Tejendra Majumdar (sarod) and Anubrata Chatterjee (tabla) at Georgia Tech
September 30th, 2008
Presenting a concert featuring one of India’s leading sarodiya’s at Georgia Tech.
Pandit Tejendra Narayan Majumdar (sarod)
Anubrata Chatterjee (tabla)
at Ga Tech (Couch Music Bldg, Rehearsal Hall)
Friday, October 3, 8:30 pm
Questions: contact Dr. Parag Chordia (ppc@gatech.edu)
Tickets: $10 w/GTID, $15 General
Gharana Music returns to the airwaves
September 30th, 2008
Gharana music my weekly Indian classical music broadcast has a new time slot, every Monday 8-9 pm. You can listen at FM 91.1 or at wrek.org. You can also find an mp3 of the most recent broadcast on teh wrek schedule page .
Here’s a rundown of Monday’s show (9/29):
Ali Akbar Khan (sarod) Raag Ahir Bhairav 78RPM
An absolutely brilliant rendition of Ahir Bhairav.
Tejendra Narayan Majumdar (sarod) and Samar Saha (tabla)
Raag Alahiya Bilawal Alap
Raag Alahiya Bilawal Gat in Madhyalay tintal
from India Archive Music 1997
Tejendrada shows tremendous timbral control and melodiousness, particularly in the alap proper and the first half of the madhyalay gat. Some nice ekhara taan work in the gat but too much too fast for me there.
Drut Gat from Sangati 08 Concert
September 18th, 2008A short excerpt in Raag Ahir Bhairav from a concert this summer at the Sangati Center in SF with Ferhan Qureshi on tabla.
Interactive Raag Emotion Data Visualizer
September 15th, 2008You can now check out the raag emotion survey data for yourself. There is an interactive visualization tool here.
At ISMIR in Philly
September 15th, 2008Just got into Philly for the ISMIR conference taking place at Drexel. At first I thought the city was bleak but they were banging the house music on Sunday night. Anyhow, I’m curious about Dmitri Tymoczko talk tomorrow. I wonder if he will address whether his theory of consonance has cognitive grounding and what insights or predictions can be made by the geometric interpretation.
Raag and Emotion and ICMPC 10 in Sapporo, Japan
September 6th, 2008Had a chance to visit Japan for the first time to attend the biennial Music perception and cognition conference in Sapporo. Unfortunately spent almost exactly as long on the plane as on the ground, but still was great. Saw the best water fountain at Moerenuma park (much better than Bellagio), it had a very meditative progression a touch of artifice applied to an elemental process. It was something like a geyser, waves and the tide. It reminded philosophically of the artist Andy Goldsworthy.
I presented work showing that raags do seem to elicit relatively consistent emotions whether or not the listener is enculturated. We also found the age-old minor key = sad, which still awaits a convincing theoretical explanation (which we are working on
) On the other hand, this was an explicit response survey using necessarily crude terms, such as “happy”, “sad”, “restless”, etc. Still, this is among the first studies to empirically show the association of raag and emotion which is taken for granted in Indian music theory. I would like to see if I can find a way to delve deeper using implicit measures. My personal feeling is that the true feelings elicited are complex and not really like emotions elicited by non-musical stimuli. When we project them onto basic axes such as arousal and valence we may get a consistent pattern, but probably we are losing most of the true information. There are more details in the abstract.
Tabla Gyan at ICMC 2008
September 4th, 2008I presented my work (virtually) on realtime tabla recognition at ICMC 08. See below for some videos describing the work. I’m really excited about taking this forward so it can be used in realistic performance contexts with top-notch tabla players. You can read the publication here.
Wisdom Symposium at the University of Chicago
August 24th, 2008I had an interesting opportunity to make the argument recently that music can express wisdom. I was finalist for the Arete Initiative grant that sought new approaches to the study of wisdom. The crux of my claim was that music has a tremendous ability to modulate mood both subtly and dramatically. I think we all have had situations where music has dramatically altered our perspective on a situation, perhaps because it gave expression to something inexpressible, or made us ruminate, or simply because it put us in a better mood. in any case it was a harder sell than I thought it would be. Nevertheless an interesting opportunity to meet people doing work in areas like meditation and neuroscience, trolleyology (morality and neuroscience) and behavioral econ.
Sarod Performance at the Sangati Center in San Francisco
July 13th, 2008I presented a North Indian classical recital on Saturday night at the Sangati center with Ferhan Qureshi on tabla. The main piece was Raag Ahir Bhairav, which was followed by Raag Manjh Khamaj and a short Kafi.
Dangum at Listening Machines 2008
April 26th, 2008Dangum is a piece for mrdangam, the main South Indian percussion instrument, and a machine listener. It was created by my students Jagadeeswaran Jayaprakash and Alex Rae. The basic format of the piece is call and response. The machine listener is able to listen to a mrdangam improvisation and determine the strokes played and their timing in realtime. This is an extension of Tabla Gyan a system that recognized tabla in realtime. A video of the performance is below. The Listening Machines website is here.