Work_
為臺大藝文中心系列活動繪製的插圖及活動標準字
「給教職員工的藝文通識課」內容為音樂講座及演奏
透過輕鬆知性的藝文時光,打開通往音樂世界的入口。
#插圖
挑選了四種世界音樂的樂器,有日本的三味線、布農族的弓琴、印度的門瑞丹根鼓、中東的魯特琴
搭配幾款與音樂相關的情境圖做應用
#活動標準字
手寫體使用類似英文字母書寫的線條構成,帶點輕鬆玩味的氣氛
因主標文字較長,句首的「給教職員工的」區分出來用明體搭配,
排列帶點有機感,加上矩形色塊,平衡手寫體外展的線條。
#世界音樂 #music #musicstagram #音樂 #worldmusic #Shamisen #三味線 #弓琴 #bowpiano #布農族 #bunun #門瑞丹根鼓 #Mridangam #魯特琴 #lute #oud #illustration #일러스트레이션 #イラスト #イラストレーター 臺灣大學藝文中心
同時也有10000部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過2,910的網紅コバにゃんチャンネル,也在其Youtube影片中提到,...
mridangam 在 來趣印度 Go India Facebook 的最佳貼文
很多人對印度的德瓦達西(Devadasi)好奇, 下面是一段大約在1930年左右的二位德瓦達西的影片, 當時這兩位跳得像是婆羅多舞.
Devadasi 在梵文的意思是<神的女僕>, 在6世紀和13世紀之間, 德瓦達西在社會中享有很高的地位和尊嚴,並且非常富裕,被視為音樂和舞蹈的保護者。 在此期間,皇家貴族向他們提供土地,財產和珠寶等禮物。
據信,據信這兩位舞者隨後被派往Tanjavur Maratha嫁給神。德瓦達西實際上指一個寺廟舞者,他一生虔誠奉獻於寺廟。
Have you seen Devadasi* artists performing Sadir, the dance form that was the forerunner of today’s Bharatanatyam? Here is a very rare clip that has a performance by two hereditary Sadir artists, taken from the silent documentary film, “Maharanee of Baroda” available in British Pathé, the world’s leading historical multimedia resource. This film is dated to have shot between 1930-1935** in the palace grounds of the Maharaja of Baroda. These two artists are believed to have been sent there as dowry from the Tanjavur Maratha court.
The Marathas, warriors from Maharashtra, ruled over the city of Tanjavur between the 17th and 19th centuries. When Sir Sayajirao Gaekwad III was ruling Baroda, he married Princess Maharani Chimnabai of Tanjore. The queen Chimnabai brought the music and art group from Tanjore to Baroda in the 19th century.
The performance has a live musical ensemble consisting of a mridangam player, a harmonium player, two nattuvanars and a tutti artist standing behind the dancers. They are doing an Alarippu that is very similar in content and form to today’s Alarippu of Bharatanatyam. Only the style of presentation looks distinct. Though the clip here shows only this, the performance is longer and goes on for another 4 minutes.
* a loose term today used to call all hereditary dancers before the revival period (1930s). A Devadasi actually means a temple dancer who has devoted her life to the diety in the temple.
**This is the date mentioned in Brish Pathé. But there are theories that it is older, shot even before, in 1926 itself.
mridangam 在 PolyGON結他友 Facebook 的最佳解答
Thee Thee & Malargale by the Berklee Indian Ensemble featuring Prasanna and Mohini Dey at the sold out Symphony Hall performance of A. R. Rahman Meets Berklee.
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Grammy and Academy award winning composer, A. R. Rahman performed with, and was paid tribute to, by Berklee College of Music at Symphony Hall, Boston, on October 24, 2014. The repertoire for the concert spanned Mr. Rahman's illustrious discography of over 25 years. We are delighted to release all 16 pieces presented at the concert featuring 109 performers from 32 countries representing The Berklee Indian Ensemble, The Berklee World String Ensemble, and Boston University's Indian dance troupe, BU Bhangra.
This concert was produced by Annette Philip, Artistic Director of Berklee India Exchange.
Thee Thee & Malargale ft. Mohini Dey
A. R. Rahman
string arr. Shachar Ziv
Electric Bass: Mohini Dey
Electric Guitar: Prasanna
Performers:
Berklee Indian Ensemble
Annette Philip: director
Shilpa Ananth: vocals
Sanjeeta Bhattacharya: vocals
Dhruv Goel: vocals
Vasundhara Gupta: vocals
Rohith Jayaraman: vocals
Harshitha Krishnan: vocals
Nalini Krishnan: vocals
Joakim Molander: vocals
Armeen Musa: vocals
Kanika Patawari: vocals
Purvaa Sampath: vocals
Ishita Sinha: vocals
Harini Srinivasa Raghavan: vocals
Aseem Suri: vocals
Adriel Tjokrosaputro: vocals
Sanchitha Wickremesooriya: vocals
Trinayan Baruah: vocals
Salil Bhayani: vocals
Malavika Das: vocals
Ava Dudani: vocals
Nicolas Emden: vocals
Christopher Kazarian: vocals
Annalisa Lombardo: vocals
Malwina Masternak: vocals
Wambura Mitaru: vocals
Zoya Mohan: vocals
Paola Munda: vocals
Lydia Renold: vocals
Gretchen Schadebrodt: vocals
Ashwin Shenoy: vocals
Sahana Simha: vocals
Pankhuri Singhal: vocals
Chantal Tribble: vocals
McKain Webb-Lakey: vocals
Yazhi Guo: flute, suona, dizi
Layth Al Rubaye: violin
Harini Srinivasa Raghavan: violin
Sashank Navaladi: sarod
Fares Btoush: oud
Jacy Anderson: guitar
Aleif Hamdan: guitar
Shubh Saran: guitar
David Milazzo: alto saxophone
Edmar Colon: tenor saxophone
Samuel Morrison: baritone saxophone
Josh Shpak: trumpet
Michael Wang: trombone
Annette Philip: piano
Cheng Lu: keyboard
Achal Murthy: bass
Daniel Gonzalez: electronic drum sound
Kaushlesh Purohit: tabla, percussion
Ranajoy Das: drums
Joe Galeota Jr.: percussion
Patrick Simard: drums, percussion
M.T. Aditya Srinivasan: tabla, kanjira
Vignesh Venkataraman: mridangam
Berklee World Strings Ensemble
Eugene Friesen: conductor
Na Young Baik: first violin
Sarah Hubbard: first violin
Sumaia Martins: first violin
Stefano Melillo Melendez: first violin
Kathleen Parks: first violin
Tim Reynolds: first violin
Carlos Silva: first violin
Yeji Yoon: first violin
Ludovica Burtone: second violin
Elise Boeur: second violin
Adrianna Ciccone: second violin
Sadie E. Currey: second violin
Carolyn Kendrick: second violin
Rosy Timms: second violin
Tsung-Yuan Lee: second violin
Choeun Kim: viola
Brendan Klippel: viola
Gerson Eguiguren Martinez: viola
Dan Lay: viola
John Smith: viola
Max Wolpert: viola
Steph Dye: cello
Marta Roma: cello
Keizo Yoshioka: cello
Adrian Zemor: cello
Nathaniel Sabat: bass
Matthew Witler: mandolin
Mairi Chaimbeul: harp
Allegra Cramer: harp
Ganavya Doraiswamy: dancer
Special appearance by Boston University student dancers of BU Bhangra
Arrangements
Matthew Nicholl, string arrangements, and orchestral parts preparation
Recorded live at Boston’s Symphony Hall
Rob Rose: executive producer
Tom Riley: executive producer
Annette Philip: artistic director/producer
Clint Valladares: artist relations/co producer
Mirek Vana: co producer
Dave Wentling: production manager
Steve Colby: sound engineer
Kaushlesh Purohit: audio mixing
Jonathan Wyner: audio mastering
Reggie Lofton: video producer
Thistle Communications: video production
Nicole Egidio: editor
For more information on Berklee India Exchange, please visit berklee.edu/india