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Ravi Shankar in Portrait

Ravi Shankar in Portrait

List Price: $39.99
Your Price: $35.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Master of the Sitar and Indian Music
Review: "Between Two Worlds", a 90 minute film by Mark Kidel, is the 'definitive' portrait of Ravi Shankar, as it attempts to encompass all facets of his life in music, while also drawing a rough sketch of his personal life as well. The film begins in Benares, India at a birthday gathering where Ravi proclaims that his life is a spiritual journey through music, in which he feels a special love for everyone that is expressed through the language of his art.

Reflections by Ravi, on his relationship with his parents and family, lead to a description of his early travels to Venice, Paris, New York and Hollywood, where he was influenced by a range of talented composers, musicians, dancers, actors and painters. In 1938, his Brahmin origins expressed their attraction in his decision to become an austere musical disciple of the guru Ustad Allauddin Khan. He spent more that seven years with 'Baba' and came to marry his guru's daughter.

This intensive musical preparation led to Ravi assuming a role as an Indian cultural ambassador, influencing musicians as diverse as Yehudi Menuhin, John Coltrane, George Harrison and Philip Glass. The film portrays that the indisciplined excesses of the 1960's popular culture, and Ravi's own participation in this exotic milieu, led to a year and a half break from musical life and finally to a rededication to more moderate ways in the years which followed.

The film closes with a tour of the construction of the Shankar foundation in New Delhi and plays a plays brief concert excerpt in which Ravi performs with a deeply solemn and profoundly beautiful sadness. In the performance, we see that music can become almost a form of worship. A world where humility, introversion and improvisation become one in the pursuit of expressing the presence of the ineffable.

Bonus footage in the two DVD set shows Ravi in the process of constructing a new musical work with his students. A second 54 minute disc records Ravi in a live performance at the Union Chapel of London with his daughter Anoushka. If you love Indian music, then the publication of "Ravi Shankar - In Portrait" can be viewed as a rare event in world of international culture.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: World class in a world that needs class
Review: I am a rock n' roller for the most part, but my music and cultural interests go far and wide.
This DVD set on the BBC/ OPUS label is simply brilliant visualy, auraly and content-wise. The spirit and integrity to this man and his music is truly inspiring.
There are segments of Ravi teaching a piece to his young group, as well as a segment on sitars and the differences between Western and Eastern music.
Brilliant, this is by far the dearest and highest quality of my large video collection. It gets watched repeatedly.
Wait till you see the concert performances...his daughter Anoushka (who is no slouch on sitar herself) seems somewhat in awe, shaking her head in near disbelief as Ravi spins his magic.
World class.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pranam Panditji
Review: I knew there was a reason why I was so excited about this DVD even before I got it. I have already watched it three to four times in so many days. My two year old loves to sit with me and watch it too! I remember going to the concerts in Bombay in the 80's and Panditji always seemed to be playing from Himalayan heights.He seemed to be un approachable to us then. We always had theories about artists who lived in the west.Most of us are known to have OPINIONS! This DVD brings Raviji's human side in your face. My impression about him has completely changed. I have even more love and respect for the man now. ThanX to BBC for a great job, I particulary enjoyed the B/W clips from his childhood days.
What a life ! Watching this DVD one gets a insight in to his spirituality and at the same time he seems to be such a simple person. Raviji thinks, speaks as if he never left his childhood place in Benaras. He still has an accent which most people like me try hard to get rid off. It was quiet hilarious to see his wife correct him from saying "servants quarters", a non-PC term used commonly in India, I had tears in my eyes. Some of the footage with Raviji's Guru, Allaudin Khan is simply brilliant. I am mostly stuck with the first CD, but the concerts on the CD 2 are very well recorded and if you have a 9:16 big screen TV , its quiet a treat.
I am already making a list of people I can buy this for as a gift!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Can't wait
Review: I ordered the DVD after reading all these wonderful reviews and I can't wait to get my hands on it. I love Ravi Shankar's music and consider him a genius myself. I can only hope I can acquire enough wisdom to appreciate the music of people like him. I do have a bone to pick though. As a person who grew up in India we saw nepotism all around us, it is a unwritten law of the land. Now, living in the US I don't have much tolerance for it. I went to a concert in the late 90's at the Mesonic hoping to see and hear Ravi Shankar's music but he was shamelessly pushing his daughter all over the concert.She wasn't even ready and would just stop playing every now and then. What most leaders in India failed to do is set themselves as an example.He is well traveled and well acheived person. Its a tragedy that such a great man passed on such an opportunity for more greatness. I will be certainly skipping the part where she plays on the DVD. That will be for all the great musical talent in India who will never be discovered because they are not related to anyone famous.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect DVD
Review: If you are interested in Ravi Shankar, India music and/ or the arts in any way I would suggest getting this DVD. It takes you to India, to see the roots of classical Indian music. To spiritual places and Ravi's connections to those place. Absolutley beautiful filming. To the mind of one of the worlds greatest composers and frankly a wonderful man. The first disc is filled with history, imagary and musical knowledge. To be veiwed over and over again. The 2nd disc was recorded in 2002, a beautiful live concert. Excellent sound and quality. To see a such a great master at work brought tears to my eyes. Seeing his influence on Pop and western music and the warmth of a man that will live forever in the hearts of many musicians and music lovers around the world. He IS music. This DVD has it all and I highly suggest it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect DVD
Review: If you are interested in Ravi Shankar, India music and/ or the arts in any way I would suggest getting this DVD. It takes you to India, to see the roots of classical Indian music. To spiritual places and Ravi's connections to those place. Absolutley beautiful filming. To the mind of one of the worlds greatest composers and frankly a wonderful man. The first disc is filled with history, imagary and musical knowledge. To be veiwed over and over again. The 2nd disc was recorded in 2002, a beautiful live concert. Excellent sound and quality. To see a such a great master at work brought tears to my eyes. Seeing his influence on Pop and western music and the warmth of a man that will live forever in the hearts of many musicians and music lovers around the world. He IS music. This DVD has it all and I highly suggest it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simply wonderful!
Review: This two-DVD set is a worthwhile purchase for anyone interested in Ravi Shankar. The first CD has two segments, "Between Two Worlds" and "Benares Ghat." "Between Two Worlds" uses Shankar's 80th birthday as a point of departure for a video retrospective, including film clips of Ravi with his brother Uday's dance troupe in the 1930s, sample footage from a film he scored, excerpts of his Monterey Pop and Woodstock performances, a short segment from the 1969 film Raga where he visits his guru Baba Khan, clips of Ravi teaching (including George Harrison), and Ravi and his wife showing the construction of his cultural center in India. The second program on Disc 1 shows Ravi teaching his composition "Benares Ghat" to a group of students. Disc two includes live performances of two complete classical ragas with a group including his daughter Anoushka, two tabla players and tampura. Anoushka is a very accomplished player, but limits her involvement here to trading several instrumental phrases with her father and playing occasional secondary lines to support him. This performance from 2002 shows Shankar's virtuosity undiminished despite his age. Disc two concludes with Ravi discussing Indian music and the sitar, playing several examples to illustrate his points. This segement also includes short performance excerpts. Covering his biography, teaching, performance, and views on Indian music, this set fairly comprehensively covers Ravi Shankar's long and varied career. The sound, image quality, editing and camera work are all excellent throughout.


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