Ramanand. Finally, make sure you listen to the fabulous, fascinating story about the Indian flute maestro, Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia. Let's dive in. ****Show notes:J Ramanand on LinkedIn and Twitter Choose to Thinq websitePosts by Ramanand on the CTQ blog: - Three lessons on Managing a remote team an- How Fouls Changed FootballQuora posts by Ramanand: - A favourite question he created, - Favourite personal moments from quizzingA couple of pieces Ramanand wrote for Mint: The Computer History Museum
Deepak Ram grew up in South Africa, discovered music as a teenager, studied bansuri (bamboo flute) with the masters in Mumbai, and found his “thing” as a globally-recognized musician. As he shares his journey with us, we touch upon: School vs. Education Studying with the Masters The Role of Practice and Intention Finding Your “Thing” Heroes and Zeroes. We close the episode with some of Deepakji's sublime playing. References: Deepak's website: https://www.deepakram.com/ Deepak on spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/0IRHoIb1ZFEVrwdm0SzPh5 Musicians mentioned: Hariprasad Chaurasia, Vijay Raghav Rao, Shivkumar Sharma Call of the Valley (album) https://www.allmusic.com/album/call-of-the-valley-mw0000174667 Technical information on Ragas mentioned: Raga Lalit: http://www.tanarang.com/english/lalit_eng.htm Raga Bhopali: http://www.tanarang.com/english/bhoopali_eng.htm
Programa Viagem Espiritual com Wagner Borges. Data: 04/07/2021 Local: Rádio Vibe Mundial de São Paulo – 95,7 FM Link para a música de fundo do áudio final: “Timeless” – do flautista indiano Hariprasad Chaurasia. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtDU2Lr_UoU&t=0s Obs.: Este link é do CD “Now” (completo). A música do áudio é a sexta do disco. *** Livros gratuitos […]
In this episode we dive into the various forms of western classical music explored by Ilaiyaraaja, especially in his independent non-film albums. We focus specifically on the concerto form and how the Nothing But Wind album utilizes this form to highlight the virtuoso flautist Hariprasad Chaurasia. Topics Covered: What are forms and how do we talk about them when discussing music? What is the historical context of Indian music being fused with western forms? The concerto, its various components and how the great composers of the west have utilized this form How does the concerto get used in Ilaiyaraaja's Nothing But Wind? Participants: Mahesh Deepauk Bala Chidambaram Musical References: Composers breath Ravishankar and George Harrison Beatles and Yehudi Menuhin Mahavishnu orchestra Vivaldi 4 seasons Concerto Beethoven Violin Concerto (Perlman) Beethoven Violin Concerto (Hilary Hahn) Ravishankar London Philharmonic Concerto Sangeetha Megam Unsuk Chin - Cello Concerto Singing Self Ravishankar at (Woodstock) John McLaughlin & Shakti Summer Storm - Presto Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto Brahms Double Concerto (for Tutti) Interviews: Raaja in Podhigai TV
Manish Vyas: India, its Paths, Traditions, Yoga, Music, Mantra, Spirituality
I personally have always considered it as a blessing for me to have been born in such a culture like Bhārat (India) with its ancient roots and its vast, bottomless, fascinating world around mystical wisdom and spiritual legacy, reflected also in all of our forms of arts expression, like music, dance and so many others.This podcast features a very interesting interview to Bapu Padmanabha, a musician from South India, who besides being a wonderful Bansuri player disciple of Hariprasad Chaurasia, is also a genuine presenter of this ancient science and ancient tradition of Mantra, Vedic chanting and other styles.The interview takes us through a journey across the world of sacred music from India and its authentic practices, what it takes to represent this tradition, how many years of learning and dedication are invested in such journey, what is the path of a musician, a teacher, a spiritual seeker and an eternal student, when it comes to music from India.Besides other long and patient trainings, just to start with Bapu's training in chanting, we know that he dedicated around twelve years, every single day, two hours per day... on getting trained in the atmosphere of this discipline, in a Hindu Vedic school in South India, knowing that this is the required patience and dedication to honor this tradition.Listen more to his interesting stories and answers to questions from Manish Vyas in this interview. Specially conceived for lovers of traditions from India, its music and the science of Mantra.You can also find a video about Bapu's music and work in this link, when he contributed to the upcoming documentary, “The True World of Mantra and Sacred Music from India”: https://youtu.be/DlqABwkXwbs Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/manishvyasmusic)
Ook met zoveel plezier naar de Filmmuziek Top 50 geluisterd? Vanavond in Vrije Geluiden een klein moment van bezinning. Een kolossale filmindustrie (met de bijbehorende filmmuziek-wereld) vinden we in India: Bollywood. Daar worden al vele tientallen jaren talloze films gemaakt, van documentaires tot romantische komedies, en van serieuze avonturenfilms tot musicals. De muziek die er bij hoort, grijpt bijna altijd terug op de klassieke Indiase roots: raga's, aangepast voor gebruik in de film. Een voorbeeldje hoor je vanavond. En dan: filmmuziek die dat eigenlijk helemaal niet ís (of was, zo je wilt). Van Bartók, Ligeti en Marshall. Wel in de film terechtgekomen, maar daar oorspronkelijk helemaal niet voor bedoeld... Aan het slot van het programma een keuze uit de Songs for Murdered Sisters van Jake Heggie, op tekst van Margaret Atwood. 23.04 CD STRAVINSKY Apollon Musagète + BARTÓK (Deutsche Grammophon 463 640-2) Bela Bartók: Music for strings, percussion and celesta Sz 106, III Adagio Berliner Philharmoniker olv Herbert von Karajan 8'12” 23.15 CD Silsila (RPG Enterprises – CDF 130073) Shiv-Hari: Silsila-thema Shiv Kumar Sharma [santoor] Hariprasad Chaurasia [bansuri] 9'24” 23.25 CD Lux Aeterna (Harmonia Mundi GNC 901985) György Ligeti: Lux Aeterna Cappella Amsterdam olv Daniel Reuss 9'50” 23.35 CD American Elegies (None 7559-792492) Ingram Marshall: Fog Tropes Orchestra of St. Luke's olv John Adams 10'50” 23.47 CD Songs for murdered sisters (Pentatone PTC 5186270) Jake Heggie: Songs for murdered sisters (keuze) Joshua Hopkins [bariton] & Jake Heggie [piano] 6'51”
Jamie Catto is an author, film-maker and musician running transformational workshops and events to reclaim all the treasure we edited away into the shadows and facilitate everyone daring to be more real, more fallible, more tender, more intimate. Jamie Catto is a former and founding member of Faithless. He was the ballad singer/songwriter, and became Art Director and Video Director of the band before leaving in 1999 to form the double-Grammy nominated, global music and film project 1 Giant Leap. His last album with Faithless was Sunday 8PM. He is also known as a photographer, script editor and creative catalyst. When Jamie Catto and Duncan Bridgeman formed 1 Giant Leap, they toured to such nations as Senegal, Ghana, South Africa, Uganda, India, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, America and Europe, equipped solely with a digital video camera, a laptop and a vision to explore ‘The Unity in the Diversity'. They released the first ‘1 Giant Leap' in 2002. (It was nominated for 2 Grammys in 2003, sold over 300 thousand albums, and won numerous awards globally). They collaborated with such artists as Dennis Hopper, Kurt Vonnegut, Michael Stipe, Bono, Susan Sarandon, k.d. Lang, Tom Robbins, Dido, Brian Eno, Tim Robbins, Daniel Lanois, Yoko Ono, J. P. Donleavy, Naomi Klein, Oumou Sangare, Billy Connolly, Baaba Maal, Rokia Traore, DBC Pierre, Neneh Cherry, Robbie Williams, Lila Downs, Bob Geldof, Neale Donald Walsch, Stephen Fry, Gita Mehta, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Speech, Mahotella Queens, Michael Franti etc. In 2004, Simon Fuller and 19 Entertainment backed the production of the 2nd 1 Giant Leap Film, TV Series and CD, “What About Me?”1 Giant Leap finished their second film / album ‘What About Me?' released on region 2 DVD June 2008 in the UK and won Grand Jury Best Documentary at Red Rock Film Festival at first screening in America at the end of 2008, has received numerous recognitions and additional screenings including a special screening at the DocMiami International Film Festival in 2010. (The making of What About Me? TV series screens on Channel 4 this November 2010.) They travelled across 50 countries and 5 continents recording music and interviews What About Me? website It features Tim Robbins, Daniel Lanois, KD Lang, Susan Sarandon, Zap Mama, Bob Geldof, Noam Chomsky, Billy Connolly, Marianne Williamson, Deepak Chopra, Neale Donald Walcsh, Courtney Love, Carrie Fisher, Bhagavan Das, Ram Dass, Oumou Sangare, Rokia Traore, Stephen Fry, Eckhart Tolle, Michael Franti, Michael Stipe, DBC Pierre, Will Young Ram Dass Daniel Lanois, Maxi Jazz, Oumou Sangare, Mahotella Queens, Stewart Copeland, Lila Downs Ramata Diakite, and others. Deep breathe, Jamie is insanely gifted and our chat he shares his wisdom and we delve more into the workshops he is offering in 2020 and how he lets life happen to him and moves with the beat rather than move against the beat. He finds the space between the notes, and it definatly shines through in our chat, just what an amazing human being Jamie is. I was super nervous in our catch up, which I feel confident in my other talks, I have mastered moving through my nerves, but you can see why in our talk, Jamie is a big soul with a lot to share and I am committed to bringing my listeners the best parts of my guests, I believe we were able to reveal a lot of gems in our chat, and I hope to get to have him on again as their is so much more to share.. You can catch the full episode on OneSpaceLove You Tube Channel visit www.onespace.love
Rohini Sahajpal er en av landets fremste utøvere på indisk sitar. I oppveksten på Fjell i Drammen fikk hun lære indisk klassisk musikk av sin far Shri Lal. Broren Jai Shankar fikk opplæring i tablas. På Fjell skole spille de for medelever og gjester. Begge er nå leger og utøvende musikere på høyt profesjonelt nivå. Rohini fikk en ny musikalsk oppvåkning etter et seminar med sin nåværende musikalske mentor, Hariprasad Chaurasia. Flere måneder i året spiller hun med ham og kombinerer nå legeyrket med musikken. Rohini er dypt forankret i den indiske tradisjonen og svært opptatt av møter med musikere i andre stilarter og musikkformer. Det har vi nytt godt av i Drammen Sacred Music Festival gjennom årene. Musikk er kunst som kan åpne alle grenser og berøre mennesker på dypet.-Jeg spilte nettopp med Arve Tellefsen. Et utrolig opplevelse med en stor musiker og et stort menneske, sier Rohini.Ypsilonsamtaler er en podkast av og med Ivar Flaten fra Kirkelig Dialogsenter Drammen. Ypsilon er den ikoniske gangbroen over Drammenselva. Drammen er elveby og en by for brobyggere. Som daglig leder og dialogprest inviterer Ivar mennesker til samtaler der kulturmøter, brobygging og samfunnsliv er tema. De inviterte har bidratt - og bidrar til at verden blir et bedre sted gjennom arbeidsliv, frivillig innsats og samfunnsengasjement på ulike måter.Drammen kommune har omtrent 100.000 innbyggere med røtter i over 150 nasjoner. Her lever mennesker med veldig mange ulike historier, kulturelle referanser og religiøse tradisjoner. Gjennom 15 års prestetjeneste og like lang dialogpraksis, har Ivar snakket med svært mange mennesker og fått et stort nettverk.Kulturmøtene i internasjonale Drammen er rammen for samtaler med livshistorier, kunnskap om forskjellige tenkemåter og levemåter - og mye materiale til refleksjon. Kort sagt vil Ypsilonsamtaler gi deg muligheten til lå bli litt mer kjent med mange fascinerende mennesker.En ny episode av Ypsilonsamtaler kommer hver torsdag. Vi er takknemlige for innspill og forslag! Send oss gjerne en e-post!Utgiver: Kirkelig Dialogsenter DrammenProdusent og programvert: Ivar FlatenMusikk: Ole Jørn MyklebustVignett/kjenning: Are Tågvold FlatenBildet på logoen er tatt av Per Ulleland See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Recored and broadcast live at the Ragas Live Festival 2017 from the Rubin Museum of Art, we hear the world premier of the new project: Recalling the Valley. Jay Gandhi (bansuri) and Max ZT's (hammered dulcimer) pay tribute to their world-renowned teachers, Shivkumar Sharma and Hariprasad Chaurasia. With Ehren Hanson on tabla they will perform music inspired by their gurus’ beloved album, “Call of the Valley.” They also have a great discussion with Andrew Shantz on the topic of creating art away from its place of origin. Ragas Live Festival supported by the Rubin Museum of Art, WKCR and Humanities New York.
This week: Impacto Crea; Lebron Brothers; Ndikuzo Makhathini; Ras Moshe; Aurlus Mabele (RIP); Mbaraka Mwinshehe; New Jazz Syndicate; Habel Kifoto & Mrroon Commandos; Dona Onete; Aline Calixto; Morente; Mari Peña; Tina Brooks; Sathima Bea Benjamin; Rais Kahn; Hariprasad Chaurasia; much more... Always FREE of charge to listen to the radio program on WRFI, or stream, download, and subscribe to the podcast: via PODBEAN: https://conferenceofthebirds.podbean.com/ via iTUNES: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/conference-of-the-birds-podcast/id478688580 Also available at podomatic, Internet Archive, podtail, iheart Radio, and elsewhere. ***In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Conference of the Birds will be broadcasting remotely, with little to no back-announcing, for the foreseeable future. Playlists will be updated live, in real-time, on the pop-up player on the WRFI website (for those listening live via WRFI's live-stream), on Spinitron at the Conference of the Birds page: https://spinitron.com/WRFI/show/92902/Conference-of-the-Birds and via the Conference of the Birds page at WRFI.ORG:https://www.wrfi.org/wrfiprograms/conferenceofthebirds/ We will continue to update playlists at confbirds.blogspot.com 24-48 hours of the program's airing Friday evenings on WRFI. Join us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/conferenceofthebirds/?ref=bookmarks Contact: confbirds@gmail.com
This is an exclusive interview with the greatest living master of the bansuri, Hariprasad Chaurasia. David Ellenbogen and Chaurasia's Senior disciple Jay Gandhi join the maestro at his Vrindaban Gurukul, in Mumbai.
Les Tympans de Magellan, c'est un podcast mensuel qui fait voyager vos oreilles. Chaque mois, un nouveau pays mis à l'honneur à travers une liste de morceaux soigneusement choisis. Le pays du mois : Pour ce cinquième épisode, on file en Asie et on vous emmène en Inde ! Tracklist : A. R. Rahman - "Bharat Humko Jaan Se Pyara Hai" Charanjit Singh - "Raga Todi" Trilok Gurtu - "Milo" Debashish Bhattacharya & Bob Brozman - "Tagore Street Blues" Shivkumar Sharma, Brij Bhushan Kabra & Hariprasad Chaurasia - "Rag Pahadi" Mumford & Sons, Laura Marling & Dharohar Project - "To Darkness / Kripa" zzz - "cocacola" Humeysha - "Majestic" R. D. Burman - "Mehbooba Mehbooba" Zakir Hussain - "You and Me" Ustad Bismillah Khan - "Raga : Tilak Kamod " Shakti With John McLaughlin - "Face to Face" Sharda - "Jack and the Beanstalk" Envoyez vos morceaux Vous avez jusqu'au 17 mars 23:59 pour envoyer un titre indien accompagné de votre commentaire à wazoo@xsilence.net Nous sélectionnerons certains des morceaux reçus pour les diffuser et lirons le commentaire associé. • Générique de début : Depeche Mode - "World in My Eyes"• Générique de fin : Wyatt / Atzmon / Stephen - "What a Wonderful World" Retrouver le podcast : XSilence | Facebook | Twitter | iTunes | Podcloud
Recored and broadcast live at the Ragas Live Festival 2017 from the Rubin Museum of Art, we hear the world premier of the new project: Recalling the Valley. Jay Gandhi (bansuri) and Max ZT's (hammered dulcimer) pay tribute to their world-renowned teachers, Shivkumar Sharma and Hariprasad Chaurasia. With Ehren Hanson on tabla they will perform music inspired by their gurus’ beloved album, “Call of the Valley.” They also have a great discussion with Andrew Shantz on the topic of creating art away from its place of origin. Ragas Live Festival supported by the Rubin Museum of Art, WKCR and Humanities New York.
Max ZT Ensemble played a late night set at the Ragas Live Festival 2016 at Pioneer Works. 1am-2am Max ZT (hammered dulcimer), Sameer Gupta (tabla), Priya Darshini (vocal), This year's festival is October 21st 2017 at the Rubin Museum of Art. At 4pm Max ZT and Jay Gandhi give a tribute to their world-renowned teachers, Shivkumar Sharma and Hariprasad Chaurasia. The duo will perform a set inspired by their gurus' beloved album, "Call of the Valley." Max will join the Epichorus at 2 am : with Priya Darshini (vocals), Zach Fredman (oud), Max ZT (hammered dulcimer), Rich Stein (percussion), Uri Sharlin (accordion) Tickets here
An interview of Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia with presentator Kries Bandhoe, Amor FM. Was broadcast on Dutch radio on Friday the 20th of May. PanditJi's concert is on Friday the 27th of May in The Hague in De Nieuwe Kerk at 20:15. Tickets: https://www.zuiderstrandtheater.nl/programma/?maand=2016-05-27#modal=/programma/3401/Pandit_Hariprasad_Chaurasia_/Een_zoektocht_naar_liefde_vrede_harmonie/
Sue Lawley's castaway this week is a businessman who brought authentic Indian foods to our supermarkets - Sir Gulam Noon. An instinctive businessman, he was brought up in a complex family situation with a step-brother and sister who were also his half-siblings and a cousin who assumed a paternal role after his own father died. They were not well off, but they had managed until their father's death when Gulam was seven. After that, it was a struggle and as a young teenager Gulam would spend the evenings working in his family's two sweetshops in Bombay. He had an entrepreneurial eye and saw business opportunities to improve and expand. After a brief holiday in Engand he announced to his family that he wanted to expand into this country too. He built a confectionary business here and, seeing the huge public appetite for Indian food in restaurants, started manufacturing it for the supermarket shelves. After a disastrous fire at his factory in 1994, he built up his business again and now makes more than a quarter of a million curries a day. His biggest seller, not surprisingly, is chicken tikka masala. Gulam Noon was given an MBE for services to the food industry in 1994, and in 2002 was knighted.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: Nat Bhairav by Shivkumar Sharma, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Brijbushan Kabra Book: Long Walk To Freedom by Nelson Mandela Luxury: Videos of cricket matches
Sue Lawley's castaway this week is a businessman who brought authentic Indian foods to our supermarkets - Sir Gulam Noon. An instinctive businessman, he was brought up in a complex family situation with a step-brother and sister who were also his half-siblings and a cousin who assumed a paternal role after his own father died. They were not well off, but they had managed until their father's death when Gulam was seven. After that, it was a struggle and as a young teenager Gulam would spend the evenings working in his family's two sweetshops in Bombay. He had an entrepreneurial eye and saw business opportunities to improve and expand. After a brief holiday in Engand he announced to his family that he wanted to expand into this country too. He built a confectionary business here and, seeing the huge public appetite for Indian food in restaurants, started manufacturing it for the supermarket shelves. After a disastrous fire at his factory in 1994, he built up his business again and now makes more than a quarter of a million curries a day. His biggest seller, not surprisingly, is chicken tikka masala. Gulam Noon was given an MBE for services to the food industry in 1994, and in 2002 was knighted. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Nat Bhairav by Shivkumar Sharma, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Brijbushan Kabra Book: Long Walk To Freedom by Nelson Mandela Luxury: Videos of cricket matches
"Sue Lawley's castaway this week is the sculptor Antony Gormley. His Angel of the North towers over the A1 just outside Gateshead. Elsewhere, his figures stand buried in sand at the mouth of an estuary, or hang from the ceiling of an American jailhouse. In 1994 he won the Turner Prize for his works called Field - thousands of small clay creatures, crafted by people from around the world. Another sculpture, Bed, he created from a mattress made from thousands of slices of bread - and then ATE his own body shape over several weeks.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Raga Jaijaiwanti by Hariprasad Chaurasia and Dilshad Khan Book: Principle of Hope by Ernst Bloch Luxury: Snorkel and mask
"Sue Lawley's castaway this week is the sculptor Antony Gormley. His Angel of the North towers over the A1 just outside Gateshead. Elsewhere, his figures stand buried in sand at the mouth of an estuary, or hang from the ceiling of an American jailhouse. In 1994 he won the Turner Prize for his works called Field - thousands of small clay creatures, crafted by people from around the world. Another sculpture, Bed, he created from a mattress made from thousands of slices of bread - and then ATE his own body shape over several weeks. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Raga Jaijaiwanti by Hariprasad Chaurasia and Dilshad Khan Book: Principle of Hope by Ernst Bloch Luxury: Snorkel and mask