Description: "My approach to music is very deep. I do not compromise with anybody or anything else in the world. I want to really go beyond this materialistic world. Not for the sake of enjoyment, entertainment, no. A musician must lift up the souls of the listeners, and take them towards Space." — Nikhil Banerjee [from interview with Ira Landgarten, 1985] Padmabhushan Nikhil Banerjee (1931-1986) was one of the finest sitarists of his time. His music earned deep respect among India's classical music connoisseurs as well as gaining him a devoted international following. He was the disciple of the two greatest forces in 20th century Indian classical music, Padmavibhushan Allauddin Khan and his son Ustad Ali Akbar Khan. Though he recorded a number of LPs, few were live concerts, in which his leisurely, majestic raga development was unsurpassed. Mr. Banerjee disliked being recorded, feeling that the process compromised the inner meditative quality of his music, so high-fidelity live recordings are rare. More information: www.raga.com Abhijit Banerjee was born in Ranchi near Calcutta in 1964. He began his early training with Sri Tushar Kanti Bose, the late Sri Manik Pal and finally came under the tutelage of Pandit Jnan Prakash Ghosh. He won his first award at the age of 8 in the Tansen Music Competition. Many awards and trophies followed, including first place in All-Bengal, All-India and All-India Radio music competitions. He has also studied vocal music with Sri Ajoy Chakraborty. He has accompanied many great artists in recordings and on concert tours in India and abroad, including Nikhil Banerjee, Amjad Ali Khan and Parween Sultana.About touring with Nikhil Banerjee: "When I was only twenty, he asked me to accompany him on a world tour. At that time, I was not a professional musician but a college student in English literature. As he liked my playing at that young age, he made me the offer and I grabbed it. It was a once in a lifetime experience for me. The following year (1985), I had to prepare for my final exams, and could not go with him to Europe. The next year he died, so that was my only tour with him. I played just one concert with him in India." - Abhijit Banerjee From the CD booklet: Gawoti is equated with Bhim by many scholars, although this has become a matter of some controversy. Gawoti has the same aroh avaroh as Bhim, but consistently uses the phrases n S D P and G m R n S, which Bhim doesn't. Bhim on the other hand, often uses the phrases m P G R S and m P G m G R S, distinguishing it from Gawoti. Both raags recall their kinship with Bhimpalasi through the use of komal gandhar in the upper octave in the phrase S g R S. Unlike Bhimpalasi, however, the R and Dha are more prominent and the madhyam is weaker and used in a vakra fashion. aroh: n S G m P n S avroh: g R S n D m P/D m/G R S chalan: n S, D--P, G m R n S Shipped by USPS Media mail. If you buy more than one of Raga Records' CDs, the flat rate of $4.00 will cover all the discs ordered at the same time; the shipping on any additional CDs will be refunded.
Price: 9.99 USD
Location: Hoboken, New Jersey
End Time: 2024-09-07T17:12:18.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Type: 77:16
Case Type: Jewel Case: Standard
Language: English
Edition: Live Recording
Producer: John Wilton
Format: CD
Release Year: 2007
Genre: World Music, Indian Classic Music
Run Time: 77 min.
Style: India & Pakistan
Artist: Abhijit Banerjee/Nikhil Banerjee
Record Label: Raga Records
Release Title: Gawoti, Amsterdam 1984 *