Live – Ritesh and Rajnish Mishra – University of Notre Dame – April 27, 2017

My wife let me know about a performance of classic Indian music taking place at the University of Notre Dame for free on April 27th.  I love classical Indian music, so I was willing to stay up a bit late even though I had to work early Friday morning to catch this show.

The performers were a pair of brothers named Ritesh and Rajnish Mishra.  They’re classically trained and singing duets in classical Indian music isn’t easy since you have to harmonize and be able to improvise at any moment.  The brothers put on a nice show, and their enthusiasm was contagious as they laughed and cheered not only each other but also their backing musicians.

Tabla player Hindole Majumdar put down great beats and harmonium player Anirban Chakrabarty created a hypnotic drone and bass.  The four men performed for almost two hours with only ten minutes intermission.  This was also the third time the Mishra brothers had performed at UND, and they certainly deserved a larger audience than the couple dozen of us who were there.

The ragas they performed were spiritual at first and then playful by the end.  They also explained the beat structure of each before performing it.  I love that about classical Indian music shows.  The performers almost always give you a little music composition lesson at the beginning.

It was a nice way to spend the evening, and the lack of sleep was worth it.

L-R: Hindol Majumdar, Ritesh Mishra, Rajnish Mishra, Anirban Chakrabarti

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

Live – Anoushka Shankar – Ft. Wayne, IN – March 26, 2017

Sitar master Anoushka Shankar and her and put on an excellent ninety-minute performance of classical Indian music at Indiana-Purdue-Fort Wayne’s Rhinehart Recital Hall.  It was a nearly full house and Ms. Shankar and her band played three ragas for us.

Her band consisted of gentlemen playing bass and treble tanpurs (drone instruments), tabla (hand drums), flute, shehnai (a sort of trumpet), and mridangam (hand percussion).  Her tabla player, Ojas Adhiya, had only played three times with her on this tour so far, but he played like he’d been touring for years.  He and mridangam player Pirashanna Thevarajah had a great “duel” during the last raga in which they matched beats and fed off each other’s rhythms.

In the meantime, Anoushka Shankar was shredding her sitar.  I saw her play, along with her favorite, the late, great Ravi Shankar, at Notre Dame University years ago (who was still killing it in his late 80’s).  She wowed the crowd there, and she stunned the crowd in Fort Wayne.  “I’m speechless,” said a man behind us at the end of the show.  He’d never heard classical Indian music before.

I think a lot of people hadn’t.  It was a lovely, almost intoxicating performance and a stunning bargain at only ten bucks a ticket.  Don’t miss her if she comes near your town.

Keep your mind open.