Moving my blog over to shawnmativetsky.com

Dear friends,

With the recent update of my website, I now have the ability to integrate the blog directly into the website, so that is what I am doing; it just makes sense. I will no longer be posting updates here. Thank you to all of you for your interest in my musical adventures. Please click along to my website for the continuation of this blog in the future! If you would like to update your RSS subscription, this is the new RSS URL: http://shawnmativetsky.com/blogs/blog.atom

I hope to see you over at shawnmativetsky.com!

Shawn

Friday, 3 October 2008

A blast from the past...

Well, it certainly took some time before I transferred these videos to my PC! Here are a couple of clips from a performance given on August 5, 2006 as part of the gala concert that ended the 25th Annual Summer Tabla Workshop with Pandit Sharda Sahai. You may remember that I had previously posted the links to clips from the second half of this concert; Pt. Sharda Sahai's tabla solo.

The concert opened with a performance of Bob Becker's Palta. As far as I know, this is the first piece to feature the tabla in a Western classical music setting. This was a very special performance, as Gurujee (Pt. Sharda Sahai) was in the audience (and he has played this piece many times in the past), Bob Becker was playing the piano part, and the audience was full of guru-bhais, tabla students, and Indian music afficionados.

The piece opens with a few moharas, followed by improvisations on an angrusthana.


Next on the program was Payton MacDonald's 1st Concerto for Tabla and Percussion Quartet. This piece continues in the tradition of Palta, and is the only of Payton's tabla concertos that wasn't written for me (I have since commissioned the 2nd and 3rd, and Samsara, a concerto with wind ensemble); an oddity in the repertoire! :) In this clip, I play variations on a well known Delhi kaida.

Payton was kind enough to conduct for this performance. With him at the helm, I know that I can get away will all kinds of things in my improvisations. :) Like Gurujee always says, "the train can only roll if the tracks are straight."



Next on the program was Bob Becker's Mudra, for solo snare drum and percussion ensemble, performed by Bob. I don't have the clip for this one ready yet. Maybe next year. :)

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