Released on March 3, tabla exponent Ojas Adhiya’s new single Forever In Rhythm has been dedicated to the “radiant and uncontainable” energy of ghazal maestro Pankaj Udhas and tabla legend Ustad Zakir ...
Ganavya will perform at 8 p.m. Sunday at The Arts Campus at Willits. She was born in New York and raised in India. She blends ...
Bloodywood have been running through Tadka for a few hours, so it’s time for a break. They chomp down on food they’ve ordered ...
Rimpa Siva is a tabla maestro who has changed the way people see women in Indian percussion. Trained by her father, pandit ...
Veteran umpires S Ravi and CK Nandan will mentor them. Michael Gough, Chris Gaffaney and Adrian Holdstock are the three international umpires part of IPL 2025. Notable absentees include Kumar ...
An Indian researcher, studying at Georgetown University in the US, has been arrested by immigration officers and faces deportation, according to his lawyer. Badar Khan Suri, a post-doctoral fellow ...
Long before sitars and tablas ruled the stage, India resonated with the haunting melodies of the Ravanahatha and the deep tones of the Surbahar. These six forgotten instruments once defined musical ...
Four-time Grammy winner and Indian tabla maestro Zakir Hussain was excluded from the 'In Memoriam' segment of the 67th Grammy Awards, an apparent oversight by the organisers that left Indian fans ...
Drummer Joe Seaward expressed fascination with Indian music, mentioning influences in their song 'Life Itself,' featuring tabla and dhol rhythms. The band is eager to explore more Indian sounds ...
Sudiksha Konanki went missing on March 6. Missing Indian-American student Sudiksha Konanki and Joshua Riibe, the person of interest in the case, were seen together at an outdoor bar before she ...
The relationship between melody and percussion is deeply symbiotic ... percussionists while maintaining the lyrical depth of Indian classical music. Starting your musical journey with the tabla before ...
Part III of the series on artistes, who have been trendsetters in the world of Indian classical arts, in the words of authors Shantanu Das and Sapna Narayan.