Ravi Shankar to Perform in Secrest Series Concert

Ravi Shankar, who popularized Indian music around the world, will perform at Wake Forest University Friday, March 21.

The 8 p.m. Secrest Artists Series Concert will be held in Wait Chapel.

From Woodstock to the Kremlin, Shankar is famous for playing the sitar, a complex stringed instrument. Zakir Hussain will accompany him on bongo-like drums called the tabla. Gaurov Mazumdar, a tamboura player, and Anthony John Karasek, a second sitar player, also will perform.

“An icon of world music, Ravi Shankar has come to embody Indian classical music and symbolize the fruitful cross-pollination of Eastern and Western musical styles,” according to Billboard magazine.

Shankar make his American debut in 1930 as a dancer and instrumentalist in a company formed by his brother. After studying the sitar intensively, he gave his first sitar concert in India in 1939. He then began performing recitals on All-India Radio and eventually became its director of music.

He first toured the United States as a sitar soloist in 1956 and recorded two albums, “Ravi Shankar Plays Three Classical Ragas” and “India’s Master Musician.”

Shankar also explored the similarities between Indian music and jazz in the album”Improvisations” (1962). He gave lessons in Indian music to John Coltrane and Don Ellis. With violinist Yehudi Menuhin, he won a Grammy Award for 1967’s Best Chamber Music Performance.

After meeting the Beatles’ George Harrison in 1966, Shankar made the leap from classical musician to Woodstock performer. He and Harrison organized 1971’s Concerts for Bangladesh. The soundtrack won Shankar his second Grammy, for the best album of 1972.

In 1971, Shankar and the London Symphony Orchestra premiered the first concerto for sitar written for a western orchestra. He wrote a second concerto that he debuted with the New York Philharmonic, them performed with major orchestras across the country.

Shankar has also composed many film scores, including those for the Oscar-winning “Ghandi” and Satayajit Ray’s “Apu Trilogy.” His compositions include solo works written for flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal and duets for violin and sitar. He composed and choreographed the ballet “Ghanashyama.”

The musician has received many honors including the Padma Vibhushan, India’s highest civilian award, in 1981. In honor of his 75th birthday, Angel Records released a 4-compact disc retrospective of his work, “In Celebration.” Shankar’s autobiography, “Raga Mala,” will be published this year.

The program will be announced from the stage.

Tickets are $15; $10 for senior citizens and non-Wake Forest students. To purchase tickets by credit card, call the University Theatre Box Office at 910-759-5295. For mail orders, send a check and a stamped self-addressed envelope to the Secrest Series, Box 7411 Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem 27109. For additional concert information, call 910-759-5757.


Categories: Arts & Culture, Happening at Wake

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