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"Hindustani Slide" |
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Vestapol 13031 reviewed in Sing Out! This fascinating video chronicles a performance by Debashish Bhattacharya on perhaps the strangest looking guitar in history. Played lap-style with a high bridge like the American dobro, its fret board accommodates only five strings instead of the usual six. But these are augmented in the Indian fashion by sympathetic drone strings along the high, or thumb side of the neck and rhythmic chikari strings running beside the fingerboard on the other side. Fretting with an iron bar, Bhattacharya achieves an incredible range of rhythmic and timbral effects, with particular emphasis on the vocal quality Indian classical music shares with American blues. His improvisations never repeat or get stale, and his phrasing and touch are remarkably sure and convincing. The ensemble includes the sympathetic tabla drummer Kumar Bose, whose accompaniment never overpowers the guitar. The film is shot simply but effectively from several angles, on a multicolored set that adds to the sense of wonder produced by this strange and magical instrument. Liner notes are copious and well-researched, citing previous Indian guitarists and native Indian instruments. They make the case that the sonorities of slide guitar are not new on the subcontinent, as do the artists themselves. Vestapol 13031 reviewed in Dirty Linen The use of slide guitar in Indian classical music has recently come to be known in the West, largely through the recordings of Vishwa Bhatt. This 80-minute video, beautifully filmed in Calcutta, documents a complete concert performance by Debashish Bhattacharya, another master of this style, accompanied here by his sister, Sutapa Bhattacharya, on tambura, and Kumar Bose on tablas. Bhattacharya's guitar
is a marvel itself, with 16 drone strings grafted onto a relatively conventional
Hawaiian guitar body. He performs with a relatively standard guitar slide
and a thumbpick and two fingerpicks on his right hand. The music performed
consists of three selections, a brief dhun based on Raga Kirwani, and
two ragas "Gurjara Todi" and the extended "Raga Charukeshi."
It is very enlightening to see how Bhattacharya uses glissando with his
slide to create a sound that is texturally very similar to that of the
sitar, and indeed his music sounds much more like classical Indian music
performed on traditional instruments than it does any form of western
slide guitar. This well-produced video provides a nice introduction into
this relatively esoteric branch of guitar |
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