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Midnight Ragas with Kala Ramnath & Jayanthi Kumaresh

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Silk Street
London, EC2Y 8DS United Kingdom
31 October 2026
11:55 pm

Hindustani violin and Carnatic veena in a midnight jugalbandi across India’s two classical traditions 

At the stroke of twelve, two of India’s foremost string players meet on stage for a jugalbandi, a duet form where musicians from different traditions improvise together, responding to each other in real time. Halloween night in London has just become a reason to go out and enjoy a fascinating, Darbar’s first ever late night performance.

Kala Ramnath, a Hindustani violinist known for phrases that move between yearning and stillness, draws ragas with her bow in long, expressive arcs. Beside her, Jayanthi Kumaresh plays the Saraswati veena, rooted in the Carnatic tradition — its plucked strings producing a quality entirely different from Ramnath’s bowed lines.

Sukhvinder Singh Pinky (tabla) and Sai Giridhar (mridangam) anchor the North and South Indian rhythmic systems respectively. The result is a conversation between two musical languages happening in the room, improvised and unrepeatable.

 

Performers:

Kala Ramnath – violin

Jayanthi Kumaresh – Carnatic veena 

Sukhvinder Singh Pinky – tabla

Sai Giridhar – mridangam

Location: Barbican Hall 

Artists

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Soumik Datta & Sukhvinder Singh | Raag Gorakh Kalyan

Soumik Datta & Sukhvinder Singh | Raag Gorakh Kalyan

Recorded at Darbar Festival on 25 Oct 2018, at London’s Barbican Centre. Musicians: - Soumik Datta (sarod) - Sukhvinder Singh (tabla) Raag Gorakh Kalyan; Thaat: Khamaj; Samay: Night Young sarod maestro Soumik Datta performs Raag Gorakh Kalyan, a spacious early night raga derived from folk tunes from Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh. Soumik Datta is a sarod player from the younger generation, describing himself as ‘a slave to the instrument’. He trained under the late maestro Buddhadev Das Gupta, flying to Kolkata for periods of intense study during his holidays from boarding school in the UK. Today he plays a vast range of styles - jazz, Indo-blues, drum’n’bass, and many more. But he always returns to his classical core, performing Hindustani music around the world. Sukhvinder Singh (affectionately known as ‘Pinky’) is a singular percussionist, specialising in low-tuned tabla and jori. Hailing from the Punjab, his first musical immersions were in dholak and pakhawaj, playing traditional Sikh devotional music. At age five he became a disciple of pakhawaj exponent Nihal Singh. His public debut aged 13 left a strong impression on Alla Rakha after which, he left for Varanasi to train under Benares gharana master Kishan Maharaj. His subsequent career has featured accompaniment slots with Ravi Shankar, Vilayat Khan, Amjad Ali Khan, and other leading Hindustani instrumentalists, and a Grammy award for his work with Ry Cooder and Vishwa Mohan Bhatt on A Meeting by the River. Zakir Hussain proclaimed him to be the world’s foremost jori exponent after his solo at Allah Rakha’s 2016 memorial concert. Soumik follows in the footsteps of his guru Buddhadev Das Gupta in performing Gorakh Kalyan, a spacious raga of the early night hours. It takes its name and structure from regional folk tunes of Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh - in fact its modern form appears to have no distinctive traces of Kalyan at all, leading some musicians to refer to it simply as Gorakh. It ascends with only four core notes [SRmDS], and descends with only five [SnDmRS], although ornamental touches of Pa can be included in either direction for added colour. Sa and Ma are the vadi-samvadi [king and queen notes], and komal Ni in mandra saptak [low octave] is a key resting note. Musicians often utilise the high degree of melodic space with heavy ornaments, balancing its folksy character with intricate detail. It lends itself particularly well to instrumental renditions. Recorded at Darbar Festival on 25 Oct 2018, at London’s Barbican Centre: - Soumik Datta (sarod) - Sukhvinder Singh (tabla) Subscribe to the Darbar Player to access the full, uncut performance.