Ravi Shankar was an Indian musician. He played the sitar, a long-necked string instrument from northern India. He is the most famous Indian classical musician of the 20th century. He was born in 1920 in the city of Varanasi (also called Banaras), in northern India. He came from a Bengali Brahmin family. His father was a lawyer and scholar who left the family when Ravi was young. His older brother Uday Shankar was a famous dancer who toured the world with an Indian dance company. As a boy, Ravi joined his brother's troupe. He travelled across Europe and America as a young dancer and musician. He met many Western artists in this period. At 18, he made a serious decision. He left his brother's company and went to study music seriously with a great teacher named Allauddin Khan in central India. He spent seven years in Khan's home, training intensively in the strict Indian classical tradition. This kind of long apprenticeship was traditional. The teacher was almost a parent. Ravi later married Khan's daughter, Annapurna Devi, who was also a brilliant musician. From the 1950s onwards, his career grew rapidly. He performed across India, then in Europe and America. In the 1960s he became famous in the West, partly because of his friendship with George Harrison of the Beatles. He continued performing into his nineties. He had a complex personal life, with several partners and four children, including the musicians Anoushka Shankar and Norah Jones. He died in San Diego in 2012, aged 92.
Ravi Shankar matters for three reasons. First, he was a master of one of the world's great classical music traditions. Indian classical music has roots going back over 2,000 years. It is built on complex melodic and rhythmic systems different from Western music. Shankar was a complete master of this system. His playing combined deep tradition with personal creativity. Within India, he was respected as one of the greatest sitar players ever.
Second, he opened Indian classical music to the world. Before him, most Western listeners knew almost nothing about it. Shankar gave concerts in concert halls across Europe and America. He explained the music to audiences who had never heard it. He recorded albums for Western labels. He worked with Western classical musicians like Yehudi Menuhin and with rock musicians like George Harrison. He helped create the international audience that Indian music now has.
Third, he shaped how the West thought about Indian culture in the second half of the 20th century. His friendship with George Harrison led many Western young people to take an interest in India. He performed at Woodstock in 1969 and the Concert for Bangladesh in 1971. His role was complicated. He sometimes worried that Western audiences treated his music as a drug-related fad rather than as serious art. He insisted on its seriousness. He helped establish the global respect Indian classical music now has.
For a first introduction, Ravi Shankar's autobiography My Music, My Life (1968, revised 2007) is the best starting point. The 1971 documentary Raga, directed by Howard Worth and produced with George Harrison, shows him performing and teaching. Many of his recordings are widely available. Good starting points include the album West Meets East with Yehudi Menuhin (1967) and Concert for Bangladesh (1971). The Concert for George tribute album (2002) includes powerful Indian music sections.
For deeper reading, Oliver Craske's Indian Sun: The Life and Music of Ravi Shankar (2020) is the standard scholarly biography. Peter Lavezzoli's The Dawn of Indian Music in the West (2006) covers the wider context of how Indian music reached Western audiences. For Indian classical music more broadly, Bonnie Wade's Music in India (1979, revised 2004) is a clear textbook. Sandeep Bagchee's Nad: Understanding Raga Music (1998) is excellent on the music theory.
Ravi Shankar invented Indian classical music.
He did not. Indian classical music has roots going back over 2,000 years, with foundational ideas developed in ancient Sanskrit treatises. Shankar was a great inheritor of an existing deep tradition, not its inventor. His own teacher, Ustad Allauddin Khan, was a master of the tradition. So were many others before and during Shankar's career. What Shankar did was bring the tradition to a global audience and add his own creative voice within it. He was a brilliant practitioner of a tradition that was already old when he was born and that continues now after his death.
All Indian classical music is the same.
It is not. There are two main classical traditions in India. Hindustani music is the northern tradition. It is what Shankar played. Carnatic music is the southern tradition, mainly in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, and Andhra Pradesh. The two traditions share basic concepts of raga and rhythm but differ in style, language of vocal music, instruments, and performance practice. Within Hindustani music there are also several different gharanas (school lineages), each with their own approach. Shankar belonged to one of these. Treating Indian classical music as a single uniform tradition misses much of its richness.
Indian classical music has no rules and is just improvisation.
It is highly structured. Each raga has strict rules about which notes are used, in which order, with which emphasis. The rhythmic system, called tala, also has strict patterns. Within these rules, the musician improvises. The freedom lies inside the structure. Calling Indian classical music 'just improvisation' misses how disciplined it is. A skilled musician knows the rules of dozens of ragas in deep detail. Most listeners cannot hear all the rules being followed, but the rules are there. The music is rigorous in its own way, just as Western classical music is rigorous in its own way.
Shankar made his music more 'Western' to please international audiences.
He did not, mostly. He shortened performances for Western concerts because Western audiences were not used to four-hour concerts. He explained ragas in advance because his audiences did not know the tradition. He worked with Western musicians on cross-cultural projects. But in his core performances, he played serious traditional Hindustani classical music with full integrity. He was very protective of the tradition. He criticised superficial 'fusion' work. He insisted his music be heard as serious classical music, not as exotic background. The accusation that he sold out is not supported by careful listening to what he actually played.
For research-level engagement, Daniel Neuman's The Life of Music in North India (1990) is a major ethnographic study of the world Shankar worked in. Bonnie Wade's Khyal: Creativity Within North India's Classical Music Tradition (1984) is a detailed study of a related vocal tradition. The journal Asian Music regularly publishes scholarship on the field. The Sangeet Research Academy in Kolkata holds extensive archival material. Anoushka Shankar's recent autobiography and Norah Jones's interviews offer additional family perspectives on Shankar's life.
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