Ravi Shankar(1920-2012)
- Composer
- Music Department
- Actor
Ravi Shankar was a world-renowned musician, composer, performer, and
scholar of classical Indian music. He was one of the leading cultural
figures of the twentieth century whose accomplishments placed him as the
leading figure of an important musical tradition. His long and
distinguished musical career included numerous recordings, performances
at all the world's leading venues, and a series of unprecedented
collaborations with other leading musicians. Although he is well known
because of his interaction with the popular music world, it is
important to underscore that Shankar is considered the leading
international figure in a very elevated art form, Hindustani music.
Shankar was born on April 7, 1920, in Varanasi, India. He moved to
Paris in 1930, and received most of his education there. From the age
of 12, he performed as a musician and dancer on tour in Europe and
America with his brother Uday Shankar, and in 1939 had his first
concert as soloist at a music conference in Allahabad. By 1945
Shankar's reputation as the leading performer of traditional Hindustani
music on the sitar had coalesced. He began to branch out as a composer,
writing music for ballet and for important films such as such as Dharti
Ke Lal and Neecha Nagar. He also composed the song Sare Jahan Se Accha,
which is one of the most widely known piece of music in India. In 1949, Shankar became Music Director of
All-India Radio at Delhi, and founded the Vadya Vrinda Chamber
Orchestra. During the years 1950-55 Shankar composed some of his most famous music, most notably in the internationally-acclaimed
film studios of Calcutta, where he scored The Ray Triology. For his
outstanding contribution to Indian music and culture, he received his
first of five Presidential Awards in 1962, India's highest honor in the
arts. In the mid-1960s, his preeminence as one of the world's leading
serious musicians was augmented with wide popular success. George
Harrison of The Beatles developed a deep, abiding interest in Hindustani
music, and began to study with Shankar. One influence of this study can
be heard in his song Within You, Without You. Shankar died in San Diego, California in 2012 at the age of 92.