Anoushka Shankar

(Redirected from Land of Gold (album))

Anoushka Hemangini Shankar (born 9 June 1981) is a British-American[1][2] sitar player and musician of Indian descent,[3][4] as well as occasional writer. She performs across multiple genres and styles—classical and contemporary, acoustic and electronic.[5][6] In addition to releasing seven solo studio albums beginning with Anoushka (1998), she has also worked alongside a wide variety of musicians, including Karsh Kale on the full-length collaboration Breathing Under Water (2007) and her father Ravi Shankar. She has received nine[7] Grammy Awards nominations and was the first musician of Indian origin to perform live and to serve as a presenter at the ceremony.[8] She was the youngest and first woman to receive a British House of Commons Shield.

Anoushka Shankar
Shankar at the Rudolstadt-Festival 2016
Born
Anoushka Hemangini Shankar

(1981-06-09) 9 June 1981 (age 43)
London, England
Nationality
  • British
  • American
Occupations
Spouse
(m. 2010; div. 2019)
Children2
FatherRavi Shankar
Relatives
Musical career
OriginLondon
Genres
Instruments
Years active1995–present
LabelsAngel, Deutsche Grammophon, Mercury KX
Websiteanoushkashankar.com

Early life

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Shankar was born in London and her childhood was divided between London and Delhi. She is the daughter of Sukanya Rajan and Indian sitar maestro Ravi Shankar, who was 61 when she was born. Through her father, she is also the half-sister of American singer Norah Jones (born Geetali Norah Shankar), and Shubhendra "Shubho" Shankar, who died in 1992.

As a teenager, Shankar lived in Encinitas, California, and attended San Dieguito High School Academy. A 1999 honours graduate and homecoming queen, she pursued a career in music rather than attending college.[9]

Career

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Anoushka and Ravi Shankar in concert, 2005

Shankar began training on the sitar with one of her father's disciples, Gaurav Mazumdar, at the age of eight.[10] As part of her training, she began accompanying her father on the tanpura at his performances from the age of ten. She gave her first public sitar performance on 27 February 1995 at the age of 13, at Siri Fort in New Delhi as part of her father's 75th birthday celebration concert. For this solo debut, she was accompanied by tabla maestro Zakir Hussain.[11] Her first experience in the recording studio came that same year when Angel Records released a special four-CD box set called In Celebration, to mark her father's birthday. By the age of fourteen, she was accompanying her father at concerts around the world. At fifteen, she assisted her father on the landmark album Chants of India, produced by George Harrison. Under both their guidance, she was in charge of notation and eventually of conducting the performers who took part in the recording. After this experience, the heads of Angel Records came to her parents' home to ask to sign her, and Shankar signed her first exclusive recording contract with Angel/EMI when she was sixteen.

She released her first album, Anoushka, in 1998, followed by Anourag in 2000. In 1999 Shankar graduated from high school with honours, but decided against university in favour of touring as a solo artist. Both Shankar and her half-sister Norah Jones were nominated for Grammy awards in 2003, when Shankar became the youngest nominee in the World Music category for her third album, Live at Carnegie Hall.

Having released three albums of Indian classical music, Shankar took several years away from recording and focused her energy on establishing herself as a solo concert performer outside of her father's ensemble. In that time, she toured worldwide, playing an average of 50–60 concerts per year. 2005 brought the release of her fourth album, RISE, her first self-produced, self-composed, non-classical album, earning her another Grammy nomination in the Best Contemporary World Music category. In February 2006 she became the first Indian to play at the Grammy Awards, playing material from RISE.

Shankar, in collaboration with Indian producer, composer and musician Karsh Kale, released Breathing Under Water on 28 August 2007. It is a mix of classical sitar and electronica beats and melodies. Notable guest vocals included her half-sister Norah Jones, Sting, and her father, who performed a sitar duet with her.

In 2011 Shankar signed with record label Deutsche Grammophon as an exclusive artist. This marked the beginning of a prolific recording and creative period for Shankar, during which time she continued to refine the sitar sound and musical ideas she had become known for. She earned a third Grammy Award nomination in 2013 for Traveller, an exploration of the shared history between flamenco and Indian classical music, which was produced by Javier Limón and featured artists such as Buika, Pepe Habichuela and Duquende. As Shankar had begun to do with RISE, she created a specially handpicked ensemble of musicians with whom to perform this cross-genre music, and played over a hundred concerts worldwide in support of Traveller. In 2013 she released a personal album called Traces of You, which was released several months after the passing of her father. Produced by Nitin Sawhney, and featuring her half-sister Norah Jones as the sole vocal performer, Traces of You earned Shankar a fourth Grammy nomination in the World Music category. In July 2015 Shankar released Home, her first purely classical album of Indian ragas. Self-composed and produced, Home was recorded over a week in October 2014 in Shankar's new, purpose-built home-studio.

 
Anoushka Shankar in Lorient Interceltic Festival in 2014

Following Home, Shankar released Land of Gold (2016) – her fourth album with Deutsche Grammophon.[12] The release featured different types of contributions – from the vocal of MIA and Alev Lenz, to the monologue of "Remain the Sea" by veteran British actress Vanessa Redgrave.[13] There is also a strong cinematic influence in the videos, lent by the production of film director Joe Wright. Land of Gold remixes came out in the same year with remixes by Mowgli, Karsh Kale, Matt Robertson, Grain and East London-based collective Shiva Soundsystem.

In 2019 came the compilation Reflections, a 20-year retrospective album that revisits the best of Shankar's cross-cultural back catalogue with Deutsche Grammophon, including many of her previous collaborations with fellow artists and producers.[14]

The release of Love Letters in 2020 marked a different direction for Shankar. The co-produced EP is a compilation of songs written across 2018-19 and released on her new record label, Mercury KX.[15][16] Several guest musicians feature on the EP, including singer and co-producer Alev Lenz, twin sister vocal duo Ibeyi, singer and cellist Ayanna Witter-Johnson, Indian singer Shilpa Rao, Brooklyn-based mastering engineer Heba Kadry (Björk, Slowdive) and British audio mastering engineer Mandy Parnell (Aphex Twin, The XX).[17]

Shankar regularly collaborates with electronic music producer Gold Panda, percussionist Manu Delago and the Britten Sinfonia strings, all of which appeared, including Shankar, at the 2020 BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall.[18]

Throughout her career, Shankar has made many guest appearances on recordings by other artists, among them Sting, Lenny Kravitz, Thievery Corporation and Nitin Sawhney.

In 2010 she collaborated with Jazz legend Herbie Hancock, on his album The Imagine Project, alongside Pink, India.Arie, Jeff Beck, John Legend, Chaka Khan, The Chieftains, Wayne Shorter and Dave Matthews. The project was also filmed for a documentary accompanying the release and showing him working with the artists who collaborated on the project.[19]

In the same year she featured on the track "Rebirth" by Indian fusion group MIDIval Punditz. In 2012 the album Area 52 by Rodrigo & Gabriela featured a guest appearance from Shankar's sitar improvisation.[20] She performed the Raga Piloo with violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja during a concert in Konzerthaus Berlin, Germany in April 2016; the song was originally composed, performed and recorded by Ravi Shankar as a duet with Yehudi Menuhin on the album West Meets East, Volume 2 in 1968.

More recently, she has played on the track "Ama La" on the Dalai Lama's first music album, Inner World that was released in July 2020 on his 85th birthday.[21]

Shortly after, she appeared on Peradam, the third and final instalment of album trilogy Perfect Vision by Patti Smith and Soundwalk Collective alongside Charlotte Gainsbourg, and Tenzin Choegyal; she also collaborated with Grammy-nominated Deva Premal on the song "Prabhujee", released in November 2020.

On 13 November 2020, Shankar was featured on "Stop Crying Your Heart Out" as part of the BBC Radio 2's Allstars' Children in Need charity single.[22] The single debuted at number 7 on the Official UK Singles Chart[23] and number 1 on both the Official UK Singles Sales Chart and the Official UK Singles Download Chart.[24]

Classical sitar

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Shankar has continued to tour and perform as a classical sitarist, both within purely Indian classical ensembles but also as a soloist championing her father's compositions with the world's leading orchestras including the London Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Berliner Philharmoniker, MDR Sinfonieorchester, Metropole Orkest and Lucerne Symphony Orchestra.[25][26][18]

Shankar is the sole performer of Ravi Shankar's First and Second Concertos for Sitar and Orchestra since his death, performing multiple times under the leadership of esteemed conductors such as Zubin Mehta, Jules Buckley, Kristjan Järvi, and Jakob Hrusa. In January 2009 she was the sitar soloist alongside the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra premiering her father's Third Concerto for Sitar and Orchestra, and in July 2010 she premiered Ravi Shankar's first symphony for sitar and orchestra with the London Philharmonic Orchestra at London's Royal Festival Hall.

She has also performed in duets with artists such as violinist Joshua Bell, in a sitar-cello duet with Mstislav Rostropovich, and with flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal, playing both sitar and piano.

Film scoring

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Shankar took her first steps into scoring with a Bengali lullaby composed for director Joe Wright's Anna Karenina (2012), starring Keira Knightley, Jude Law and Tannishtha Chatterjee.[27]

Shankar's progression into composition for films led her to score the British Film Institute's restoration of a rare Indian silent Shiraz: A Romance of India (original 1928, scored in 2017). She also performed the composition live at screenings of the movie that premiered at 2017's London Film Festival Archive Gala and then appeared at the global film festival We Are One on 2 June 2020.[28]

In the same year (2017) she co-wrote and performed on the end-title song "Gain the Ocean" for the Judi Dench-starred British-American biographical drama Victoria & Abdul directed by Stephen Frears.[29]

More recently she co-composed the score to Mira Nair's (Monsoon Wedding, Vanity Fair, The Namesake) BBC six-part series A Suitable Boy (2020); based on Vikram Seth's classic novel of the same title, the show developed by Andrew Davies (Bridget Jones's Diary, War & Peace, Les Misérables) stars Tabu, Tanya Maniktala and Ishaan Khatter.[30]

Acting, writing and narrating

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Shankar has also ventured into acting (Dance Like a Man, 2004) and writing. She wrote a biography of her father, Bapi: The Love of My Life, in 2002 and has contributed to various books. As a columnist she wrote monthly columns for India's First City Magazine for three years, and spent one year as a weekly columnist for India's second largest newspaper, the Hindustan Times.[citation needed]

She narrated Stolen Innocence: India's Untold Story of Human Trafficking, a 2017 documentary by filmmakers Chris Davis, Casey Allred and Lindsay Daniels, telling the true stories of young women who escaped from sex slavery in India and Nepal.[31]

Benefit concerts

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Over the span of her musical career, Shankar has frequently been invited to perform for benefit concerts around the world.

In 2000 she shared the stage with Madonna and Bryan Adams at the Summer's Tibetan Peace Garden Benefit concert organised in London by Sting's wife Trudie Styler;[32] on 29 November 2002, Shankar was the featured performer of the "Indian" half of the Concert for George, a posthumous tribute to the life and music of George Harrison, held at the Royal Albert Hall in London. She opened the show by playing a solo sitar instrumental titled "Your Eyes". Also on the sitar, she performed George Harrison's "The Inner Light" with Jeff Lynne. Lastly, she conducted a new composition, Arpan, written by her father. The composition featured Eric Clapton playing acoustic guitar, and a full orchestra of Indian and Western musicians. The concert was modelled after Ravi Shankar's benefit concert with Harrison, the 1971 Concert for Bangladesh.

Also in 2002 she performed alongside Patti Labelle, Elton John, Nina Simone and others for Rock for the Rainforest, the benefit concert organized by Sting and Trudie Styler at Carnegie Hall.[33]

Shankar was invited by Richard Gere and Philip Glass to perform in a concert at Avery Fisher Hall in 2003 in aid of the Healing the Divide: A Concert for Peace and Reconciliation.[citation needed]

Shankar and Jethro Tull postponed a concert scheduled for 29 November 2008 in Mumbai after the 2008 Mumbai attacks. They reorganised the performance as A Billion Hands Concert, a benefit performance for victims of the attacks, and held it on 5 December 2008.[34]

In 2016 Shankar helped gather names and signed Letter to the Guardian for a call for action to help Syrian refugees.[35]

In February 2018 she read a poem as part of Letters Live for Help Refugees, alongside other performers such as Gemma Arterton, Andrew Scott, Jade Anouka, Cara Theobaold, Florence Welch, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Joely Richardso, among many others.[citation needed]

In July 2018 she embarked on a short US tour of Land of Gold to help raise funds for the nonprofit organization Help Refugees.[36]

Awards and honours

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  • British House of Commons Shield, 1998[37]
  • Woman of the Year awarded on International Women's Day 2003 in India.
  • Named as one of 20 Asian Heroes by the Asia edition of Time in 2004
  • In 2003 she received her first Grammy Nomination in the Best Global Music Album category for her third-album, Live at Carnegie Hall. She was the youngest-ever nominee in this category.
  • In 2004 she received a National Film Award nomination for Best Supporting actress in the film Dance Like A Man in 2004.[38]
  • In 2006 she was nominated for another Grammy, in the Best Contemporary World Music Album category for her fourth album Rise.
  • In 2012 she won Best Artist in the Songlines Music Award for her album Traveller.[39]
  • In 2013 she was nominated for her third Grammy, in the Best Global Music Album category for her album Traveller.
  • In 2015 she was nominated for a fourth Grammy in the Best Global Music Album category for her album Traces of You.
  • In 2016 she was nominated for a fifth Grammy in the Best Global Music Album category for her album Home.
  • In 2017 she was nominated for a sixth Grammy in the Best Global Music Album category for her album Land of Gold.
  • In 2017 she won the Eastern Eye Arts, Culture & Theatre Awards (ACTA) Award for Music for outstanding achievements in the Indian classical and progressive world music scenes.
  • Asteroid 292872 Anoushankar, discovered by Italian amateur astronomer Silvano Casulli, was named in her honour.[40] The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 12 January 2017 (M.P.C. 103028).[41]
  • In 2018 she won the 3rd Eastern Eye Arts, Culture & Theatre Awards (ACTA) for the score to 1928 BFI film Shiraz.
  • In November 2020 she was nominated for the RTS (Royal Television Society) Craft & Design Awards 2020 for the music she and Alex Heffes composed for A Suitable Boy, A Lookout Point Production for BBC One.[citation needed]
  • In July 2021 she received the Honorary Membership of the Royal Academy of Music (Hon RAM).[42]
  • In 2021 she was nominated for a seventh Grammy in the Best Global Music Album category for her album Love Letters.[43]
  • In 2021 she was co- nominated for an Ivor Novello Award for A Suitable Boy Score.[44][45]
  • In 2023 she became the inaugural Visiting Professor of Music Business at the University of Oxford's Faculty of Music.[46]
  • In 2023 she received Grammy nominations in both Global Music categories, her eighth and ninth. The first was in the category Best Global Music Album for her album Between Us with the Metropole Orkest conducted by Jules Buckley and featuring Manu Delago. The second was in the category Best Global Music Performance for Udhero Na by Arooj Aftab featuring Anoushka Shankar.[47]
  • In June 2024, the University of Oxford awarded her an Honorary Doctor of Music degree for her contributions to the field of music.[48]
  • In 2024 she received her second Grammy Nomination in the Best Global Music Performance category for “A Rock Somewhere,” by Jacob Collier[49][50]

Activism

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Shankar is an activist working with multiple causes and charitable organisations, in particular supporting women and refugees; she is also an advocate for animal rights.

One Billion Rising

In 2013, responding to the horrific gang-rape of a young girl in Delhi, whom the Indian media referred to as Nirbhaya, Shankar threw her weight behind an online campaign One Billion Rising on Change.org,[51] demanding an end to crime against women.[52] As part of the campaign, she released a video in which she revealed she had been sexually abused for many years as a child.[53]

UNHCR – The UN Refugee Agency

In 2018 she joined musicians, actors and artists such as Patrick Stewart, Peter Capaldi, Vivienne Westwood, Anish Kapoor, The Kaiser Chiefs and many others in a call to urge MPs to attend the Refugees Family Reunion Bill and ensure refugee families torn apart by war and conflict are reunited.[54]

Help Refugees

Shankar is one of the faces of the Help Refugees campaign to raise funds and awareness for the refugee crisis worldwide.[35]

The F-List

In 2020 Shankar was announced as the inaugural President of the F-List: a UK database created to help bridge the gender gap in music.[55]

Pin Your Thanks

In 2020 Shankar designed a pin for the "Pin Your Thanks" initiative that supports the National Health Service (NHS) charities during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.[56]

The Walk

She is an ambassador for The Walk, an international artistic project in support of refugees.[57]

UN World Food Programme

In 2007 the UN World Food Programme appointed Shankar as spokesperson to raise awareness about the issues of hunger and malnutrition, especially among children, in India.[58]

PETA

Shankar and her father, also a supporter of animal rights, appeared in a thirty-second public-service announcement against animal suffering for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).[59]

Artists4Ceasfire In October 2023, Shankar signed the Artists4Ceasefire open letter to Joe Biden, President of the United States, calling for a ceasefire in the Israeli bombardment of Gaza.[60]

Personal life

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Shankar is the daughter of Pandit Ravi Shankar and Sukanya Rajan, and the half-sister of Norah Jones and Shubhendra Shankar. She grew up in the US, the UK, and India. In 2010, she married British director Joe Wright.[61] They have two sons (born 2011 and 2015). They separated in December 2017 and finalised their divorce in September 2019. She lives in London with her sons.[62]

Discography

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Shankar in 2020

Studio albums

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Title Album details Peak chart positions
FRA
[63]
SPA
[64]
SWI
[65]
US
[66]
US
Heat.

[67]
US
World

[68]
Anoushka
Anourag
  • Released: 15 August 2000
  • Label: Angel Records
Rise
  • Released: 27 September 2005
  • Label: Angel Records
29 2
Breathing Under Water
(with Karsh Kale)
177 40 6
Traveller 144 62 4 2
Traces of You
  • Released: 4 October 2013
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon
190 90 77 185 4 1
Home
  • Released: 6 July 2015
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon
3
Land of Gold
  • Released: 1 April 2016
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon
5
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Remix albums

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  • Rise Remixes (2006)

Live and compilations

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Features

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Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Ref
2004 Dance Like a Man Lata [69][70]

References

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  1. ^ "Anoushka Shankar Doesn't Want To Be the 'Only Brown Woman' in the Room". VICE. 23 November 2022.
  2. ^ @ShankarAnoushka (9 October 2020). "'m gonna set my alarm to join from London. See you there? And by the way...If you're an overseas American like me, have you mailed in your ballot yet?!?!" (Tweet). Retrieved 12 April 2024 – via Twitter.
  3. ^ "Anoushka Hemangini SHANKAR". gov.uk. find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  4. ^ "Anoushka Shankar". Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 3 April 2024. Sitar virtuoso Anoushka Shankar — the first Indian woman and youngest-ever Grammy nominee in the world music category
  5. ^ "the twang of your heart. Sitarist and social activist Anoushka Shankar brings her fight to support refugees to the stage". SubMerge. 10 July 2018. Archived from the original on 21 July 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  6. ^ "Anoushka Shankar". British Music Collection. 30 October 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  7. ^ Anoushka Shankar | Artist, Grammy.com
  8. ^ "Anoushka Shankar thrilled to be a presenter at the Grammys". The Economic Times. 6 February 2016.
  9. ^ Chhibber, Kavita. "Anoushka Shankar". Kavita Chhibber. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  10. ^ "Godfather of world music- sitar maestro Pt Ravi Shankar bids adieu". India Today. 13 December 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  11. ^ Desk, From : Lifestyle. "An ode to sitar maestro Anoushka Shankar!". Cityspidey.com. Retrieved 24 February 2023. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  12. ^ "Anoushka Shankar - Land Of Gold - CD". Rough Trade. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  13. ^ "Album review: Anoushka Shankar re-embraces electronics and cross-genre collaborations in Land of Gold". The National. 25 July 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  14. ^ "Album Review: Anoushka Shankar - Reflections". OriginalRock.net. 8 May 2019. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  15. ^ "INTERVIEW | Anoushka Shankar playing for love, friendship, family". The New Indian Express. 14 February 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  16. ^ "Anoushka Shankar - Love Letters - Album Review". 1883 Magazine. 7 February 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  17. ^ "Anoushka Shankar Releases Debut Mercury KX EP 'Love Letters'". 7 February 2020.
  18. ^ a b "Anoushka Shankar and Jules Buckley: New Explorations". BBC Proms. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  19. ^ "Herbie Hancock's new album features Anoushka Shankar". Reuters. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  20. ^ Sharp, Johnny. "BBC - Music - Review of Rodrigo y Gabriela - Area 52". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  21. ^ Swaminathan, Chitra (17 September 2020). "Anoushka Shankar excited to be back on stage". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  22. ^ "All-star BBC Children in Need charity single announced". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  23. ^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100 – 20 November 2020 – 26 November 2020". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  24. ^ "Official Singles Sales Chart Top 100 – 20 November 2020 – 26 November 2020". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  25. ^ "Anoushka Shankar and the London Philharmonic Orchestra: Ravi Shankar - Symphony". Financial Times. 18 May 2012. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  26. ^ "Anoushka Shankar and the New York Philharmonic Is a Debut 35 Years in the Making". NBC News. 5 November 2016. Archived from the original on 6 November 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  27. ^ "I wrote a Bengali lullaby for Joe's 'Anna Karenina': Anoushka Shankar - Times of India". The Times of India. 14 October 2011. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  28. ^ "Faith and creation: Anoushka Shankar on her score for Shiraz | Sight & Sound". British Film Institute. 27 May 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  29. ^ "Grammy-nominated sitarist Anoushka Shankar to play live score for 89-year-old Indian silent film Shiraz: A romance of India". Ahmedabad Mirror. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  30. ^ "Anoushka Shankar: Mira Nair wanted music with a strong Indian sound but also a global sensibility". Cinema Express. November 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  31. ^ Davis, Chris (24 September 2017), Stolen Innocence: India's Untold Story of Human Trafficking (Documentary), retrieved 27 October 2021
  32. ^ "Like father like daughter (May 04, 2001)". Paloaltoonline.com. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  33. ^ Limited, Alamy. "Anoushka Shankar, daughter of [Ravi Shankar], performs at Carnegie Hall during the Rain Forest Foundation Benefit Concert in New York on April 13, 2002. The concert was held to benefit groups working to save the world's disappearing rain forests". Alamy.com. Retrieved 27 October 2021. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  34. ^ Jamkhandikar, Shilpa (5 December 2008). "Mumbai hosts first concert after deadly attacks". In.reuters.com. Archived from the original on 7 December 2008.
  35. ^ a b Action, Refugee (25 March 2016). "Public figures join Refugee Action's call for the UK to help more Syrian refugees". Refugee Action. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  36. ^ "Anoushka Shankar US tour will help refugees". The World from PRX. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  37. ^ De Cruz, Errol (27 February 2001). "Shankar guru a left-handed genius". New Straits Times. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
  38. ^ "Don't be obsessed with international awards: Anoushka Shankar". Hindustan Times. 7 March 2009. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  39. ^ "Songlines – Music Awards – 2012 – Winners". Songlines. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  40. ^ "292872 Anoushankar (2006 VV12)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  41. ^ "MPC/MPO/MPS Archive". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  42. ^ "Royal Academy of Music announces 2020 honours". Royal Academy of Music. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  43. ^ "63rd Annual GRAMMY Awards". Grammy.com.
  44. ^ Kaufman, Gil (10 August 2021). "Harry Styles, Lewis Capaldi, Dave, Celeste Top 2021 Ivor Novello Award Nominees". Billboard. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  45. ^ Sutherland, Mark (21 September 2021). "Harry Styles, Bon Jovi Win Big at 2021 Ivor Novello Awards as Universal IPO Provides Sideshow". Variety. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  46. ^ "Anoushka Shankar in conversation with Professor Suzanne Aspden". Faculty of Music, Oxford University. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  47. ^ "2023 GRAMMY Nominations: See The Complete Winners & Nominees List". The Recording Academy. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  48. ^ "Anoushka Shankar receives honorary degree from Oxford". Times of India. 29 April 2024. Retrieved 20 June 2024.
  49. ^ Tagat, Anurag (8 November 2024). "Grammy Nominations 2025: Ricky Kej, Anoushka Shankar Earn Nods". Rolling Stone India. Retrieved 8 November 2024.
  50. ^ Atkinson, Katie (8 November 2024). "Grammy Nominations 2025: See the Complete List". Billboard. Retrieved 8 November 2024.
  51. ^ "Anoushka Shankar supports the One Billion Rising movement". Yahoo Celebrity India. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013.
  52. ^ Nigam, Aarushi (7 October 2013). "Anoushka Shankar names song after Delhi gang-rape victim". The Times of India.
  53. ^ "Anoushka Shankar says she was sexually abused". BBC News. 13 February 2013. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
  54. ^ "Anoushka Shankar - News". IMDb. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  55. ^ "Anoushka Shankar". The F-List Directory of UK Female Musicians. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  56. ^ "Anoushka Shankar". #PinYourThanks. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  57. ^ "Ambassadors - The Walk". Walkwithamal.org. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  58. ^ "Music and Language: A Partnership", Of Sound Mind, The MIT Press, pp. 153–172, 2021, doi:10.7551/mitpress/13606.003.0011, ISBN 9780262365659, S2CID 263404169, retrieved 27 October 2021
  59. ^ "Kentucky Fried Cruelty :: Celebrity Support :: Anoushka Shankar ad Pundit Ravi Shankar". Kentucky Fried Cruelty. PETA.
  60. ^ "Artists4Ceasefire". Artists4Ceasefire. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  61. ^ Barnett, Laura (20 May 2014). "Anoushka Shankar: 'Suddenly I'm the parent'". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  62. ^ "Anoushka Shankar writes a heartfelt note on 'first love' and 'life as a single parent'". The Indian Express. 5 April 2018. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  63. ^ "Discographie Anoushka Shankar". Lescharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  64. ^ "Anoushka Shankar – Traces Of You". Spanishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  65. ^ "Discographie Anoushka Shankar". Hitparade.ch. Hung Medien. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  66. ^ "Anoushka Shankar – Billboard 200 chart". Billboard. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  67. ^ "Anoushka Shankar – Top Heatseekers Albums chart". Billboard. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  68. ^ "Anoushka Shankar – Top World Albums chart". Billboard. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  69. ^ "'I am not aching to pursue acting'". Rediff.com. 15 February 2003. Archived from the original on 8 October 2023. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  70. ^ "Dance Like A Man". variety. 28 October 2003. Retrieved 12 April 2024.

Further reading

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  • Sinnott, Susan (2003). Extraordinary Asian American and Pacific Islander. New York: Children's Press.
  • Cole, Joni B; Joffrey, Rebecca; Rakhra, B K (2003). This day:diaries from American women. Hillsboro, Oregon: Beyond Words.
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