Anoushka Shankar · Breathing Under Water
Anoushka Shankar Overview
1 min readLast updated November 2026
Table of contents
Background
- She was born in london,1981 and lived in delhi and san fransisco
- She has a hyphenated identity (Anglo-American-Indian). The music exists in these “hyphens”
- Her music is very much Fusion - Blends Indian Classical Music with other styles.
Indian Classical Music(ICM)
Divided into two strands :
- Hindustani (North Indian - influenced by Muslim culture)
- Carnatic (South Indian - influenced by Hindi culture)
- She was born into the Hindustani tradition
Instrument and Features
- Sitar - uses śruti (microtones – important).
- Has sympathetic strings (Underneath the sitar).
- Tanpura (Tempura) - the drone.
- Tabla - provides accompaniment
Two Fundemental elements
- Raga (Melody and a Scale):
- A raga creates a mood.
- Each raga is linked to different times of day and seasons.
- There are thousands of ragas.
- Tala (Rythm):
- Hundreds of rhythmic cycles
- Most common is Tintal (16 beats)
- Each beat has a name
Guru–Shishya Tradition
- Based on the relationship between guru (teacher) and shishya (student).
- Students begin with duties like cleaning feet.
- When ready, they pick up the instrument and learn to hold it.
- The training is very long.
Structure
- Alap – slow unfolding of the music, starts in lower register.
- Jhor – when the rhythm comes in.
- Jhala – fast-paced rhythmic section
- Tihai – a pattern repeated three times (by the tabla or other instruments).
Registers (Saptak)
- Mandra Saptak – low register.
- Madhya Saptak – middle register.
- Tār Saptak – high register.
Wider Listening
- Karsh Kale – Indian fusion artist in London.
- Example: Up (2017).
- Very much fusion.
- All instruments are live, combined with programmed synths.
- Mixes Indian Classical Music with electronic dance music, Bollywood, and pop.
- What to look out for: instrumentation, structure, static tonality.