What famous person did Ravi Shankar teach the sitar?

What famous person did Ravi Shankar teach the sitar?

At age 18 Shankar gave up dancing, and for the next seven years he studied the sitar (a long-necked stringed instrument of the lute family) under the noted musician Ustad Allauddin Khan.

Did Ravi Shankar make the sitar famous?

Ravi Shankar was an Indian musician and composer best known for popularizing the sitar and Indian classical music in Western culture.

What is the instrument of Ravi Shankar?

the sitar
He played the sitar, an Indian stringed instrument known for its complexity and intoxicating sound, and was considered a supreme master of it.

What is Ravi Shankar’s most famous song?

Remembering Ravi Shankar With 10 of His Greatest Recordings

  • Ravi Shankar — Sounds of India: Music.
  • Ravi Shankar — “Theme to Pather Panchali“
  • Ravi Shankar and Ustad Ali Akbar Khan — “Raga Palas Kafi”
  • Ravi Shankar and Ustad Zakir Hussain.
  • Ravi Shankar — Live at Monterey.
  • Ravi Shankar and George Harrison — “Prabhujee”

How old was Ravi Shankar when he died?

92 years (1920–2012)Ravi Shankar / Age at death

Where and when was Ravi Shankar born?

Robindro Shaunkor ChowdhuryRavi Shankar / Full name

Who made the first Ravi Shankar sitar?

It was made for the great musician Ravi Shankar (1920–2012) in 1961 by the Calcutta-based instrument maker Nodu Mullick. Mullick made four sitars for Shankar, and we believe this to be the first of the group.

How did Ravi Shankar die?

Indian sitar maestro Ravi Shankar has died in a hospital in the US, aged 92. His family said he had been admitted to the Scripps Memorial Hospital in San Diego last week, but had failed to recover fully from surgery. Shankar gained widespread international recognition through his association with The Beatles.

Why did the Shankar Family gift the sitar to the British Museum?

Uday is known to have visited the British Museum to study Indian medieval sculpture to enable him to better understand how to develop his new Indian dance. The wonderful gift of the sitar is therefore just the latest chapter in the history of connections between the Shankar family and the Museum.

What is so special about the sitar on display in Room 33?

The sitar now on display in Room 33 is particularly special. It was made for the great musician Ravi Shankar (1920–2012) in 1961 by the Calcutta-based instrument maker Nodu Mullick. Mullick made four sitars for Shankar, and we believe this to be the first of the group.