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The famously wild mane has thinned a little with age,but Indias most celebrated percussionist,Ustad Zakir Hussain,retains the vim that first made him popular with music lovers in the country and abroad. We can still see the grinning charmer who shook his locks as he beat away at the tabla in the Taj Mahal tea adverts of the 90s and who made the Indian beat a part of global music. But he does not claim any credit for this.
Until about 35 years ago,a tabla player received only 10 per cent of the earnings of the main musician. Even in my struggling days,Ive travelled by train while the sitarist I was supposed to perform with would travel by flight. Its thanks to my father that tabla got the global recognition it has today. He changed the image of a tabla player as a mere accompanist.
The barsi,which starts at 6:30 am on February 3 at the Shanmukhananda Hall in Sion,is usually a dawn-to-dusk event and sees Indias most celebrated musicians perform. This year has singer Shankar Mahadevan,tabla artistes Vijay Ghate,Subhankar Bannerjee and Nayan Ghosh,followed by Turkish percussion group Taksim Trio and drummer Billy Cobham perform with Hussain himself.
As one of the countrys busiest musicians,59-year-old Hussain has performed over 30 concerts in three months. Moreover,his new album,The Melody of Rhythm has received a Grammy nomination in the Best Classical Crossover album category,while last year he won the award for the Global Drum Project.
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