Ravi Shankar
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- This article is about the musician. For the guru, see Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. For the music director, see Ravi (music director).
Ravi Shankar (born April 7 1920 in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India) is a Bengali-Indian musician best known for his virtuosity on the sitar.
A disciple of Allauddin Khan (founder of the Maihar gharana of Indian classical music), Pandit Ravi Shankar is arguably the best-known Indian instrumentalist, and is well known for his pioneering work in bringing the power and appeal of the Indian classical music tradition, as well as Indian music and its performers in general, to the West. This was done through his association with The Beatles as well as with his own personal charisma. His musical career spans over six decades and Shankar currently holds the Guinness Record for the longest international career.
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Early life
His ancestral home is the present day Kalia Upozila in Narail District, Jessore, Bangladesh. His mother's name was Hemanginee, and his elder brother Uday Shankar was a famous Indian classical dancer. As a teenager Ravi played sitar with Uday Shankar's dance troupe, most notably with Anna Pavlova in the Soviet Union.
Musical career
Ravi Shankar gave up a possible dance career, and starting in 1938 he spent long years of dedicated study under his guru Allaudin Khan. His first public performances in India came in 1939. Formal training ended in 1944 and he worked out of Bombay. He began writing scores for film and ballet and started a recording career with HMV's Indian affiliate. He became music director of All India Radio in the 1950s.
Shankar then became well known to the music world outside India, first performing in the Soviet Union in 1954 and then the West in 1956. He performed in major events such as the Edinburgh Festival as well as major venues such as Royal Festival Hall.
George Harrison, a member of The Beatles, began experimenting with the sitar in 1965. The two eventually met due to this common interest and became close friends, and that in turn expanded Shankar's fame as a pop star and as Harrison's mentor. This development greatly expanded his career. He was invited to play venues that were unusual for a classical musician, such as the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival in Monterey, California. He was also one of the artists who performed at the Woodstock Festival in 1969 and The Concert for Bangladesh in 1971. Ravi Shankar & Friends was also the opening act for Harrison's 1974 tour of the United States.
Shankar has been critical of some facets of the Western reception of Indian music. On a trip to San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district after performing in Monterey, Shankar wrote "I felt offended and shocked to see India being regarded so superficially and its great culture being exploited. Yoga, Tantra, mantra, kundalini, ganja, hashish, Kama Sutra? They all became part of a cocktail that everyone seemed to be lapping up!" In 1969 he published an English language autobiography, My Music, My Life.
Shankar has written two concertos for sitar and orchestra, violin-sitar compositions for Yehudi Menuhin and himself, music for flute virtuoso Jean Pierre Rampal, and music for Hozan Yamamoto, master of the shakuhachi (Japanese flute), and koto virtuoso Musumi Miyashita. He has composed extensively for films and ballets in India, Canada, Europe, and the United States, including Chappaqua, Charly, Gandhi, and the Apu Trilogy. His recording Tana Mana, released on the Private Music label in 1987, penetrated the New Age genre with its unique combination of traditional instruments with electronics. The classical composer Philip Glass acknowledges Shankar as a major influence, and the two collaborated to produce Passages, a recording of compositions in which each reworks themes composed by the other. Shankar also composed the sitar part in Glass's 2004 composition Orion.
Family life
When Ravi Shankar was 21, he married 14-year-old Annapurna Devi, daughter of his guru Baba Allauddin Khan and sister of Ali Akbar Khan in Almora. The marriage produced one son, Shubhendra Shankar, but ended in divorce.
He became involved with American concert promoter Sue Jones but they did not marry. Their union, however, produced one daughter, the Grammy winner Norah Jones. He later married an admirer, Sukanya Kotiyan (born Rajan), with whom he had a second daughter named Anoushka.
Shankar's daughters Anoushka Shankar and Norah Jones are also musicians. Anoushka is a sitarist and performs frequently with Shankar, in addition to having her own recording career. Jones has achieved considerable professional success, including several Grammy Awards, by herself with no assistance from her father. Shankar is also the uncle of the late sitarist Ananda Shankar.
Shankar has homes in both Encinitas, California and New Delhi, India.
Honours
Shankar is an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and is a member of the United Nations International Rostrum of Composers. He has received many awards and honours from his own country and from all over the world, including fourteen honorary doctorates, the Padma Vibhushan, Desikottam, the Magsaysay Award from Manila, two Grammy Awards, the Fukuoka Grand Prize from Japan, and the Crystal Award from Davos, with the title "Global Ambassador", to name but some. In 1986 he was nominated to be a member of the Rajya Sabha, India's upper house of Parliament, for six years. In 2002, he was conferred the inaugural Indian Chamber of Commerce Lifetime Achievement Award. The Bharat Ratna was awarded to him in 1999.
Films
- Raga (1971). Directed by Howard Worth.
- The Concert for Bangladesh (1972).
- Concert for George (2003).
Discography
(alphabetically)
- At the Monterey International Pop Festival (LIVE)
- At the Woodstock Festival (LIVE)
- Bridges: Best of Private Music Recordings
- The Bunbury Tails
- Chants Of India: Ravi Shankar; George Harrison (1997)
- Collected
- Concert for Peace
- Concerto for Sitar & Orchestra
- The essential Ravi Shankar
- Farewell my friend
- Festival from India
- Four Ragas
- From Dusk to Dawn - the Raga Collection
- From India
- Full Circle: Carnegie Hall 2000
- Genesis
- The Genius Of Ravi Shankar
- Golden Jubilee Concert (LIVE)
- Golden Jubilee Concert, Vol. 2
- Homage to Mahatma Gandhi
- In Concert (1961)
- In London (LIVE)
- In New York (LIVE)
- In San Francisco (LIVE)
- In Venice. Vol. 1
- Incredible
- Inde du Nord
- India's Master Musician
- Indian Night Live Stuttgart '88 (LIVE)
- Inside the Kremlin
- Jazz et Ragas
- Kaleidoscope World
- Legends (Box Set)
- Live at Monterey 1967 (LIVE)
- The Man and his Music
- Master Drummers of India
- Master musicians of India
- Master of Sitar
- Menuhin Meets Ravi Shankar
- A Morning Raga/An evening Raga
- Pandit Ravi Shankar
- Passages
- Passages - Windham Hill Classics
- Portraits of Genius
- Presents the Music of India
- Raga Charukauns
- Raga Jogeshwari
- Raga Tala
- Ragas (with Ali akbar khan)
- Raga Varanasi
- Ravi Shankar
- Ravi Shankar & Ali Akbar Khan in Concert 1972
- The Ravi Shankar Collection: Improvisations
- Ravi Shankar Master of Sitar
- The Ravi Shakar Project: Tana Mana
- The Rough Guide to Ravi Shankar
- Raga Mala: Sitar Concerto No. 2
- Sangeet Sartaj: Vol. 1 & 2
- Sitar
- Sitar Master
- Sound of the Sitar
- Sounds of India
- Spirit of India
- Spiritual Music of India: Ragas for meditation
- The Teacher
- Three Ragas
- The Tiger and the Brahmin (with Ben Kingsley)
- Transmigration Macabre
- West meets East
Bibliography
- Rag Mala (1997) (Autobiography edited by George Harrison)
- Learning Indian music: A systematic approach (1979)
- My Music, My Life (1968) (Autobiography)
- Music memory (1967)
External links
- Ravi Shankar Official Website
- His autobiography - My Music, My Life
- Audio excerpts from a 2000 interview for the BBC
- Ravi Shankar Interview
- Stream and interview of his 80th birthday
- EMI Biography
- Guinness Record for longest International Careerda:Ravi Shankar
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