A
program of Indian classical music will be presented at 6:30 p.m.
on Friday, March 30, at Derryberry Auditorium.
The concert of South Indian Carnatic classical
music will be presented in a unique format — accompanied by
a slide presentation detailing the meaning of lyrics and other important
information to help the audience better understand the musical ideas
being presented.
The musical program will consist of vocals accompanied
by violin and mridangam (an Indian percussion instrument) and will
be led by singer Sankaran Mahadevan of the Kalanivedanam School
of Music and Dance in Nashville.
He has given many concerts, lectures and demonstrations
of various Carnatic music topics in the United States and India
and has composed many musical pieces for concerts, classical dance
and devotional singing.
Mahadevan studied with several well-respected
senior Carnatic musicians, including T. R. Subramanyam. He is a
founder of Nashville’s Kalanivedanam School and is a professor
of civil engineering at Vanderbilt University.
He will be accompanied by Ramesh Panchagnula on
violin and Santosh Chandru on mridangam.
Panchagnula trained under vocalist and violinist
Neti Srirama Sarma of Hyderabad, India, and later with Shivkumar
Kalyanaraman in Troy, N.Y.
He has performed frequently as a violin soloist
on All India Radio of Hyderabad and has presented concerts in India
and the United States.
He holds a master’s degree in electrical
engineering and currently lives and works in Atlanta.
Chandru trained in Mumbai, India, under percussionist
T.S. Nandakumar and is well versed in several instruments, including
the ghatam, tavil and kanjira, in addition to the mridangam.
He frequently accompanies vocalist K.J. Yesudas
in Carnatic music concerts in the United States and often provides
percussion accompaniment for classical dance programs as well.
He is a doctoral student in environmental engineering
at Georgia Tech.
The free show is a Center Stage event.
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