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Resonance: Ode to Call of The Valley

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Trafalgar Sq
London, WC2N 4JJ United Kingdom
27 February 2026
1:00 pm

Resonance: Ode to Call of the Valley brings together three of Indian classical music’s most expressive voices in an intimate trio performance. Santoor virtuoso Ninad Daithankar and bansuri exponent Saurabh Vartak are joined by accomplished tabla artist Saleel Tambe, creating a rich and evolving musical conversation rooted in the Hindustani tradition.

Ninad Daithankar plays the santoor—a hundred-stringed trapezoid instrument from Kashmir, struck with lightweight wooden mallets. A Citi–NCPA Scholar, he has performed extensively across India, Europe, and North America. Saurabh Vartak performs on the bansuri, the bamboo flute deeply associated with Lord Krishna. Based in Pune, he regularly performs alongside the legendary Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia and runs his own academy dedicated to preserving and passing on this lineage.

In this trio setting, melody and rhythm unfold collaboratively within a chosen raga (melodic framework) and tala (rhythmic cycle). The santoor and bansuri weave and exchange melodic phrases while the tabla anchors, accents, and propels the music forward. As the performance develops, the interplay becomes increasingly layered and dynamic, culminating in a fluid three-way dialogue. The bell-like resonance of the santoor, the warm, breathy tone of the bansuri, and the rhythmic clarity of the tabla together create a soundscape that is both meditative and exhilarating.

Performers:

Ninad Daithankar santoor
Saurabh Vartak bansuri flute
Saleel Tambe tabla

These concerts are in partnership with St Martin-in-the-Fields for their seasonal lunchtime concerts.

Instruments

'T' for Tabla with Gurdain Rayatt

Learn to play tabla from beginners to advance with Gurdain Rayatt. Online classes are starting soon!

Pandit Shivkumar Sharma & Pandit Anindo Chatterjee | Raag Jog

Pandit Shivkumar Sharma & Pandit Anindo Chatterjee | Raag Jog

Recorded at Darbar Festival on 4 Apr 2010, at London’s King’s Place. Musicians: - Shivkumar Sharma (santoor) - Anindo Chatterjee (tabla) - Roopa Panesar (tanpura) Raag Jog; Thaat: Kafi; Samay: Night “Before I started playing santoor, I was trained as a vocalist and a tabla player and I feel that has helped me a lot...I tried to balance melody with rhythm.” (Shivkumar Sharma) Shivkumar Sharma is one of very few Indian instrumentalists who has near-single-handedly put their instrument on the classical map. Born in the Himalayan state of Jammu to a Dogri family, his father Uma Dutt Sharma was an esteemed singer who inducted him into vocal music and tabla from a young age. But his path deviated at age 13, as his father recommended that he took up the santoor - a 100-stringed hammered dulcimer traditionally used in Sufi folk music. Shivkumar estimates that it took almost two decades from his controversial 1955 debut to win over "the die-hard connoisseurs…and purists." He attributes his santoor style to blending the melodic turns of vocal music with his two-handed percussive training on tabla (he maintained his tabla study for decades, becoming proficient enough to accompany Ravi Shankar at one stage). International collaborators have included electronic producers as well as a successful stint with Indo-jazz heavyweights Remember Shakti. Today he takes keen interest in therapeutic music, and teaches dedicated students for free at his ashram during breaks from touring with his santoor-playing son Rahul, who carries his lineage forward. Anindo Chatterjee is one of the most accomplished tabla players of the modern age, known for breathtaking speed and extraordinary clarity of stroke. Aged five he became All India Radio's youngest artist, and studied with Jnan Prakash Ghosh guru for three decades, learning the intricate grammar of the Farrukhabad gharana before then branching out to others. Jog describes a ‘state of enchantment’. Commonly played in the late evening, it has a finely balanced mix of major and minor phrases, and is popular among Western listeners due to its almost bluesy tension. Its wide interval jumps give a spacious melodic feel. It ascends as SGmPnS, but descends with a characteristic ‘Gmg zigzag’ to form SnPmGmgS. It favours strong phrasings, often starting on Ga, and Pa is usually considered to be the vadi [king note]. Subscribe to the Darbar Player to access the full, uncut performance.