I started developing this track, now called "Sunset on the Kushiara" as a cover to George Harrison's "Marwa Blues" but the recording seemed to take on a life of its own as I began thinking of my late father Sudhansu (1915 - 2009), born on the banks of the River Kushiara and who served as a surgeon in the British Indian Army at the Western Front of World War II and became a decorated war hero. I have last year published a book on his memoirs now available at all the major outlets.
https://soundcloud.com/kay-das/marwa-blues-encore
Kay
Steel Guitar Goes to India.
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
- Nic Neufeld
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- Location: Kansas City, Missouri
Lovely playing! I wasn't familiar with this song...listening to the original now. Wonder if it is named for Marwa thaat. SrGMPDNS...doesn't line up too well but in some places.
I would love to apply my sitar studies (under Ustad Imrat Khan, the sitar and surbahar maestro of Imdadkhani gharana...recently passed on) to steel guitar someday, perhaps via one of the acoustic slide veenas (mohan, hansa, etc).
I would love to apply my sitar studies (under Ustad Imrat Khan, the sitar and surbahar maestro of Imdadkhani gharana...recently passed on) to steel guitar someday, perhaps via one of the acoustic slide veenas (mohan, hansa, etc).
Waikīkī, at night when the shadows are falling
I hear the rolling surf calling
Calling and calling to me
I hear the rolling surf calling
Calling and calling to me
- Joachim Kettner
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- David M Brown
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Indian steel players have been doing so for decades, you'd be in good company!Nic Neufeld wrote:
I would love to apply my sitar studies (under Ustad Imrat Khan, the sitar and surbahar maestro of Imdadkhani gharana...recently passed on) to steel guitar someday, perhaps via one of the acoustic slide veenas (mohan, hansa, etc).
I still like the older electric filmi Indian steel style.
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Nic, Joachim, David, John,
Grateful for the appreciation.
The steel guitar can adapt to many different genres of music. Further, within each genre, I can 89-90% of the time identify who is playing. We are all built differently and we each play with our individual touches, the way we are wired internally. I think no lap steel players sound alike.
btw: you may wish to read the intro to the book now available on amazon and other outlets...to get a deeper flavour to the tune. I wish I could attach the track to the book somehow! but that would be impossible!
Thanks again,
Kay
Grateful for the appreciation.
The steel guitar can adapt to many different genres of music. Further, within each genre, I can 89-90% of the time identify who is playing. We are all built differently and we each play with our individual touches, the way we are wired internally. I think no lap steel players sound alike.
btw: you may wish to read the intro to the book now available on amazon and other outlets...to get a deeper flavour to the tune. I wish I could attach the track to the book somehow! but that would be impossible!
Thanks again,
Kay
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- Joined: 27 Mar 2011 7:54 pm
- Location: Perkasie PA, USA
Grateful for the appreciation, Eric.
Here is another Harrison tune...with a long steel guitar solo outro that seemed to acquire a life of its own...
https://soundcloud.com/kay-das/my-sweet-lord
Kay
Here is another Harrison tune...with a long steel guitar solo outro that seemed to acquire a life of its own...
https://soundcloud.com/kay-das/my-sweet-lord
Kay