Ravi Shankar: In Celebration | |
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Compilation album by | |
Released | February 1996 (US) July 1996 (UK) |
Recorded | 1957–1995 |
Genre | Indian classical music, jazz, world music |
Length | 4:39:24 |
Label | Angel, Dark Horse |
Producer | Richard Bock, George Harrison, Peter Baumann, Ravi Shankar, Christopher Bishop, John Mordler, Kurt Munkacsi, John Fraser, Alan Kozlowski, Shefali Nag, Frank Serafine, Sukanya Shankar |
Compiler | George Harrison, Alan Kozlowski |
Ravi Shankar: In Celebration is a compilation box set by Indian classical musician and composer Ravi Shankar, released in 1996 on Angel Records in conjunction with Dark Horse Records. The four discs cover Shankar's international career, from the 1950s to the mid 1990s, and include recordings originally released on the World Pacific, HMV, Angel, Apple, Dark Horse and Private Music record labels. Shankar's friend George Harrison compiled and co-produced the set, which was issued as part of year-long celebrations for Shankar's 75th birthday.
Each disc of In Celebration adopts a musical theme covering a facet of Shankar's varied career – specifically, traditional ragas; orchestral works; collaborations with Western classical musicians; and vocal and experimental pieces, particularly in the jazz genre. Although Indian classical music receives relatively little coverage, the compilation includes examples of Shankar's work with artists such as Yehudi Menuhin, Bud Shank, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Philip Glass, André Previn, Harrison and the Music Festival from India. Among the previously unreleased selections, "Adarini" marks the recording debut of sitarist Anoushka Shankar, the youngest daughter of Ravi Shankar.
The box set has received critical acclaim for providing an effective retrospective of Shankar's musical career. It was followed by In Celebration – Highlights, an abbreviated, single-disc version of the full compilation, and led to further joint projects by Shankar and Harrison, including the 1997 studio album Chants of India .
In his book The Dawn of Indian Music in the West, Peter Lavezzoli describes the years 1989 to 1995 as "a period of several milestones in [Ravi] Shankar's life and career". [1] The first of these was the 50th anniversary of Shankar's debut as a performer, a concert career that had begun with his and sarodya Ali Akbar Khan's duet at the 1939 Allahabad Music Conference. [2] In 1995, Shankar turned 75, the year-long celebrations for which included a concert at New Delhi's Siri Fort, in February, [3] and one at the Barbican Centre, London, in July. [1] [4]
Away from his life as a performer and composer, in September 1992 Shankar's longstanding heart problems led to him undergoing angioplasty, shortly after which his only son, Shubho, died. [5] Shankar's friend George Harrison visited him following the angioplasty operation, [1] and the two musicians began re-establishing a social and musical bond that had waned somewhat since the late 1970s, when Shankar cut himself off from many of his Western friends. [6] [nb 1] After Shankar, Harrison and their families holidayed together over Christmas 1994, [8] Harrison began compiling a career retrospective, Ravi Shankar: In Celebration, [9] as part of Angel Records' celebrations for Shankar's 75th birthday year. [10] Harrison co-produced the four-disc compilation with photographer and Shankar archivist Alan Kozlowski. [11] The project partly coincided with Harrison's work on the Beatles' Anthology TV series and album releases, [12] [13] and led to him serving as editor on Raga Mala , Shankar's second autobiography, [14] and the two of them collaborating on the Chants of India album (1997). [15] [16]
In Celebration divides Shankar's then 40-year international career into distinct themes, as reflected in the title for each of the four discs: [17] "Classical Sitar", "Orchestral and Ensembles", "East–West Collaboration" and "Vocal and Experimental". [10] [18] The content includes items that were either previously unissued in the United States and Britain, or had been long unavailable by 1995. [1] [9] Angel executive Steve Murphy later credited the widespread goodwill felt towards Shankar as facilitating the retrieval of recordings from a variety of sources, following the decision in May that year to begin compiling In Celebration. [19]
The idea behind this four-disc set is to show different aspects of Ravi's music. Most music lovers will have heard of Ravi Shankar, the Sitar and the classical Ragas and Talas of India, but how about Ravi the singer, the composer, the orchestrator, the innovator or the experimentalist? [10]
– George Harrison, from his introduction to the album booklet
Disc one includes ragas first recorded for Richard Bock's World Pacific Records between 1957 and 1967. [20] [nb 2] On four of the disc's five selections, Shankar performs on sitar accompanied only by a tabla player – variously, Chatur Lal, Alla Rakha, Kanai Dutt or Kumar Bose. [20] Among the featured ragas are Shankar's interpretations of Marwa, Bhatiyar and Charukesi, the latter a Carnatic raga, from the South Indian tradition, that he adapted for the Hindustani (or North Indian) discipline. [20]
Based on Raga Khamaj, "Adarini" was a Shankar composition written for his then-teenage daughter Anoushka Shankar, [24] who made her Western concert debut at the Barbican birthday recital in July 1995. [1] "Adarini" marked Anoushka's debut as a recording artist; [25] recorded in Encinitas, California on 2 September 1995, the piece features her on sitar and Zakir Hussain on tabla. [24] [nb 3]
Disc two begins with another previously unreleased track, "V 7½". [31] Shankar based this piece on Raga Vachaspati and recorded it in 1968 with members of his first Festival from India revue, [32] and American jazz flautist Bud Shank. [31] Shankar's 1974 Music Festival from India, a venture sponsored by Harrison and recorded for his Dark Horse record label, [33] is represented by "Jait". [31]
The disc also includes "Sandhya Raga", a selection taken from Shankar's July 1988 concert at the Kremlin in Moscow, the live album from which appeared on German producer Peter Baumann's Private Music label. [34] In the booklet accompanying In Celebration, Shankar describes "Ghanashyam" as a "ballet or music theatre" piece that reflects his sadness at how, particularly during the 1960s, Indian music "became synonymous with the use of drugs to alter one's state of mind". [34]
The third disc consists of collaborations with Western classical artists, including Yehudi Menuhin and Jean-Pierre Rampal, [35] whose selections originally appeared on volumes two and three of the HMV-issued West Meets East series. [36] The disc also offers pieces from Shankar's two sitar concertos [17] – the first recorded in 1971 with André Previn and the London Symphony Orchestra, [37] the second from 1982, with the London Philharmonic and Indian conductor Zubin Mehta. [38]
The previously unreleased "Indo-Japan Finale" comes from a performance at the Japan American Centre in Los Angeles, [39] held in June 1985 as part of the Rhythms of the World festival. [40] It features Indian classical contributions from Lakshmi Shankar, Aashish Khan, Shubho Shankar, V.M. Bhatt and others, along with Japanese musicians such as Johnny Mori and Kazu Matsui. [39]
Disc four contains vocal pieces, some sung by Shankar himself, and examples of his more experimental works. [18] Among the latter are selections from Tana Mana (1987) and from Shankar's jazz-influenced collaboration with Bud Shank for World Pacific, [41] Improvisations (1962) [42] – a release that Rough Guides' world music guidebook describes as "[t]he original East–West concept album". [17] Harrison and Shankar's 1970s projects on Dark Horse and the Beatles' Apple Records are also well represented, [18] through the inclusion of tracks such as the pop bhajan "I Am Missing You", [43] from Shankar Family & Friends (1974), and "Oh Bhagawan", from the Bangladesh relief EP Joi Bangla (1971). [42] Previously unreleased, "Ta Na Nom" dates from 1974 sessions with the Music Festival from India personnel, [44] held at Harrison's Friar Park home. [45] Shankar says of this piece: "Based on the evening 'Raga Abhogi Kanada'. I used the 'nom tom' style of singing Alap in the traditional manner. It has the mood of a prayer." [44]
The disc also includes examples of his 1989–90 collaboration with American minimalist composer Philip Glass ("Hey Nath", from Passages ) and Shankar's work as a film soundtrack artist. [46] The latter endeavour is represented by two pieces: "Sanwaréy, Sanwaréy", sung by Lata Mangeshkar and taken from Anuradha (1960); [47] and "Pather Panchali", [42] originally part of Shankar's acclaimed score for Satyajit Ray's 1955 film of the same name, [48] [49] but here re-recorded with Shank for Improvisations. [17] The compilation's final track is another selection from the Inside the Kremlin live album, "Shanti Mantra". [50] The recording represents an "expression of artistic unity" that Shankar recalls as highly emotional for the audience and performers alike, in what was then still Soviet Russia. [51]
In America, Angel Records, in conjunction with Dark Horse, [52] issued Ravi Shankar: In Celebration during February 1996. [53] In a December 1995 article announcing the release, Billboard magazine noted the "fortuitous bit of timing" provided by the Beatles' Anthology series, and the resulting "reviv[ed] interest in the '60s", [54] a decade when Shankar's audience had grown to include Western rock fans through his association with Harrison. [55] [56] Shankar's career-spanning project also closely followed his reuniting with Yehudi Menuhin for a television broadcast, From the Sitar to the Guitar, detailing the birth of the gypsy and flamenco traditions from their roots in Indian music. [57] The UK release of In Celebration took place in July 1996. [58] [nb 4] In the same Billboard article, Kozlowski stated his regret that it was not possible to represent Shankar's celebrated performance from the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, while Shankar suggested that "We could have made 12 CDs, or 16, with all the material there was" but expressed particular pleasure at the inclusion of tracks such as "V 7½", "Adarini" and "Sanwaréy, Sanwaréy". [19]
The packaging for the four discs featured a 64-page colour booklet with liner notes provided by music journalist Timothy White [54] and recollections from Shankar on each of the compilation's 31 selections. [52] The booklet credits Harihar Rao, a former student of Shankar's [61] and a contributor to many of his musical projects from the 1960s onwards, [62] as having provided "project research". [63] In June 1996, Angel released the single-disc In Celebration – Highlights, which condensed the full compilation into what AllMusic's Thom Owens terms "the most essential items", [64] totalling around an hour's worth of music. [65]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [18] |
Billboard | "Spotlight" [66] |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [67] |
Entertainment Weekly | A [68] |
On release, Billboard's Paul Verna described the four-disc set as "[t]he perfect introduction to an indispensable artist". [66] The magazine similarly considered the condensed Highlights to be "a fine single-disc compilation" and included the release among its "Critics Choices". [69] In his review for Entertainment Weekly , Josef Woodard wrote of In Celebration: "a compelling historical sampler. In music ranging from classical Hindu profundity to East-West experiments to doses of cross-cultural kitsch, Shankar emerges sublime and game for new ideas." [70]
Rough Guides' World Music deems In Celebration to be "a superb retrospective" and includes the compilation among its recommended Shankar recordings in lists for both "Hindustani classical discs" and the artist's "fusion outings". [71] The same publication remarks on the omission of any of Shankar's "important early shellac recordings for HMV [India]", however, and of any "jugalbandi [pieces] with Ali Akbar Khan (a partnership that made them the hottest ticket in Hindustani music)". [71]
Peter Lavezzoli describes the project as "a success" and writes that the "positive response" inspired Shankar to start work on Raga Mala. [1] Harrison biographer Simon Leng refers to the "sheer, stunning virtuosity" of In Celebration, a "lavish" compilation that displays "Harrison's true love for the music" in addition to "showcas[ing] his musical guru in a bewildering range of settings and styles". [72]
Bruce Eder of AllMusic praises the box set for "present[ing] a surprisingly rich and diverse overview of Shankar's career". [18] Eder continues:
Each disc is different enough from what came before so that the listener is constantly surprised by new discoveries, and the last disc, with the addition of the voices, is the most delightful of all, spotlighting Shankar the composer and leader as well as Shankar the instrumentalist, and offering a rich, bracing body of music that stands apart from most listeners' associations with his work from the 1960s and early 1970s. From the opening 'Vandana' it draws us into a realm of music that is so sublimely beautiful that it makes everything that has come before it, in all its bejeweled splendor, seem almost plain and pale by comparison. [18]
All selections written Ravi Shankar.
No. | Title | Original release; producer and date of recording (if applicable) | Length |
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1. | "Charu Keshi" | India's Master Musician (1963); Richard Bock, 1957 | 13:27 |
2. | "Bhatiyar" | Unique Ravi Shankar (1991); Shefali Nag, 1988 | 18:38 |
3. | "Adarini" | previously unreleased; Ravi Shankar, September 1995 | 8:48 |
4. | "Marwa" | Ravi Shankar in New York (1967); Richard Bock, 1967 | 17:40 |
5. | "Dhun Kafi" | India's Master Musician/Recorded in London (1964); Richard Bock, 1963 | 12:31 |
No. | Title | Original release; producer and date of recording (if applicable) | Length |
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1. | "V 7½" | previously unreleased; Richard Bock, 1968 | 18:09 |
2. | "Jait" | Ravi Shankar's Music Festival from India (1976); George Harrison, 1974 | 9:42 |
3. | "Sandhya Raga" | Inside the Kremlin (1989); Peter Baumann and Kurt Munkacsi, 1988 | 11:19 |
4. | "Ghanashyam" | The Musical Genius of Ravi Shankar (1992); Sukanya Shankar, 1991 | 5:06 |
5. | "Tilak Shyam" | New Offerings (1984); Ravi Shankar, 1983 | 23:21 |
No. | Title | Original release; producer and date of recording (if applicable) | Length |
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1. | "Sitar and Violin Duet" | West Meets East, Volume 2 (1968) | 14:32 |
2. | "2nd Movement Sitar Concerto No. 1" | Concerto for Sitar & Orchestra (1971); Christopher Bishop, 1971 | 6:13 |
3. | "3rd Movement Sitar Concerto No. 1" | Concerto for Sitar & Orchestra (1971); Christopher Bishop, 1971 | 3:28 |
4. | "Morning Love" | West Meets East, Volume 3 (1977); John Mordler, 1976 | 12:05 |
5. | "Indo-Japan Finale" | previously unreleased; Alan Kozlowski, 1985 | 12:55 |
6. | "Enchanted Dawn" | West Meets East, Volume 3 (1977); John Mordler, 1976 | 11:45 |
7. | "4th Movement Raga Mala (Sitar Concerto No. 2)" | Raga-Mala (Sitar Concerto No. 2) (1982); John Fraser, 1982 | 12:45 |
No. | Title | Original release; producer and date of recording (if applicable) | Length |
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1. | "Vandana" | Ravi Shankar's Music Festival from India (1976); George Harrison, 1974 | 2:37 |
2. | "Hey Nath" | Passages (1990); Ravi Shankar, 1989 | 6:07 |
3. | "Pather Panchali" | Improvisations (1962); Richard Bock, 1962 | 7:00 |
4. | "Supaney Mein Aye" | Shankar Family & Friends (1974); George Harrison, 1973 | 4:11 |
5. | "West Eats Meat" | Tana Mana (1987); Peter Baumann, 1986 | 6:08 |
6. | "Oh Bhagawan" | Joi Bangla EP (1971); George Harrison, 1971 | 3:35 |
7. | "Friar Park" | Tana Mana (1987); George Harrison, 1986 | 5:50 |
8. | "Tana Mana" | Tana Mana (1987); Frank Serafine, 1983 | 3:40 |
9. | "I Am Missing You" | Shankar Family & Friends (1974); George Harrison, 1973 | 3:40 |
10. | "Ta Na Nom" | previously unreleased; George Harrison, 1974 | 6:42 |
11. | "Fire Night" | Improvisations (1962); Richard Bock, 1962 | 4:30 |
12. | "Sanwaréy, Sanwaréy" | Anuradha soundtrack (1960) | 3:12 |
13. | "Dispute & Violence" | Shankar Family & Friends (1974); George Harrison, 1973 | 2:29 |
14. | "Shanti Mantra" | Inside the Kremlin (1989); Peter Baumann and Kurt Munkacsi, 1988 | 6:49 |
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"Hari's on Tour (Express)" is an instrumental by English musician George Harrison, released as the opening track of his 1974 album Dark Horse. It was also the B-side of the album's second single – which was "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" in North America and most other territories, and "Dark Horse" in Britain and some European countries. Among Harrison's post-Beatles solo releases, the track is the first of only two genuine instrumentals he released from 1970 onwards – the other being the Grammy Award-winning "Marwa Blues", from his 2002 album Brainwashed.
Shankar Family & Friends is an album by Indian musician Ravi Shankar, recorded primarily in Los Angeles during the spring of 1973, but not released until late 1974. It was produced by Shankar's friend George Harrison and one of the first releases on the ex-Beatle's Dark Horse label. Out of print for many years, and much sought after as a result, the album was remastered in 2010 and reissued as part of the Ravi Shankar–George Harrison box set Collaborations.
Ravi Shankar's Music Festival from India was an Indian classical music revue led by sitarist and composer Ravi Shankar intended for Western concert audiences and performed in 1974. Its presentation was the first project undertaken by the Material World Charitable Foundation, set up the previous year by ex-Beatle George Harrison. Long a champion of Indian music, Harrison also produced an eponymous studio album by the Music Festival orchestra, which was released in 1976 on his Dark Horse record label. Both the CD format of the Ravi Shankar's Music Festival from India album and a DVD of their performance at the Royal Albert Hall in London were issued for the first time on the 2010 Shankar–Harrison box set Collaborations.
In Concert 1972 is a double live album by sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar and sarodiya Ali Akbar Khan, released in 1973 on Apple Records. It was recorded at the Philharmonic Hall, New York City, in October 1972, and is a noted example of the two Hindustani classical musicians' celebrated jugalbandi (duet) style of playing. With accompaniment from tabla player Alla Rakha, the performance reflects the two artists' sorrow at the recent death of their revered guru, and Khan's father, Allauddin Khan. The latter was responsible for many innovations in Indian music during the twentieth century, including the call-and-response dialogue that musicians such as Shankar, Khan and Rakha popularised among Western audiences in the 1960s.
"I Am Missing You" is a song by Indian musician Ravi Shankar, sung by his sister-in-law Lakshmi Shankar and released as the lead single from his 1974 album Shankar Family & Friends. The song is a rare Shankar composition in the Western pop genre, with English lyrics, and was written as a love song to the Hindu god Krishna. The recording was produced and arranged by George Harrison, in a style similar to Phil Spector's signature sound, and it was the first single issued on Harrison's Dark Horse record label. Other contributing musicians include Tom Scott, Nicky Hopkins, Billy Preston, Ringo Starr and Jim Keltner. A second version appears on Shankar Family & Friends, titled "I Am Missing You (Reprise)", featuring an arrangement closer to a folk ballad.
Chants of India is an album by Indian musician Ravi Shankar released in 1997 on Angel Records. Produced by his friend and sometime collaborator George Harrison, the album consists of Vedic and other Hindu sacred prayers set to music, marking a departure from Shankar's more familiar work in the field of Hindustani classical music. The lyrical themes of the recorded chants are peace and harmony among nature and all creatures. Sessions for the album took place in the Indian city of Madras and at Harrison's home in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, following his work on The Beatles' Anthology (1995). Anoushka Shankar, John Barham, Bikram Ghosh, Tarun Bhatacharaya and Ronu Majumdar are among the many musicians who contributed to the recording.
Joi Bangla is an EP by Indian sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar, issued in August 1971 on Apple Records. The recording was produced by George Harrison and its release marked the first in a series of occasional collaborations between the two musicians that lasted until the Chants of India album in 1997. Shankar recorded the EP in Los Angeles, to help raise international awareness of the plight faced by refugees of the Bangladesh Liberation War, in advance of his and Harrison's Concert for Bangladesh shows at Madison Square Garden, New York. Side one of the disc consists of two vocal compositions sung in Bengali, of which the title track was a message of unity to the newly independent nation, formerly known as East Pakistan. The third selection is a duet by Shankar and sarodya Ali Akbar Khan, supported by Alla Rakha on tabla, a performance that presaged their opening set at the Concert for Bangladesh.
Anant Lal, often referred to by the title Pandit, was an Indian classical musician who played the shehnai. He worked for All India Radio and played with artists such as Ravi Shankar and Debu Chaudhuri in addition to recording under his own name. Lal was one of the leading exponents of the shehnai in Hindustani classical music. In 1989, he received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest recognition afforded artists in India.
Kamala Chakravarty is an Indian classical musician and former dancer, known for her association with sitar maestro Ravi Shankar. From 1967 until the late 1970s, she accompanied Shankar, in the role of tambura player and singer, in a number of acclaimed performances, including the Monterey International Pop Festival (1967), his Human Rights Day duet with violinist Yehudi Menuhin (1967), the Concert for Bangladesh (1971) and the Music Festival from India (1974). She lived with Shankar as his "wife" from 1967 to 1981, while he was still married to musician and teacher Annapurna Devi.
Tana Mana is an album by Indian musician Ravi Shankar, originally credited to "the Ravi Shankar Project" and released in 1987. The album is an experimental work by Shankar, mixing traditional instrumentation with 1980s electronic music and sampling technology. Shankar recorded much of Tana Mana in 1983 with sound effects innovator Frank Serafine, but it remained unreleased until Peter Baumann, head of new age record label Private Music, became attached to the project. The album title translates to mean "body and mind".
George Harrison and Ravi Shankar's 1974 North American tour was a 45-show concert tour of the United States and Canada, undertaken by English musician George Harrison and Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar in November and December 1974. It is often referred to as the Dark Horse Tour, since the concerts served as a launch for Harrison's record label Dark Horse Records, to which Shankar was one of the inaugural signings, and Harrison's concurrent single was the song "Dark Horse". The release of his delayed album, also titled Dark Horse, followed towards the end of the tour. The shows featured guest spots by Harrison's band members Billy Preston and Tom Scott.
"Ride Rajbun" is a song by English musician George Harrison. It was released in 1992 on the multi-artist charity album The Bunbury Tails, which was the soundtrack to the British animated television series of the same name. Harrison co-wrote the song's lyrics with Bunbury Tails creator David English. The eponymous Rajbun was a character in the series based on English's friend and cricketer Rajendrasinh Jadeja, one of a team of cricket-playing rabbits – in this case, from Bangalore in India. The composition is in the style of a nursery rhyme or children's song, while the all-Indian instrumentation on the recording recalls some of Harrison's compositions for the Beatles during 1966–68.
Collaborations is a four-disc compilation box set by the Indian classical musician Ravi Shankar and the former Beatle George Harrison. Released in October 2010 on Dark Horse Records, it compiles two studio albums originally issued on that label – the long-unavailable Shankar Family & Friends (1974) and Ravi Shankar's Music Festival from India (1976) – and Chants of India, first issued on Angel Records in 1997. Although all three albums were originally Shankar releases, for which Harrison served in the role of music producer and guest musician, both Shankar and Harrison are credited as artists on the box set. Each of the collaborative projects represents a departure from Shankar's more typical work as a sitarist and performer of Hindustani classical ragas, with the box set showcasing his forays into, variously, jazz and rock, Indian folk and orchestral ensembles, and devotional music.
Raga Mala is an autobiographic work by Indian classical musician Ravi Shankar, published in 1997 as a hand-bound, limited edition book by Genesis Publications. The initial print run was limited to 2000 signed and individually numbered copies, with a foreword by George Harrison, who also served as Shankar's editor. In addition, Oliver Craske was credited with providing "additional narrative".
Live: Ravi Shankar at the Monterey International Pop Festival is a live album by Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar, released on the World Pacific record label in November 1967. It consists of part of Shankar's celebrated performance at the Monterey International Pop Festival in California on 18 June 1967. Shankar was accompanied throughout by his regular tabla player, Alla Rakha, who performs a frenetic five-minute solo on the recording.
Ravi Shankar's Festival from India is a double album by Indian musician and composer Ravi Shankar, released on World Pacific Records in December 1968. It contains studio recordings made by a large ensemble of performers, many of whom Shankar had brought to the United States from India. Among the musicians were Shivkumar Sharma, Jitendra Abhisheki, Palghat Raghu, Lakshmi Shankar, Aashish Khan and Alla Rakha. The project presented Indian classical music in an orchestral setting, so recalling Shankar's work as musical director of All India Radio in the years before he achieved international fame as a soloist during the 1960s.
Concerto for Sitar & Orchestra is a studio album by Indian musician and composer Ravi Shankar with the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) conducted by André Previn. The concerto was premiered at London's Royal Festival Hall on 28 January 1971, and subsequently released in Britain and America.