Ali Khan, Ustad Asad / Raga Miyan Ki Todi
Album: | Raga Miyan Ki Todi | Collection: | World | |
Artist: | Ali Khan, Ustad Asad | Added: | Jul 2005 | |
Label: | India Archive Music |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2006-01-08 | Pull Date: | 2006-03-12 | Charts: | Reggae/World |
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Week Ending: | Feb 26 | Feb 19 | Jan 22 |
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Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Mar 07, 2014: | Aporeia some more
Dhrupad in Chautal |
4. | Jan 18, 2006: | asymptotic subbing for Blu G
Dhrupad in Chautal |
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2. | Feb 23, 2006: | rmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmrmr
Dhrupad in Chautal |
5. | Jan 16, 2006: | Eels in the Zoo
Dhrupad in Chautal |
|
3. | Feb 14, 2006: | eclectica: Interview with Salman Ahmad
Alap, Jor & Jhala |
Album Review
Fo
Reviewed 2005-12-30
Reviewed 2005-12-30
USTAD ASAD ALI KHAN– “Raga Miyan Ki Todi”
India Archive, 2005
INDIA – North Indian classical in the relaxed, “rounded” dhrupad style. Asad Ali Khan is a renowned master of the rudra veena, a string instrument related to the sitar, but with two large resonating gourds that create deep, meditative tones. He is accompanied by Mohan Shyam Sharma on pakhawaj (a two-headed percussion instrument).
1. 49:31 – Solo veena track: slow & low bent tones with staccato strumming, very gradually growing higher in pitch for the first 25 minutes or so, then dropping back down. Then it gets really bendy! The pace starts to gradually pick up here, and it takes off suddenly near the 35 minute mark. It rolls in gradual waves from here until the end.
2. 25:31 – Starts very quiet. Pakhawaj drifts in after 1 minute, then slow interplay. They crank it up after 5 minutes or so, then pull back, but the dialogue gets really tight. They continue to bob & weave as the tempo rises and falls. From the 13-minute mark on it’s all fairly uptempo, and at 18 minutes the drum has fallen into more of a timekeeping role. Quick, pounding end.
[Fo] 12/30/05
India Archive, 2005
INDIA – North Indian classical in the relaxed, “rounded” dhrupad style. Asad Ali Khan is a renowned master of the rudra veena, a string instrument related to the sitar, but with two large resonating gourds that create deep, meditative tones. He is accompanied by Mohan Shyam Sharma on pakhawaj (a two-headed percussion instrument).
1. 49:31 – Solo veena track: slow & low bent tones with staccato strumming, very gradually growing higher in pitch for the first 25 minutes or so, then dropping back down. Then it gets really bendy! The pace starts to gradually pick up here, and it takes off suddenly near the 35 minute mark. It rolls in gradual waves from here until the end.
2. 25:31 – Starts very quiet. Pakhawaj drifts in after 1 minute, then slow interplay. They crank it up after 5 minutes or so, then pull back, but the dialogue gets really tight. They continue to bob & weave as the tempo rises and falls. From the 13-minute mark on it’s all fairly uptempo, and at 18 minutes the drum has fallen into more of a timekeeping role. Quick, pounding end.
[Fo] 12/30/05
Track Listing
1. | Alap, Jor & Jhala | 2. | Dhrupad in Chautal |