
with Mohamad
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Toronto
Tabla Ensemble
"When I play music, I go to a place…where my body
is doing one thing – playing the drums – but my mind
is somewhere else, in ecstasy with the music."
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The Toronto
Tabla Ensemble is ten years old, and with a new CD due out
this year, they continue to be one of Toronto’s most dynamic
groups. In the past decade, they’ve swelled from 3 to about
17 members, released two albums and an interactive CD-ROM,
and played venues packed to capacity. Ironically, according
to artistic director Ritesh Das, his focus is not on success,
but on his lifelong study of the tabla and of the tabla
nawaaz – his Self.
Ritesh began his immersion
in the sounds of the tabla when he was already a fifteen-year-old
high school student in Kalkota, trying to look cool in his
kurta and jeans, dreaming of playing filmi music in Mumbai.
His elder brother was then teaching kathak at the Ali Akbar
College of Music in the US. Through him, Ritesh was introduced
to his first guru, Shankar Ghosh, the father of tabla great
Bikram Ghosh. Established in the Farukhabad gharana by Ghosh,
Ritesh began to realize what playing the tabla was all about,
not the money, not the fame, but the experience – the musical
high. He moved on to study with Zakir Hussain, and finally
Pandit Swapan Chaudhari. his current teacher. In 1987, Ritesh
ji moved to Toronto with his former wife, kathak performer
Joanna Das. They were both a hit at Vishnu Mandir, and Ritesh
ji soon began teaching there, learning from his students
while they learned from him.
On the other hand, Santosh
Naidu and Gurtej Hunjan each got an early start. Gurtej’s
parents were trying to find some way to stop him from bugging
the tabla players at the gurdwara, and after going through
several teachers, they hit on Ritesh ji. "He made it fun
to learn," says Gurtej. For Ritesh ji, that’s what it’s
all about. Santosh, born into an exceptionally musical family,
was caught on film trying to play the tabla in his uncle’s
lap as a toddler. After seeing Ritesh perform, Santosh’s
father rushed his reluctant young son to Ritesh ji’s class
at Vishnu Mandir in the late 80s, when he was just beginning
to teach. Santosh has been with the ensemble since its conception."Why
have I stuck with it? I love tabla!" Dumb question – good
answer.
Recently, tabla nawaazi has
turned into something of a fad. Ritesh ji tells me, "these
days you go to Calcutta and in any alleyway, you find ten
good tabla players happening…they are good to a limit, but
they haven’t gone to the next step." Similarly, electronic
musicians have turned sampling and looping tabla beats into
an exercise in cultural correctness, without knowing squat
about the technique or the patterns. It’s the death of a
tradition, but this is what we’re buying.
Ritesh ji’s view: like Loblaw’s
shoppers filling their grocery carts with President’ Choice
samosay, the general public has too little audio exposure
to distinguish the profundity of hardcore Indian Classical
music from the banality of a haphazardly slammed taal on
an ad for life insurance. Santosh and Gurtej agree that
it’s crucial to strike an accord between tradition and innovation;
certain fetters have to be cast off in order for the 21st
century tabla nawaaz to be able to explore his or her music
to the fullest extent. Santosh, who’s worked with I Mother
Earth and Bass is Base, nevertheless insists that there
are certain things you just can’t throw overboard:
"In terms of technique, you
can’t go anywhere otherwise than tradition. I think that
if you feel you’re making an innovative technique, you’re
out in left field. I’m a very big stickler for technique
– the technique I use has been passed down to me from my
teacher’s teacher’s teacher, so it’s traditional, and that’s
the way it should be. Tabla shouldn’t be played with sticks."
To
get a taste of the Tabla Ensemble, check out their 10th
anniversary concert on January 26th and 27th at the Du Maurier
Theatre. For more info, see the Events
page. Saal girah mubarak, Toronto Tabla Ensemble.
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SAMPLE
AUDIO CLIPS |

photo
credit: Dianna Last
photo
credit: Dianna Last

Visit the Toronto Tabla Ensemble at www.tablaensemble.com
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