Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
Portland Arts and Entertainment SF Cultural Events Examiner
SF Cultural Events Examiner

Sangati Center showcases classical acoustic Indian music in San Francisco's Mission

September 19, 11:36 AMSF Cultural Events ExaminerEmily Wilson
Comment Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the SF Cultural Events Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use


 

 

Gautam Tejas Ganeshan, was very clear about what he wanted when he founded the Sangati Center three years ago, at 23.

“What this place is is a chamber music venue for Indian classical acoustic music,” he said.

Ganeshan, who grew up in Houston, a city with a large Indian population, says most Indian music venues in the U. S. fall into three categories: ones who do big, expensive superstar concerts about once a year; neighborhood groups that rent out a community space to bring a musician to town; and schools like the Ali Akbar College of Music in San Rafael.

The Sangati Center is none of these.

The center is unique in many ways. First there’s its location. A small, former storefront on 22nd and Shotwell in San Francisco’s Mission District isn’t a place you’d expect to find a high caliber of musicians performing Indian classical music. The 650-square-foot center hosts at least six concerts a month, of both Northern and Southern Indian musical styles. There’s no stage, so performers sit on the floor along with the audience. And then there’s the amplification—there is none.

“I’m an advocate, but not an activist for acoustic music,” Ganeshan said. “I want people to just sit down and make music with no intermediary forces.”

Ganeshan says as a performer, he never wanted to concern himself with equipment and sound systems.

“I don’t have a big aptitude for speakers and electronics,” he said. “I’m a musician. I want to make music.”

He adds, perhaps unnecessarily, that he is not Britney Spears.

“Some people who are regulars here went to see her concert and they told me the most interesting thing about it wasn’t the music, but the production,” he said. “Where is she going to come from next, what’s happening with the lighting, that kind of thing.”

There won’t be a lot in the way of special effects at Sangati Center concerts. But anyone wanting to hear a South Indian stringed instrument, the veena, or the tabla, a North Indian percussion instrument, or a concert with an All India Radio vocalist, can do that in the next few weeks. All are welcome, including Britney Spears fans.

More info: Come see the founder, web designer, director, promoter, booking agent, etc. of the Sangati Center perform. Ganeshan will be at the Red Poppy Art House on 23rd and Folsom on Saturday, Sept. 26 at 8 pm.

 

More About: Music

Add a Comment

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Inside 'New Moon'
Get inside info on all things New Moon.
Robert Pattinson | Taylor Lautner

Recent Articles

Wednesday, November 11, 2009
With boom, an “explosive comedy about the end of the world,” playwright Peter Sinn Nachtrieb addresses a few of his passions, including …
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Monday, Nov.9 is the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. And what better why to celebrate than hearing some of a new translation of …

Things to see and do

Keb' Mo'
24 Nov 2009 - 8 pm
Aladdin Theater and Performance Center
More music »
Troublemakers, The
McMenamins White Eagle
Stampede
Ash Street Saloon