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Akash Parekar and Janan Sathiendran

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Trafalgar Sq
London, WC2N 4JJ United Kingdom
31 July 2026
1:00 pm

The strings of the sitar have always known how to fill a sacred space. At St Martin-in-the-Fields, where centuries of collective reverence live in the walls, Darbar brings the ancient soul of Indian classical music home to one of London’s most beloved churches.

Akash Parekar is one of the most exciting voices in a new generation of British-born sitar players. Beginning his journey at just eighteen, he has since studied under a lineage of masters including the renowned Roopa Panesar, Ustad Dharambir Singh MBE, and Ustad Irshad Khan, son and disciple of Ustad Imrat Khan. Rooted in both Western classical and contemporary music, Akash brings a fresh sensibility to the sitar without losing sight of its deep spiritual core. His collaborative work spans Glastonbury to the recording studio, with artists as varied as Zak Starkey and Mayur Navekar, and he is currently completing his debut album.

Joining him is tabla player Janan Sathiendran, whose training spans both Hindustani and Carnatic traditions under Shri Sukhdeep Singh Dhanjal and Pandit Yogesh Samsi. Raised in London in a home rich with musical diversity, Janan has shared stages with Nitin Sawhney, A.R. Rahman, and Abi Sampa.

In a church built on centuries of shared reverence, these two artists bring music that has always understood the distance between the human and the divine is measured not in doctrine, but in sound.

Performers:

Akash Parekar sitar
Janan Sathiendran tabla

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Ustad Shahid Parvez | Romance of Raag Piloo

Ustad Shahid Parvez | Romance of Raag Piloo

Recorded at Darbar Festival on Sun 28 Oct 2018, at London’s Barbican Centre. Musicians: - Shahid Parvez (sitar) - Ojas Adhiya (tabla) Raag Piloo: Thaat: Kafi; Samay: Afternoon “My involvement in music is so much that I do not think of anything else...I do not believe I can live a better life.” (Shahid Parvez). Shahid Parvez Khan is totally dedicated to the sitar, upholding the illustrious traditions of his ancestors while expanding the instrument’s technical boundaries. Critics back in India have described him as ‘Indian music personified’. Born into the legendary Imdadkhani gharana of Uttar Pradesh, he was always expected to carry the family legacy forward. His ancestors gave shape to the modern sitar, redesigning it and formulating the now-distinctive gayaki ang [singing style]. The Khan family includes pioneers such as his uncle Vilayat and his grandfather Imdad, who in 1904 became the first recorded sitarist. His early training was famously demanding. He had to practice for the majority of his waking life, rarely playing outside or socialising with his peers. His father Aziz did not believe in praise, and avoided smiling at his son’s accomplishments despite widespread acclaim as a prodigy. For many the extreme discipline may have poisoned the music, but not for Shahid, who says “my involvement in music is so much that I do not think of anything else...I do not believe I can live a better life.” Khan’s playing reaches scarcely believable standards: He feels no need to dabble with fusion music, saying that Hindustani music “is like a great ocean - you can spend a lifetime exploring it and will not run out of space.” Technical innovations set his style, with unique picking patterns and overtone whispers that glide upwards and spiral into silence. Today he sits at the pinnacle of Hindustani music, touring widely while also finding time to teach at his eponymous SPK Academy in Arizona (“I do not teach for money - it is my passion”). But it is only the music which motivates him: “I always want to proceed, and overcome whatever boundaries I come across. But the direction is never pre-planned. It is about the green light. I don’t have to wait for it to flash - I have reached a level where it is always on. There are no shortcuts to this place, but it must be the goal.” Subscribe to the Darbar Player to access the full, uncut performance.