- Shankar, Ravi
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Indian sitar player.He studied music and dance, toured as a member of his brother Uday's dance troupe, and spent years learning the sitar. After serving as music director of All-India Radio (1948–56), he began a series of European and U.S. tours. He wrote the score for Satyajit Ray's Apu film trilogy (1955–59). He was a founder of the National Orchestra of India, and in 1962 he founded the Kinnara School of Music in Bombay (now Mumbai) and later in Los Angeles. His performances with Yehudi Menuhin and his association with George Harrison of the Beatles were primarily responsible for bringing Indian music to a broad Western audience.
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▪ Indian musicianborn April 7, 1920, Benares [now Varanasi], IndiaIndian musician, player of the sitar, composer, and founder of the National Orchestra of India, influential in stimulating Western appreciation of Indian music.As a member of the dance troupe of his brother Uday, Ravi studied music and dance and toured extensively in India and Europe. At the age of 18 Shankar gave up dancing and for the next seven years studied the sitar (a long-necked stringed instrument of the lute family) under the noted musician Ustad Allauddin Khan. After serving as music director of All-India Radio from 1948 until 1956, he began a series of European and American tours.In the course of his long career, Shankar became the world's best-known exponent of North Indian (Hindustani) classical music, performing with India's most distinguished percussionists and making dozens of successful recordings. Shankar composed the film scores for the Indian director Satyajit Ray (Ray, Satyajit)'s famous Apu trilogy (1955–59). In 1962 he founded the Kinnara School of Music in Bombay (now Mumbai) and then (1967) in Los Angeles. Beginning in the 1960s, his concert performances with the American violinist Yehudi Menuhin and his association with George Harrison, lead guitarist of the then wildly popular British musical group the Beatles, helped bring Indian music to the attention of the West. Shankar's recordings won Grammy Awards in 1967, 1972, and 2001.Unique among Shankar's accomplishments is his equally expert participation in traditional Indian music and in Indian-influenced Western music. Most characteristic of the latter activity are his concerti for sitar and orchestra, particularly the second, Raga Mala (“Garland of Ragas”), first performed in 1981. He continued giving concerts into his 80s. He wrote two autobiographies: My Life, My Music (1969) and Raga Mala (1999). Singer-songwriter Norah Jones (Jones, Norah) (born 1979) and sitarist Anoushka Shankar (born 1981) are his daughters.* * *
Universalium. 2010.