Academics
With an array of undergraduate and graduate programs, as well as summer, international, and precollege offerings, Berklee College of Music provides options for students of all levels to explore and achieve their artistic, academic, and career potential.
Slideshow: The Berklee Indian Ensemble Performs for Thousands in Bengaluru
For its first performance outside of the United States, the Berklee Indian Ensemble played to a crowd of more than 5,000 people at the 54th Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava megafestival in India.
By
Kimberly Ashton
September 19, 2016
The Berklee Indian Ensemble performs a medley of A. R. Rahman songs from the film "Lagaan" at the 54th Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Ensemble singers reenact a moment from the film "Lagaan" in which villagers await rainfall to end a long drought.
Sharayu Mahale
Drummer Yogev Gabay '16 and hand percussionist and tabla player Kaushlesh “Garry” Purohit '16 rock on out on the ensemble's interpretation of the song "5 Peace Band" by the band Remember Shakti.
Sharayu Mahale
The ensemble at the opening of the song "Sati," by Salim-Sulaiman, Taufiq Qureshi, and Vijay Prakash.
Sharayu Mahale
Renowned vocalist Vijay Prakash joins the ensemble while it performs "Sati," a song about the banned Hindu ritual where a widow would burn herself alive on her husband's funeral pyre. "The song led us to discuss matters of liberation, equality, women's rights, and freedom of choice," Annette Philip, the ensemble's director, said. Purvaa Sampath, a music therapy student, was responsible for the choreography performed on this piece.
Sharayu Mahale
Acclaimed singer-songwriter Raghu Dixit performs his original composition "Lokada Kalaji" with the ensemble at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Raghu Dixit and Vijay Prakash perform "Vande Mataram," the national song of India, with the ensemble as the last song of the group's three-hour show in Bengaluru, India.
Sharayu Mahale
Vijay Prakash talks with ensemble members in preparation for the September 6 show at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Annette Philip, the director of the Berklee Indian Ensemble and artistic director of the Berklee India Exchange, rehearses with the group a few days before the show.
Sharayu Mahale
Sanchitha Wickremesooriya '15, contemporary performance and production student Agney Mulay, and Rohith Jayaraman '15 practice for the upcoming show at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
The Berklee Indian Ensemble performs a medley of A. R. Rahman songs from the film "Lagaan" at the 54th Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Ensemble singers reenact a moment from the film "Lagaan" in which villagers await rainfall to end a long drought.
Sharayu Mahale
Drummer Yogev Gabay '16 and hand percussionist and tabla player Kaushlesh “Garry” Purohit '16 rock on out on the ensemble's interpretation of the song "5 Peace Band" by the band Remember Shakti.
Sharayu Mahale
The ensemble at the opening of the song "Sati," by Salim-Sulaiman, Taufiq Qureshi, and Vijay Prakash.
Sharayu Mahale
Renowned vocalist Vijay Prakash joins the ensemble while it performs "Sati," a song about the banned Hindu ritual where a widow would burn herself alive on her husband's funeral pyre. "The song led us to discuss matters of liberation, equality, women's rights, and freedom of choice," Annette Philip, the ensemble's director, said. Purvaa Sampath, a music therapy student, was responsible for the choreography performed on this piece.
Sharayu Mahale
Acclaimed singer-songwriter Raghu Dixit performs his original composition "Lokada Kalaji" with the ensemble at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Raghu Dixit and Vijay Prakash perform "Vande Mataram," the national song of India, with the ensemble as the last song of the group's three-hour show in Bengaluru, India.
Sharayu Mahale
Vijay Prakash talks with ensemble members in preparation for the September 6 show at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
Annette Philip, the director of the Berklee Indian Ensemble and artistic director of the Berklee India Exchange, rehearses with the group a few days before the show.
Sharayu Mahale
Sanchitha Wickremesooriya '15, contemporary performance and production student Agney Mulay, and Rohith Jayaraman '15 practice for the upcoming show at the Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava festival.
Sharayu Mahale
For its first performance outside of the United States, the Berklee Indian Ensemble played to a crowd of more than 5,000 people in India at the 54th Bengaluru Ganesh Utsava megafestival, which attracts nearly 1 million people over the course of 11 days. The 36-person ensemble, headed by Berklee India Exchange Artistic Director Annette Philip, took the stage on the second day, September 6, for a three-hour performance that paid tribute to film composer A. R. Rahman and featured guest artists Vijay Prakash and Raghu Dixit.
Two of Rahman's songs the ensemble covered were "Dil Se Re(Opens in a new window)" and "Jiya Jale(Opens in a new window)," both of which the group sang in YouTube videos that have reached millions of viewers. The Bengaluru concert also included three original ensemble songs.