Indian classical music superstars visit Royal Birmingham Conservatoire

Wednesday 16th February 2022 07:32 EST
 

Ties between British and Indian musicians were boosted this week with a visit by four classical music superstars to Royal Birmingham Conservatoire.

 

Tabla supremo Zakir Hussain told an assembled audience of staff, students, diplomats, MPs and business leaders including the Indian Consul General of India Dr Shashank Vikram and Preet Kaur Gill MP at the world-renowned centre of music, based at Birmingham City University, that ‘music has the power to change your life in a way you couldn’t even imagine’.

 

Acclaimed singer-composer Shankar Mahadevan, leading flautist Rakesh Chaurasia, and legendary keyboardist and producer Louiz Banks joined the superstar for the visit.

 

Organised by BCU India and West Midlands India Partnership, the event saw the artists – who are known to hundreds of millions of fans in their home country and across the globe – share advice and stories with a captivated audience in the Conservatoire’s Bradshaw Hall, before enjoying performances from RBC percussion and brass students.

 

Musical links between the UK and India were explored between the VIPs and senior leaders of the University, and the artists posed for photos with senior music students on stage after the event.

 

Zakir Hussain, who alongside his late father Ustad Alla Rakha was largely responsible for popularising the tabla with Western audiences throughout the 1970s and 1980s, is a virtuoso musician who gave his first concert at the age of seven and was touring with the late sitar maestro Ravi Shankar in the US at 11 years old.

 

The musician has also recorded and performed with many notable Western musicians including George Harrison, Van Morrison, Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead, Herbie Hancock, and John McLaughlin in the great acoustic group Shakti.

 

Shyam Naban, Director of the West Midlands India Partnership, part of the team who organised the visit, said, “We’re delighted to support the development of cultural and artistic links between the West Midlands region and India through interactions with global Indian maestros like Ustad Zakir Hussain, Padmashri Shankar Mahadevan, Jazz King Louis Banks and Rakesh Chaurasia. We will continue to connect our board members with esteemed organisations in India as a part of our strategy to enhance relations as we celebrate the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games and ‘India at 75’ this year.


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