NPR covers the cultural shift that took place when Shankar taught the Beatles' George Harrison how to play the sitar, an ancient classical Indian instrument.
Enduring afterglow of Shankar's life in music
Bilal Qureshi (NPR's All Things Considered, April 7, 2020)
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In a career that spanned decades and continents, he singlehandedly introduced Western audiences to the centuries-old classical tradition of Indian ragas -- a complex system of melodies performed as longform improvisations by an instrumentalist and an accompanying percussionist.
He inspired legions of Western and Eastern fans and created a model for stretching the boundaries of an ancient musical tradition. Biographer Oliver Craske traces the full breadth of Shankar's life beyond the known flashpoints of his career -- icon of the 1960s, teacher of George Harrison, and a tour-de-force set at the Monterey Pop festival. More
The Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" psychedelic acid bootleg, autumn 1965
Hipster Norman Maslov showcases his Shankar collection, April 7, 2020
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