Their Rubinstein, our Voleti?

Oh My God !--- but eventually gave away my CDs by him.
Yes, indeed. I believe one of the tanpura accompanists was Gandharva's son (Mukul ?). The room/studio must have been reverberating with the sound of four properly tuned tanpuras !! Quite a contrast, I might add, from the typical sangeet sabha with janta walking in and out at random (or standing at the back to check out an item or two without actually sitting down).cienu wrote:There are 4 Tampura Accompaniments!! (can be seen at 1.39 mins). Speaks a lot for Shruthi Shudham of HM.
Yes, the tabla guy was indeed enthusiastic, but he was only appreciating the music (and histrionics) of the main performer. Since this thread was on histrionics, I posted an example of a musician essentially acting out the lyrics and mood of the composition, which expresses annoyance at the incessant monsoon rains and complains that the sun is not to be seen for many days. Kumar Gandharva's histrionics very effectively convey this - he looks personally aggrieved at the imagined monsoon situation and he takes it quite seriously, till the end (when he breaks out into a smile after a job well done).vijay wrote:Thanks SR....The taans are good (I thought KG was supposed to have a bad voice - nothing wrong in that clip though!) but I thought it was rather too exuberant...
Narastuti - the act of praising someone in person through music, in their presence, for some financial or other personal benefit - has nothing to do with secular music or religious music. It is sycophancy plain and simple, and has existed from time immemorial. A far cry from music composed to honor genuinely great people from all walks of life - even though they may not be the stereotypical "sadhu-sant".And look what I found while browsing through youtube...brilliant, I thought - also some food for thought for participants in the secular music thread (I am not necessarily saying that secular music will inevitably result in something this - just flagging a potential concern). Of course you could reasonably argue that there is nothing wrong with it...