The life and times of Pandit Ravi Shankar
The life and times of Pandit Ravi Shankar
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Legendary sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar, who is credited with making Indian classical music a hit in the West, would have been 94 today.
Here's a look at the life and career of one of India's best known musicians on his birth anniversary. Panditji died in 2012 at the age of 92. -
Pandit Ravi Shankar, the younger brother of dancer Uday Shankar, was born Robindro Shaunkor Chowdhury on April 7, 1920. His father was a barrister and a Bengali Brahmin living in Varanasi. At the age of 10, young Robindro went to Paris with Uday Shankar's dance group. Three years later, he had learnt to play various instruments and was a full-time member of his brother's troupe. On tour in Europe and USA and now known as Ravi Shankar, he studied French, Western classical music and jazz.
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Sarod player Allauddin Khan, who briefly joined Uday Shankar's group, took the young Ravi Shankar under his wing. At Maihar, a centre of Indian classical music, Allauddin Khan trained his protégé in the traditional gurukul system. Ravi Shankar's debut performance was a jugalbandi playing the sitar with Allauddin's son Ali Akbar Khan on the sarod.
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After finishing his formal musical training in 1944, Ravi Shankar moved to Mumbai and joined the Indian People's Theatre Association for whom he composed ballets. He famously re-composed the music of Sare Jahana Se Achha at the age of 25. He then began to record with music label HMV and also joined All India Radio as a music director for several years.
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In 1952, Pandit Ravi Shankar and violinist Yehudi Menuhin met and formed a long association. Pandiji first turned down the violinist's invitation to play in New York and sent Ustad Ali Akbar Khan instead. Khan sahib received rapturous applause from the American audience after which Panditji resigned from All India Radio and began to tour Europe and USA. Ustad Alla Rakha, father of Zakir Hussain, joined him on the tabla.
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In 1966, Panditji met George Harrison of The Beatles in London. The Beatles' lead guitarist had already developed an interest in Indian music, using a sitar on the song Norwegian Wood. He then visited India to study the sitar under Ravi Shankar, spending six weeks on a houseboat in Srinagar.
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In 1967, Panditji won his first Grammy award, in collaboration with Yehudi Menuhin. The Beatles won a Grammy the same year for their album Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which featured the Indian classical music influenced song Within You, Without You.
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Pandit Ravi Shankar went on to win three more Grammys, one which he scored posthumously. In 2013, he won the Best World Music Album award for The Living Room Sessions Part 1, beating daughter Anoushka who was nominated in the same category. Panditji also received the Grammy for Lifetime Achievement the same year. Both posthumous Grammys were accepted on his behalf by daughters Anoushka Shankar and Norah Jones.
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Pandit Ravi Shankar was married twice, first to Allauddin Khan's daughter Annapurna Devi, also a musician, in 1941. Their son Shubhendra was born in 1942. The couple separated in the late 1940s.
In 1989, he married second wife Sukanya, who's daughter Anoushka he was the biological father of. In 1979, Panditji had a daughter, Norah, with American concert producer Sue Jones.