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After a long gap,sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar will entertain Delhiites with a concert
The legendary violinist Yehudi Menuhin compared him to Mozart and Beethoven while George Harrison said he was his inspiration. The sitar,meanwhile,became a global instrument once Pandit Ravi Shankar started playing it. And to think that the talented young Shankar started his career,not in classical music,but as a dancer while his brother,Uday,also a classical dancer,was touring Europe is quite astonishing. It was only when I met baba (Ustad Allauddin Khan) at 18 that I began learning the sitar in Maihar. The sound of it fascinated me, says Shankar,now 90,at the Ravi Shankar Academy located at Chanakyapuri. The maestro is in town and will perform for the yearly Music in the Park series organised by SPIC MACAY.
After such an illustrious career spanning over 50 years that includes collaborations with The Beatles and unequalled celebrity status for an Indian classical musician,Shankar reminisces about whats meant most to him over the years. I never jammed with the Beatles. I presented Indian music on my own terms, says Shankar firmly. His presence in film music,he says,was too little. I composed for Gandhi ,Anuradha and Satyajit Rays Apu trilogy. I never had time for films otherwise. Interestingly,Shankar had set the tune to the semi national anthem,Mohammad Iqbals Saare Jahan Se Accha in 1945,though the HMV record attributed the song to Lata Mangeshkar and referred to the composition as traditional. Shankar shrugs and states philosophically,My music has sometimes been used illegally but I cant always stop it.
(Music In The Park will be held at 6 pm at Nehru Park on December 5. Entry free)
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