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#31 |
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(in charge of navel affairs)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: India
Posts: 8,709
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In North India, at least, traditionally, artists of all kinds, from poets to singers to musicians, were patronised by kings and royalty. Some of them were extremely rich and/or famous. Tansen is one famous example.
Discipleship often led to Gharanas (lineage or tradition) with the rich continuing to patronise musicians. With the collapse of this system, classical artists now find it increasingly difficult to make a living, unless they are hyped and/or famous. Or, sometimes, very good. The better ones used to have some avenues with State run Radio and television, and still do, but viewership is dwindling. Piscesman, George Harrison discovering Ravi Shankar reminds me of Columbus discovering America ![]() Err, both were already there. PS http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tansen
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. The cynic must remember that he is a spy (Epitectus) Indiamike moderating team ..ich bin ein oneliner Last edited by capt_mahajan : Aug 19th, 2007 at 13:46. Reason: PS |
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#32 | |
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Not Your Guru Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: yörp
Posts: 9,139
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Quote:
Just thinking here's one thought that might bear, um, reconsideration.
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Reading tips, all picked up at IndiaMike |
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#33 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Minneapolis, MN USA
Posts: 161
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When you are broke, you are a "wandering minstrel"
When you have some cash, you are a "touring musician" same same ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Piscesman, George Harrison discovering Ravi Shankar reminds me of Columbus discovering America Err, both were already there. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Now, that's some funny stuff!!!!! The better ones used to have some avenues with State run Radio and television, and still do, but viewership is dwindling. Getting to the AIR Gov't radio thing- is it still considered to be the highest sort of recognition if one's work is being broadcasted on it? I may be reading incorrectly but it sounded from above posting as if that is going the way of the dinos in a sense. I remember being told last year if you are brought up/schooled in AIR system then you receive a "rating"- Also during festival season of Dec-Jan ONLY those "rated" folks can play high profile/prestigious venues having been brought up thru that system...others not of that class have to play the poorer venues. Plus NO chance of anyone being played on AIR radio if not brought up thru their "rating" system. Sound about right? ![]()
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S/he who laughs lasts |
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#34 | |
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Benefactor
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: India
Posts: 47
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Ravi - the Fifth, erm, Sixth Beatle!
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I meant George's discovery was personal to him, development as a musician. That Ravi was thrust into the spotlight with George for a while there was a good thing. All us bandwagon jumping kids had some new attitude to get our ears around.
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"I work for what I believe in. Everything else is labour." |
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#35 | |
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(in charge of navel affairs)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: India
Posts: 8,709
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Quote:
Though your point is a good one, maybe some of the hype is a good thing coz it exposes more to different music.. and works both ways I guess. I remember many Indians at a concert who had never heard of Ian Anderson, but were there because he was playing with Chaurasia. Blasphemous to me at that time. People who hadn't heard of Tull? ![]() |
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#36 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Minneapolis, MN USA
Posts: 161
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What I wrote:
...rather that most talented artists are unappreciated here in US especially since there is a glut of folks all attempting to do this same thing with advent of technology/the tweaking of untalented to appear talented and image being more important than actual talent. machadinha wrote: Just thinking here's one thought that might bear, um, reconsideration. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ From my perspective I see that to be the case in this world (re: image) but my heart and Be-ing most assuredly DOES NOT agree with the concept. Maybe I'm not understanding/clear on what you meant in your post? ![]() |
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#37 | |||
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Benefactor
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: India
Posts: 47
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If music be the food of love...I'll have a Glass burger with Ravi sauce.
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Prior to the late sixties (psychodelic era) and early nineties (ethnic and world fusion era), Indian instruments and singing were an utter novelty to the majority of western ears. Quote:
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#38 | |
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Not Your Guru Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: yörp
Posts: 9,139
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Quote:
Actors were considered heretics almost by definition, viewed with high suspicion at least, by the Church of yore -- presumably because of their pretense of taking on a persona they were not (issues of the undivisable soul). Robert Graves has written some interesting stuff on the demise of the classic Druid poet (and the mass of knowledge they were expected to acquire) when they became court poets, reduced to the mere function of primarily singing the praise of their master, and the Church at large. See e.g. his The White Goddess (itself later rebuked, of course.) (Funny enough the "National Poet" the Netherlands at least knows today seems to serve a not dissimilar function, some acceptable mild dissent notwithstanding, but nothing like the poet's curse of pre-Christian eras where a decent satire might literally blow the subject to pieces.) Etc. Anyway what I meant is I think blaming it all to commercialism seems an understatement to me, I think it goes much deeper. Rembrandt and the likes only survived by virtue of their playing to the courts' or their patrons' wishes. |
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#39 | ||||||
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Loud-mouthed, Noisy Bird
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Chennai, India
Posts: 24,219
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This thread is getting complicated, with many strands.
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Piscesman, I'm not out to fight about Ravi. He is the one who I've seen to bristle on this subject. Crowgirl, first --- please experiment with the Quote and " buttons! The latter will cause a number of posts to be quoted ready for you when you click on Post Reply --- now... Quote:
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. IndiaMike Mod Team (The Grumpy One)
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#40 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Minneapolis, MN USA
Posts: 161
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Machadinha, Thanks kindly for taking the time to tell me your musings. It was well thought out and very much cleared up the confusion on my side.
Nick, I will try to behave myself w/ quote buttons and the like. Thank you for your response concerning my questions about AIR system. |
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#41 |
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Loud-mouthed, Noisy Bird
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Chennai, India
Posts: 24,219
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![]() but, hey! forum help fits in anywhere ![]() You can manually put [quote]and[/quote] tags around the stuff you want boxed. This is particularly useful in a reply like mine where you want to answer specific points one by one. If you are in the Post Reply screen, rather than the Quick Reply box at the bottom of every page, you can use Preview to check how it is coming. And don't worry too much... we mods try to clear up stuff like broken quote boxes |
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#42 | |
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Not sure where I'm from
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