Ravi Shankar Nine Decades Vol. 6: Dutch-India Airwaves
Release Date:
April 24, 2020
Nine Decades Vol. 6 is a special re-mastered recording of the music-theater piece entitled, Ghanashyam: A Broken Branch, originally commissioned by he Birmingham Touring Opera Company and premiering in 1989. Created out of his deep concern over the youth culture’s preoccupation with drugs as an “easy escape from the sadhana found in disciplined hard work,” Ravi Shankar wrote this outstanding piece of music in the folk tale tradition. It is an examination of the forces that can dilute the world-changing potential of the artist. The music is lush, featuring Shankar’s usual proclivity to combine Eastern and Western orchestral instrumentations to great effect. Featuring dance music in the North Indian Kathak style, as well as the South Indian Bharatanatyam and Kathakali styles, Ghanashyam is a dynamic work of unearthly beauty and one that is very much influenced by Shankar’s eight years of dancing in his brother Uday Shankar’s troupe. Originally released on CD in the early 1990s at a truncated 60 minutes, East Meets West has re-mastered the original reels and restored a full twenty more minutes to the music, making this recording a more faithful to the audio that accompanied the original theater production.
TRACKS
1 Radio Netherlands Hindi Introduction (0:57)
2 Raga on the Airwaves Tilak Shyam (8:30)
3 Raga on the Airwaves Dhun (9:12)
4 Dutch-India Interview (English) (7:24)
5 Dutch-India Interview (Hindi) (10:28)
CREDITS
Ravi Shankar – Sitar
Chatur Lal – Tabla
Nodu Mallick – Tanpura
All music composed by Ravi Shankar
All compositions published by Anourag Music via St. Rose Music Publishing (ASCAP) Executive Producers: Shyama Priya & Cat Celebrezze
Music Producer: Shyama Priya
Tape Transfer, Audio Restoration, and Mastering: Barry Phillips
Design: Wickstrom Design
Special thanks to Pieter de Rooij who originally found these recordings in the Radio Netherlands Archives and to the Radio Netherlands Worldwide Foundation for donating this recording to the Ravi Shankar Foundation.