jueves, 9 de abril de 2015

U. Srinivas - Gajavadhana



3 de diciembre 2014

Totalmente genial. Srinivas tocaba la mandolina eléctrica sin trastes (fretless).  Conozco su música gracias a la discográfica Real World de Peter Gabriel.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

U. Srinivas
U. Srinivas 2009.jpg
Shrinivas performing in Pune, January to December 2009
Background information
Native nameఉప్పలపు శ్రీనివాస్
Born28 February 1969
PalakolWest Godavari Dist,Andhra Pradesh, India
OriginAndhra Pradesh, India
Died19 September 2014 (aged 45)
Chennai, India
GenresIndian classical music
Occupation(s)Musician
Instrumentselectric mandolin[1]
Years active1978–2014
LabelsReal World Records
Websitewww.mandolinshrinivas.org
Uppalapu Shrinivas (Teluguఉప్పలపు శ్రీనివాస్ 28 February 1969 – 19 September 2014) was a virtuoso Indian mandolin maestro, prodigy, trailblazer and composer belonging to the classicalCarnatic musical tradition of Southern India. Recognized worldwide as a colossus and the rarest of musical geniuses, Shrinivas is regarded as the Mozart of classical Indian music.[2] Shrinivas pioneered the introduction of the mandolin, a western instrument, into classical Carnatic music, because he fell in love with it as a five-year old, in the same manner as three much older musicians, Varahappa Iyer, Baluswami Dikshitar, and Vadivelu, had introduced the violin into Carnatic music, two hundred years ago. There is a major difference in their contributions: cognoscenti and leading musicians accepted Shrinivas’s mandolin when he was about nine, owing to his astounding virtuosity and sheer genius, whereas it took about a hundred years for the violin to be thus accepted.[3][4] A prodigy, he made his debut in 1978, at the age of nine, and since he was the first musician to adapt and play the mandolin in the Carnatic music style, he came to be popularly known as Mandolin Shrinivas.[5] “Eddie van Halen, eat your heart out,”Beatle George Harrison reportedly said in 2001, having stumbled upon one of Shrinivas's albums. "George Harrison's favourite piece of Indian music was Mandolin Ecstasy, an album recorded by a child prodigy from Madras called U Shrinivas at the age of 13. It was, like, my dad's favourite album of all time," says (Dhani) Harrison. "U Shrinivas is 27 now and still making music. He plays an electric five-string mandolin, he's fantastic...." [6] Over the next four decades, he toured across the world, and collaborated with John McLaughlinMichael Nyman, and Michael Brook.[7] After Pandit Ravi Shankar, no classical Indian musician enjoyed the kind of global reach and worldwide audience that U. Shrinivas has: at a very young age he was internationally viewed as the successor to Pandit Ravi Shankar.[8] Shrinivas's gift was so prodigious and baffling from the very moment he gave his first performance that it inevitably led to his being compared to the world's greatest prodigies: "Some of you have heard or read about exceptionally gifted children, our own Mandolin Shrinivas, Sir Yehudi Menuhin, Beethoven, Sir Isaac Newton, Picasso, Madam Curie, the list is endless."[9] (The Hindu, Sunday, May 3, 1992)

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