|
|
 |
N. Ravikiran Discography of CDs

Click on price to add N. Ravikiran albums to cart
|
| | Artist appears on Mumtaz Mahal CD (1995)
$13.79 Ravikiran and V.M. Bhatt on a selection of tunes that ultimately owe more to obvious blues clichés than they do to cross-cultural collaboration. This is a (multi-channel) Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio players.
Taj Mahal is joined by Indian master musicians N. ~ Brian Beatty
Vocalist/guitarist Taj Mahal, a repository of the musical traditions of the West African Diaspora in the New World, teams with Hindustani wizard of the mohan vina, V.M. Bhatt and Karnatak virtuoso of the chitra vina, N. Ravikiran; Vishwa Mohan Bhatt.
Arranger: Taj Mahal But that seems a terrible waste of the talent gathered, unless the listener is looking for nothing more than an unlikely blues workout. This isn't to say that the set doesn't have any moments of inspired improvisation and nuanced playing; there are a few instances of brilliance. Anthony Seminary, Santa Bar (04/1994).
Author: Rumi.
Photographer: Mike Sexton.
Unknown Contributor Roles: N. Ravikiran (chitra vina).
Liner Note Author: Kavichandran Alexander.
Recording information: Christ the King Chapel, St. Ravikiran.
Personnel includes: Taj Mahal (vocals, guitar); V.M. Bhatt (mohan vina); N. Ravikiran (chitra vina).
Personnel: Taj Mahal (vocals, guitar); N. Ravikiran. Their interpretation of
Full performer name: Vishwa Mohan Bhatt/Taj Mahal/Narasimhan Ravikiran.
Personnel includes: Vishwa Mohan Bhatt (guitar); Taj Mahal (vocals); Narasimhan Ravikiran (chitra vina).
Full performer name: Vishwa Mohan Bhatt, Taj Mahal, N. Perhaps that's because nearly half of the album's tunes -- including Robert Johnson's "Come on in My Kitchen," "Mary Don't You Weep," and "Johnny Too Bad" -- have long been staples of Taj Mahal's concert catalog.
|
 | | Appears On Album |
| Artist appears on Mumtaz Mahal (1995) Super Audio CD
$23.75 This is a (multi-channel) Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio players.
This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players.
Taj Mahal is joined by Indian master musicians N. Ravikiran and V.M. Bhatt on a selection of tunes that ultimately owe more to obvious blues clichés than they do to cross-cultural collaboration. But that seems a terrible waste of the talent gathered, unless the listener is looking for nothing more than an unlikely blues workout. This isn't to say that the set doesn't have any moments of inspired improvisation and nuanced playing; there are a few instances of brilliance. Perhaps that's because nearly half of the album's tunes -- including Robert Johnson's "Come on in My Kitchen," "Mary Don't You Weep," and "Johnny Too Bad" -- have long been staples of Taj Mahal's concert catalog.
|
N Ravikiran albums Alternate spellings: CD discography of songs by band, discographie, dicography, discology, disography, discografie, discogrophy, diskography.
 N Ravikiran CD discography Worked With
N. Ravikiran Taj Mahal Vishwa Mohan Bhatt
 |
|
|
|
1996 - 2009 CD Universe; Portions copyright 1948 - 2009 Muze Inc. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved.cdu4sr music xartist ver427cdu cdu4all 12/11/2009 6:31:13 AM
| |