In the United States, tabla master Zakir Hussain may be better known for his groundbreaking work in the World Music groups Planet Drum, not to mention his wide-ranging collaborations with musicians as diverse as George Harrison and Charles Lloyd. In his native India, however, he is revered as a performer of his country’s ancient and extraordinarily complex classical repertoire.
The son of the great tabla master Allarakha, who toured the West with sitarist Ravi Shankar beginning in the ’60s, Hussain has carried on the tradition started by those two maestros, bringing Eastern music to the ears of Western listeners.
This Monday, Zakir Hussain’s Masters of Percussion, presented by the Outpost Performance Space in partnership with PADMINI, will introduce Albuquerque to an intriguing collection of highly accomplished musicians and dancers performing the folk and classical music of India.
Touring with Allarakha
Masters of Percussion originally grew out of Hussain’s desire “to be close to my father and learn from him,” he says. In the early ’80s, they began touring together, performing percussion concerts. The group grew with the addition, first, of Hussain’s younger brother, tabla artist Fazal Qureshi. Later, at Allarakha’s urging, other Indian percussionists were added, and Hussain’s wife coined the name Masters of Percussion for the ensemble.
“It’s always been a tour to showcase some rarely heard or unknown percussion talent from India,” says the softspoken Hussain, who directs the ensemble. “It has now grown into a much bigger show, and there is now a sort of equal emphasis on the melodic part of India, as well.”
On this tour, the group features nine solo performers, including Hussain and his brothers Fazal and Taufiq Qureshi, as well as a premier dance troupe (see sidebar).
Rhythm Is Good
Outside of post-Renaissance European culture and its North American derivative, rhythmic traditions have long played a central role in people’s everyday and ritual lives.
“It’s been part and parcel of prayer, of communication, of marching, of discipline in the world,” says Hussain. “These things existed in the pagan world. In the Western world, they changed that, because drums were supposedly evil and would inspire certain instincts, which ought to be curbed, not brought forth,” he says. In effect, the West “took rhythm and put it away.”
Hussain sees that attitude changing now, with interest in rhythmic traditions growing and with rhythm taking a central role in much of popular music.
“Everybody’s noticing that, yes, this is the core of our being and should not be curbed but brought forth,” he says. “It is not anything evil, but something pure, and passion is not wrong.”
Zakir Hussain’s Masters of Percussion celebrate that purity and the passion, animating Western hearts to rhythms of the East.
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Zakir Hussains Masters of Percussion



