Ravi Shankar
The Sounds Of India
Play The Sounds Of India
| Song | Lyrics | Save | Buy |
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| 1 An Introduction To Indian Music | ![]() |
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| 2 Dadra | ![]() |
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| 3 Maru-Bihag | ![]() |
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| 4 Bhimpalasi | ![]() |
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| 5 Sindhi-Bhairavi | ![]() |
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MOG Editorial Review
Ravi Shankar, the most famous contemporary sitar player, released Sounds of India in 1989 as an album intended to inform and explain some of the Indian scales, ragas, and time signatures unfamiliar to the Western world. Though it is but five tracks long, Sounds of India is perhaps the easiest introduction to Indian music and Shankar's masterful sitar playing available today. His far-reaching influence was famously documented in the '60s when his work inspired the Beatles, spawning a trend of "raga rock." One listen to Shankar's Sounds of India encompasses a whole historical look at Hindustani classical music taught by a master, though odds are you'll be compelled to put it on repeat right away.
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AMG Review of Sounds of India
Adam Greenberg
All Music GuideOne of the early works of art created for the West by the Grandfather of World Music. This album stands as an early attempt to teach the curious western listener about the complexity and beauty of Indian music. Composer Alan Hovhaness provides some rather thorough liner notes describing the systems involved in Indian classical music (with the focus clearly on Hindustani forms), and goes into some detail on the finer points of the four ragas performed (Maru-Bihag, Bhimpalasi, Sindhi-Bhairavi, and Pancham-se-Gara, which is played during the piece titled "Dadra," actually a tala). Throughout the album, short lessons in the forms and techniques are given by Shankar himself before the various pieces are performed. For sheer musicality, something like The Genius of Ravi Shankar might be a better choice for a look at the earlier years, but for a historical document of both Shankar's amazing abilities, as well as his love of spreading the word for his music and teaching others, this album is perhaps better. For collectors, both albums would be wonderful additions to the collection, as early examples of World Music making its way into the non-native markets quite successfully. Give this one a number of listens for the music itself, and maybe a spare just for the history in it.






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