Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Ghosh to grace Cape Jazz stage

Internatio­nally-celebrated Indian musician coming to Cape Town

- WEEKEND ARGUS REPORTER Full Circle, Vande Mataram

THE Cape Town Internatio­nal Jazz Festival is constantly seeking to expose audiences to a diversity of artists and will this year feature renowned Indian musician Bickram Ghosh.

Ghosh performs as part of a quartet bearing his name and which includes Arun Kumar on drums, Abhishek Mallik on the electric sitar and Jonathan Kay on the saxophone.

Ghosh will land in Cape Town with a wealth of experience and global exposure as numerous awards have been bestowed on this talented musician.

His band has performed throughout the length and breadth of India and made its UK debut in 2003, at The Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.

In 2004, they performed at the Forum at Barcelona, sharing the stage with musicians Sting, Phil Collins, Norah Jones and Bob Dylan.

Ghosh was featured on Ravi Shankar’s album which won

a Grammy award. He has also played on three other albums that have been nominated for Grammy awards – including former Beatle band member George Harrison’s album Brainwashe­d.

Ghosh’s successful solo albums include Beyond Rhythmscap­e, Folktail,

Drum Invasion, Kingdom of Rhythm and Transforma­tion. And he has composed music for 30 feature films and featured on at least 100 albums.

Another film he scored music for was Sooni Taraporewa­la, which had support from award-winning filmmaker Mira Nair. He has since teamed up with Bollywood singing star Sonu Nigam as co-composers in Bollywood with three films, including the film Jal, which was nominated for an Oscar award for the best original score.

This should not really be that surprising though, considerin­g Ghosh is the son of the illustriou­s tabla maestro Pandit Shankar Ghosh and wellknown vocalist Sanjukta Ghosh.

Jazz festival fans can expect some experiment­ation from an artist known for fusing Indian music with a contempora­ry touch. His style has been branded as Indo-fusion and he dabbles in a vast repertoire of musical genres, from classical to rock.

In an interview with Gulf News, Ghosh said he prefers to play music differentl­y each time.

“Indian classical music is nothing but two artists going on stage with nothing written down... For me, I cannot do the same thing twice… we do shows of Rhythmscap­e, but each time we play it completely different,” he said.

“Otherwise, I am certainly bored. I find it completely meaningles­s.”

Ghosh also seeks out foreign collaborat­ors to expand the musical experience. “If it is just me every time then it is limited in scope. We also need other energies. We need to have a guest from America, from the UK, or from Europe or from Japan.”

Ghosh still draws inspiratio­n from the legendary musician Shankar, whom he has accompanie­d in live concerts for at least a decade and who honed his skills in the art of accompanim­ent. All the while he has played with the greatest maestros of both North and South Indian Classical music.

Ghosh’s touring performanc­e, Drums of India, travelled across the US in 2016.

Back at home, in 2012 Ghosh recreated the Indian national anthem

along with 22 of India’s greatest musical stars.

 ??  ?? BICKRAM Ghosh will perform at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Jazz Festival.
BICKRAM Ghosh will perform at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Jazz Festival.

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