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Pandit Debashish Bhattacharya & Gurdain Rayatt (Bhaitak Series)

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30-32 Blyth Road
London, London UB3 1BY United Kingdom
25 July 2026
6:30 pm

Back after 2012, sarod maestro Pt. Debashish Bhattacharya returns for an evening of pure Hindustani music.

Step into the world of the baithak, where music was born to be heard up close. Darbar brings you an unmissable evening featuring virtuoso Pt. Debashish Bhattacharya on sarod alongside the extraordinary Gurdain Rayatt on tabla, in a performance stripped of distance and staged formality.

Expect a masterclass in Hindustani classical music: intricate ragas unfolding in real time, the meditative pull of alap giving way to intense, rhythmic interplay between sarod and tabla. This is improvisation at its purest — two master musicians in dialogue, responding to each other and to the room, creating something that will never be repeated in quite the same way again.

Why the Baithak Format Makes This Special

Unlike a concert hall performance, a baithak brings you into the same intimate space as the artists — seated close, with nothing between you and the music. This traditional format was how Hindustani classical music was originally meant to be experienced: informal, personal, and deeply immersive.

Here, you’ll see every nuance — the subtle hand movements on the sarod’s strings, the split-second communication between musician and tabla player, the expressions that shift with each phrase. It’s a rare chance to feel the music rather than simply watch it, in a setting that fosters genuine connection between artist and audience.

Limited seating. An evening you’ll remember.

Artists

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Debasmita Battacharya | Director

Debasmita Battacharya | Director's Cut

Raag Jhinjhoti Thaat Khamaj, Samay Night Raag Mishra Bhairavi, Thaat Bhairavi, Samay Morning Musicians: - Debasmita Bhattacharya (sarod) - Gurdain Rayatt (tabla) Raag Jhinjhoti exudes a folksy charm. It expands best in the lower and middle octaves with happy, vibrant strides. Debasmita Bhattacharya chooses Jhinjhoti for her sarod recital at the Darbar Festival 2017. The forebearers of this stringed lute weighing almost 10 kilograms (22 lbs) is a largely a male dominated sphere. As a talented and one of the few emerging female exponents of this instrument, Bhattacharya has made an exception. She comes from an assured lineage. She has learned from her father Debashish Bhattacharya, an exponent of the Senia Shahjahanpur gharana and then Late Pandit Buddhadev Dasgupta, the eminent sarodist from Kolkata, India. In this recital, she plays alap, jod and jhalla in Jhinjhoti followed by two compositions – one set to madhyalay Teental and the other to drut Teental. She concludes her recital with a light and captivating piece in Mishra Bhairavi. Bhattacharya’s alap or introduction develops steadily, revealing the significance of Ga (3rd) in Jhinjhoti. Combining subtle elements of pathos and reflection, she pauses at Ga in the descending phrases. She ascends the octave, bringing back a happy focus to the same note with a slightly intricate application, layering her presentation with varying emotions. She introduces the jod with an unhurried pace, punctuating it with long, appealing glides. She draws upon the swiftness and balance between her right and left hands to display intricate tantrakari (instrumental nuances) and a harmonious jhalla. Bhattacharya handles Jhinjhoti with caution, containing enough to keep it within its bounds and liberating enough to let its parent scale Khamaj flow into it. Gurdain Rayatt gives laudable tabla accompaniment with flashes of tayyari and combination of subtle and powerful bols calibrated to the flow of melody. Bhattacharya’s concluding Mishra Bhairavi is controlled and restive in the alap. She soaks the piece with poignance and devotion while Rayatt captures the lilt of this composition in Dadra with energy and confidence. Recorded at Darbar Festival 2017, on 10th November, at Sadler's Wells Theatre, London.