At the young age of 21, Anoushka
Shankar has shown herself to be a unique artist with tremendous
talent and understanding of the great musical tradition of India.
Anoushka is the only artist in the world to be trained completely
by her father and legendary sitar virtuoso and composer, Ravi Shankar.
She has been playing and studying with him since she was nine, working
first on a "baby" sitar that was built especially for
her. At age 13 she made her performing debut in New Delhi, India.
That same year, Anoushka entered the recording studio for the first
time to play on her father's recording, "In Celebration."
Two years later she helped as conductor with her father and George
Harrison, Mr. Shankar's friend and frequent colleague, on the 1997
Angel release, "Chants of India." Shortly thereafter she
signed an exclusive contract with Angel/EMI Classics. In the Fall
of 1998 her first solo recording, Anoushka, was released to tremendous
critical acclaim. Her second album "Anourag" was released
in August 2000. And October 2001 saw the release of her third CD;
"Live at Carnegie Hall." She also assisted her father
on his Grammy Award winning album "Full Circle: Carnegie Hall
2000."
As her solo career continues to blossom, she is poised to carry
forward her father's legacy as one of the most creative and influential
figures in the music world. In recognition of her artistry and
musicianship, on July 17, 1998 the British Parliament presented
Anoushka with a House of Commons Shield. She is the youngest as
well as the sole female recipient of this high honor. She has
also twice been a finalist for the New Age Voice Music Award in
the Best Traditional World Album category, first for "Anoushka,"
and then for "Live at Carnegie Hall."
Anoushka spent her formative years in London, where she was born,
and by the time she was seven was also living partly in New Delhi,
India. She still spends half the year performing with her father
and visiting her family. At age eleven she moved from London to
Encinitas, California, where she graduated in 1999 with honors
from public school. She is also a gifted classical pianist with
a wide range of interests. But her devotion to the sitar and to
her father's guidance is unmistakable, with a discipline that
has led her into an already extraordinary performing career.
Anoushka had her first solo tour in 2000, and is currently focusing
on building a solo career. with performances in America, Europe,
and Asia. However, she continues to assist her father at his performances
worldwide. Anoushka is also championing her father's Concerto
No. 1 for Sitar and Orchestra, which she first performed with
Zubin Mehta conducting the London Philharmonic Orchestra in March
1997. In July 1999 Anoushka premiered a new work for sitar and
cello, written by her father, Ravi Shankar, with cellist Mstislav
Rostropovich at the Evian Festival. Anoushka became the first
woman to perform at The Ramakrishna Centre in Calcutta in February
2000. In January 2001, Anoushka made her conducting debut at Siri
Fort Auditorium in New Delhi. She conducted a 22-member orchestra
performing a new and intricate composition of her father's titled
"Kalyan."
Anoushka Shankar performed for a fundraising concert organized
by Trudie Styler for the Tibet Foundation Peace Garden, in London
on 4th June 2000. Other artists performing included Madonna, Vanessa
Redgrave, Lulu, Bryan Adams, and Alan Rickman. She also performed
at the World Economic Forum in January 2002. Organized by the
legendary producers Quincy Jones and Phil Ramone, it was held
for the first time in New York City. Also performing at the WEF
were artists like Bono of rock group U2, Lauryn Hill and Peter
Gabriel. At the performance she premiered a new piece composed
by her father titled "Mood Circle." Just months later
she took part in the star-studded Rainforest Foundation Benefit
Concert in Carnegie Hall, organized by Sting and Trudie Styler.
Among others taking part in the performance, were Elton John,
Patti La Belle, Nina Simone and James Taylor. The evening's programme
was dedicated in part to the late George Harrison and Anoushka
performed a short piece composed by her father in his memory.
"Most people are musicians simply because they play
a certain instrument; when they play that instrument, the music
appears. But Ravi - to me, he is the music; it just happens to
be that he plays the Sitar. And it's like that with Anoushka.
She has that quality…She is the music."- George
Harrison - 1997
"…Ms. Shankar, sounding utterly different from
her father, improvised against tablas, using aggressive geometric
ideas, ramming home her improvisations; the crowd cheered her
loudly, and Mr. Shankar, beaming, was as proud as Ms. Coltrane
had been of her son." - The New York Times - June 16,
1998
"..I am waiting for the time when I will be called Anoushka's
father.... Anoushka has indeed a rare talent... there is something
spiritual in the way she plays... she feels the music and gives
in to it.." - Ravi Shankar in an interview to Maya Bahir,
Yedioth (Israel)