05.23.12
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Aha Moment: Rudresh Mahanthappa Finds His Roots

Aha Moment

Friday, June 24, 2011

When jazz saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa was still a student at Berklee College of Music, his older brother gave him an album called Saxophone Indian Style — as a joke. Mahanthappa had been suspicious of American jazz’s sampling of Indian music. 

When he was in his twenties, already an accomplished musician, he went to India without his family for the first time on a music tour. He found himself himself at an all-night concert in Bangalore given by the classical singer Parveen Sultana. In the small hours of the morning, Mahanthappa says, “I realized that I was as captivated by Indian music as I was jazz, and I felt a burn inside me.”

 

Has a work of art changed the way you see the world?
Leave a comment and let us know.

 

 

Bonus Track: Parveen Sultana
Sultana sings “Raga Mishra Kedar: Bhajan - Kab Ki Khadi Yamuna Ke Teer.”

Contributors:

Michael Raphael

Comments [2]

Andrea Hornick from Cambridge, MA

I was 18 when I saw Woody Allen's film, "NY Stories," and it was Nick Nolte's cheesy but well played abstract expressionist painter character that put a picture - a sort of how-to - to the immediate expression that was obtained by DaKooning and all of the great abstract expressionists that I loved.

Jun. 26 2011 11:49 AM
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redheadjazzwriterchick from Colorado Springs

Wonderful insight into one of my absolute favorite artists.

Jun. 25 2011 04:48 PM
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