best live music venues in Mumbai - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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best live music venues in Mumbai

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On most weekends, the 60-year-old Sri Shanmukhananda Chandrasekarendra Saraswathi Auditorium is where you head to catch a performance of Carnatic (or South Indian classical) music. However, Mumbai's largest auditorium – with a seating capacity of 2,763 spread over three floors – is also a perennially popular venue for the city's biggest gigs. In the past couple of months, master percussionist Trilok Gurtu and Grammy-winning mohan veena player Vishwa Mohan Bhatt have staged performances here. Shanmukhananda also hosts the annual tribute concert that tabla maestro Zakir Hussain organises every year in memory of his father, Allah Rakha Khan, on 3 February. A red-letter date in the city's concert calendar, the event has featured some of the world's finest Indian classical, jazz and fusion music talent. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: best live music venues in Mumbai


1
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2
best live music venues in Mumbai
3
National Centre for the Performing Arts
  • Mumbai's premier cultural venue, the National
    Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA) boasts both
    an eclectic programme of events and a wide range
    of performance spaces from the 285-capacity
    black-box Experimental Theatre to the regal
    Jamshed Bhabha Theatre. Considered the hub of
    western classical music in the city, the NCPA
    founded the Symphony Orchestra of India in 2006.
    Under the directorship of Kazakh violinist Marat
    Bisengaliev, the SOI stages two sets of
    "celebrity" concerts featuring such big-ticket
    names as Karl Jenkins and Tamas Vasary every
    February and September. The NCPA is perhaps even
    better known for its Indian classical music
    recitals, and in addition to weekly concerts it
    also hosts a number of annual festivals,
    including Aadi Anant every January and Bandish
    every July. Their most recent success, however,
    is the Sufi music festival, Sama'a, held in
    November.

4
Bonobo
  • Ever since hipster hangout Zenzi shut last
    October, this Bandra bar and restaurant has
    become the den of choice for the city's art set.
    Fridays and Saturdays are the gig nights here,
    and past performers have included genre-hopping
    multi-instrumentalist Shri and British beatboxer
    Testament. Bonobo is also home to Wobble, a
    monthly night of "bass heavy" sounds like
    drum'n'bass and dubstep, which has featured such
    Indian electronica heavyweights as Bandish
    Projekt and BREED. The air-conditioned
    performance room can only hold about 80 people,
    which means you're likely to find the majority of
    the crowd sipping on cocktails around the
    mushroom-shaped tables in the rooftop bar. It's
    located somewhat incongruously in a lemon-yellow
    building, alongside a KFC. 

5
Hard Rock Café
  • ocated in a former mill, the Mumbai outpost of
    the US chain of resto-bars has a mixed reputation
    among the city's musicians. In the first couple
    of years after opening, in 2006, indie rock acts
    were often asked to include a stipulated number
    of cover songs in their set lists. These days,
    Hard Rock Café, which hosts gigs every Tuesday
    and Thursday night, sticks mostly to cover bands,
    with a couple of dates a month spared for indie
    groups. Skip these gigs, and come here only for
    the ticketed events, when one of the seating
    areas is cleared to make room for a larger stage,
    for performances by Indian indie icons
    (folk-fusion veterans Indian Ocean, electro-rock
    superstars Pentagram), international chart
    toppers (Wyclef Jean, Jay Sean) or club-packing
    DJs (Bob Sinclair, Paul van Dyk). Be warned,
    though the waiters break into a synchronised jig
    every time the Village People's "YMCA" comes on.

6
Shanmukhananda Auditorium
  • On most weekends, the 60-year-old Sri
    Shanmukhananda Chandrasekarendra Saraswathi
    Auditorium is where you head to catch a
    performance of Carnatic (or South Indian
    classical) music. However, Mumbai's largest
    auditorium with a seating capacity of 2,763
    spread over three floors is also a perennially
    popular venue for the city's biggest gigs. In the
    past couple of months, master percussionist
    Trilok Gurtu and Grammy-winning mohan veena
    player Vishwa Mohan Bhatt have staged
    performances here. Shanmukhananda also hosts the
    annual tribute concert that tabla maestro Zakir
    Hussain organises every year in memory of his
    father, Allah Rakha Khan, on 3 February. A
    red-letter date in the city's concert calendar,
    the event has featured some of the world's finest
    Indian classical, jazz and fusion music talent.
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