World Festival of Sacred Music
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Inspired by a simple request by his holiness the Dalai Lama 14 years ago, the fifth World Festival of Sacred Music (WFSM) seeks to bridge communities while conveying peace and global solidarity through the elemental and sacrosanct mediums of music and dance. Apart from the entertainment qualities of the event, it will be the audience presence that fuels and morphs into a collective will for global improvement.
For
2011, the festival will be a versatile assemblage of more than 800 local
and international performers who cross cultural disparities to express
and present a bevy of artistry in roughly 30 historic and public locales
across Los Angeles.
WFSM is a
project of Foundation for World Arts and UCLA Center for Intercultural
Performance and will run Oct. 1-16. Four previous festivals took place
in 1999, 2002, 2005, and 2008.
One
of the many world-renowned artists who has responded to WSFM’s call for
action is bansuri virtuoso Hariprasad Chaurasia, a man often credited
for the popularization of Indian classical music abroad.
Chaurasia
will present an enchanted evening of sacred classical Indian music.
Music ignites spirituality and this fused mood “free of everything but
the pure, while creating peace and harmony,” says Chaurasia, “a
necessity for people worldwide who are suffering mentally and
physically.”
Chaurasia will
perform solos and select playful ragas particular to the time of the
performance. The spell-binding blend of rhythm and pitch from the
bansuri and tabla evoke melodic forms called ragas. Each raga evokes a
mood often by lengthy improvisation that is passed on to the listener.
Indian sages have long recognized the power of sound emanating from
music and its resulting spiritual effects. Ancient music schools created
ragas to activate specific centers and streams of internal power.
Chaurasia
will be accompanied by his senior student, Jay Gandhi, on second
bansuri flute and renowned tabla player Subhankar Banerjee. Shyamala
Rajender will play the tanpura.
Playing
the bansuri arose as a burning spiritual passion within Chaurasia when
he was only 14. It is this passion that he urges young music lovers to
pursue. “Try to keep the foundation that your teacher provides you. It
is one thing when the teacher asks you to perform but when you become a
music lover, your approach changes as you want to demonstrate for the
teacher that you are the best,” he says. He progressed to hone his
breathing and blowing skills that allow him to play fast tempos and
incredible ranges. His training is in the Senia gharana, which he draws
from while integrating other styles as well.
Beyond
his worldwide live performances, which earned him international
recognition, Chaurasia is a recipient of multiple awards including the
Padma Vibhushan, the second-highest civilian award in India. He has been
knighted by the French government, honored by the Royal Dutch family
and has performed in many major concerts worldwide. A notable concert
was the 1998 Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo where classical Indian
music was introduced.
In 1996,
he established the Brindavan Gurukul in Mumbai, an academy dedicated to
the teaching and promotion of performing arts. He currently heads the
world music department at Rotterdam Music Conservatory in the
Netherlands. In addition to performing solo, Chaurasia has collaborated
with Western musicians such as the late Yehudi Menuhin, Jean Pierre
Rampal, John McLaughlin, and many others.
Currently
in his 70s, Chaurasia’s energy continues to surge fueled partly by the
spiritual callings of his flute. From a 24-hour performance honoring
Lord Krishna during the holy festival of Janmashtami to mixed European
stops in August, Chaurasia comes to the U.S. to begin an independent, 10
city nationwide tour beginning with the WFSM performance. The tour will
continue through October.
Subhankar
Banerjee’s tabla and vocal prowess matured from the early age of 5 into
a well-earned reputation as master soloist and accompanist to well
known celebrities such as the legendary sitarist and composer Ravi
Shankar, Amjad Ali Khan, and many more. Banerjee’s global performances
have won numerous accolades and awards from the President of India and
esteemed filmmaker and writer Satyajit Ray. Banerjee also had the honor
of performing with Chaurasia at the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo in
1998 and has performed for Prince Charles of England, the President of
Pakistan, Mexico and South Africa as a guest artist.
Jay
Gandhi is one of Chaurasia’s devoted students who has excelled as a
bansuri player and has performed in India, Europe, the Middle East, and
America. Gandhi’s musical pursuits also involve a great love for the
music of the African diaspora and jazz. In 2004, he completed an
Individual Major in Jazz Performance at Oberlin College/Conservatory of
Music (Ohio), studying privately under such jazz luminaries as the
saxophonist Gary Bartz and trumpeter Marcus Belgrave.
Shyamala
Rajender, an attorney by profession, has been playing the tanpura for
the last 20 years and has not only accompanied Chaurasia on stage but is
a personal friend who coordinates his U.S. tours. The tanpura provides a
firm anchor and harmonic base for the music according to Rajender who
prizes the custom made instrument tuned to E scale to play with the
master.
The bansuri is a natural
woodwind flute made out of bamboo and ranging in 29 sizes. The tabla is
famed for being one of the most sophisticated pair of finger drums in
North Indian classical music and in the world of percussion. Both
musical instruments date back to the Vedic civilization.
Sunday,
Oct. 2, 8 p.m. Magnin Auditorium, Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N.
Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles. $30 general, $20 student. Tickets: www.skirball.org, (877) SCC-4TIX, (877) 722-4849. For more details on the festival, go to www.festivalofsacredmusic.org. www.hariprasadchaurasia.com.




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