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Album: east to East (Persian Art Music)
Artist(s): Alan
Kushan (Dusty Man) - Santur
Style/Genre: World Fusion
Instrumentation: Santur, Tabla.
For listening to samples & purchase CD or digital download please visit:
Item: CD
1015-2
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Ustad Abhijit
Banerjee - Tabla
One of Alan
Kushan's many contributions to the SANTUR has been to broaden
its musical range by increasing the number of bridges (notes)
available to the musician. This expands the SANTUR from a typically
restricted pitch area into an instrument capable of traveling
previously unexplored musical territories. Alan designs and constructs
these unique SANTURS and, in addition to differing gauges of steel
and copper wire, he uses piano and harp strings to create fascinating
variations in tonal quality. In this album he is accompanied by
Ustad Abhijit Banerjee on Tabla.
ALBUM INSERTS:
1 East (3:55)
2 Persia (6:20)
3 Tibet (9:56)
4 Kashmir (5:13)
5 Jerusalem (9:23)
6 Nepal (0:54)
7 Punjab (4:19)
8 Himalia (6:43)
Total Time: 46:46
Item # CD
1015-2
Ustad Alan Kushan
- Santur
Ustad Abhijit Banerjee - Tabla & Voices
Produced by Alan
Kushan
Mastered by Aldoush Alpanian
Cover Design by Farzaneh Foroughi
Mastering Engineer Albert Benichou at CD Premastering in Emeryville, California
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Ustad
Abhijit Banerjee |
Ustad
Alan Kushan - Santur |
The ancient musical
instrument SANTUR, has a unique trapezoid shape, and is more commonly known
in the western world as the "hammer dulcimer". The origins of the SANTUR
lie in ancient Persia and the instrument has inherited a proud legacy that
is thousands of years old.
This aristocratic
instrument was played at every important ceremony and on festival occasions,
especially at the imperial courts. Due to the fact that the Persian plateau
has always, through the passage of the history of civilizations, served
as an indispensable "bridge" between cultures and peoples of the East
and those of the West, this musical instrument, the SANTUR, inevitably
came to be introduced to other civilizations. this was achieved not only
via the ancient and legendary "Silk Road" which Marco Polo traveled 700
years ago, but also by virtue of earlier contact between the Achaemenean
Persians (599 BC-333 BC) and the ancient Greeks. This exchange was continued
by the Sassanian dynasty of Persia (224-637 AD) through her cultural and
diplomatic links with the Roman Empire. Because of Persia's
contacts with Greece, Rome, India, China, the SANTUR found its way to
such diverse areas of the world such as Ireland, Switzerland, Poland,
the Ukraine, Hungary, Korea, and Germany. Each of these nations has adapted
the SANTUR to its own musical temperament and has christened it with its
own unique name.
One of Alan Kushan's
many contributions to the SANTUR has been to broaden its musical range
by increasing the number of bridges (notes) available to the musician.
This expands the SANTUR from a typically restricted pitch area into an
instrument capable of travelling previously unexplored musical territories.
Alan designs and constructs these unique SANTURS and, in addition to differing
gauges of steel and copper wire, he uses piano and harp strings to create
fascinating variations in tonal quality.
Ustad Abhijit Banerjee
on Tabla & Voices
Abhijit
Banerjee received his initial training in tabla from Tushar Kanti Bose and
then from Manik Pal. Later on he became a disciple of the legendary tabla
maestro, the late Pandit Gyan Prakash Ghosh. As a child he won many music
competitions of national repute. Besides TABLA he had his training in Vocal
Music and in Violin. He represents the Farukhabad gharana of tabla playing.
At present Abhijit
is considered as one of the leading tabla players. He is recognized for
his skillful accompaniment as well as for his solo performances. He has
been on concert tours with most of the leading classical musicians of
India both in North Indian and South Indian tradition. He has toured all
over the world and also performed with jazz musicians and groups in New
York. Abhijit teaches Indian Classical Music at Universities in U.S.A.,
Japan, England and Spain.
Alan Kushan, born
in the mountains of Kurdestan, is arguably one of the most accomplished
santur players in the world. He stands out not only because of his brilliant
realizations of traditional Persian compositions, but also for his innovative
avant-guard soundscapes. He is not only a builder of Persian instruments
but also a virtuoso in performing Persian traditional music. His style,
however, is not limited to traditional approaches but it extends itself
beyond any such boundaries. He applies his own touch to the music that
he performs, a touch which he has developed after experiencing the new
trend of music, not only in his native land of Iran, but in the world.
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