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http://www.hindu.com/2005/12/31/stories/2005123118410300.htm
Taking ghatam and kanjira to the West
Sudhish Kamath
| The supporting artists are integral part of the
ensemble in music The supporting artists are integral
part of the ensemble in music |
Kanjira artist Ganesh and Ghatam exponent Subash
Chandran. — Photo:R. Shivaji Rao
CHENNAI: They are responsible for the accompaniments
that pep up the kutcheri, though they remain largely unsung.
The supporting artistes, who are an integral
part of the ensemble in classical and fusion music. This
is about a unique Guru-Sishya duo who tour together, play
together and work together to spread awareness of the lesser
known Indian musical instruments.
`Ghatam' veteran Subhash Chandran and Ganesh
Kumar, a Kanjira artiste, are on a mission: to take the two
native instruments around the world. They have been going
places, largely in the United States, having set up six schools
to spread the magic of South Indian percussion.
"The ghatam, kanjira and konnakkol (vocal
percussion) have become an integral part of fusion music
because they provide the right kind of bass sound that fuses
well with Western instruments like the sax, bass guitar and
banjo," Subhash Chandran says. Thanks to such fusion concerts,
the West has taken an interest in the lesser-known Indian
classical instruments.
"We have over a hundred students at the
satellite schools of Sankara Academy of Music and Arts in
New Jersey, New York, Washington, Portland, San Francisco
and Tampa," says Ganesh. About 15 musicians from the Sankara
Academy of Music and Arts had attained the `arangetram' (debut
concert) stage till date. "We travel throughout the US for
eight to nine months during the year and come back in time
for the music festival," says the ghatam exponent. The master
of vocal percussion began popularising `kunnakol' thirty
years ago, when Doordarshan started broadcasting fusion music
concerts as a part of the JG Laya Group. "But it became popular
only in the nineties, thanks to fusion music. In fusion music,
you get a lot of freedom in expressing what comes to you
naturally," says Chandran.
His market-savvy disciple Ganesh lines up
concerts with top class fusion musicians from the West to
promote their brand of percussion. "We played for the Katrina
Relief fundraisers at Seattle organised by the Mata Amritanandamayi
Centre, and a jugalbandhi at Tampa, Florida, recently."
Ganesh has also recently participated in
the International Convention organised by the Percussive
Arts Society at Columbus, Ohio, and launched a synthetic
version of the kanjira under the Artists innovation series.
He also released a two and a half hour instructional DVD
on `The Art of Kanjira' marketing it as the South Indian
Tambourine.
Ganesh has also developed a website to promote
his style of music: www.ganeshkanjira.com. |