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Speakers

Senior Academic Fellow, NLSIU Bangalore
Assistant Professor, Azim Premji University

Date & Time

Saturday Sat, 15 Apr 2023

Categories

Location

Bangalore International Centre
7, 4th Main Road, Domlur II Stage
Bangalore,Karnataka560071India

A panel of scholars and musicians will engage in a discussion with author Sebanti Chatterjee on her recent book, Choral Voices: Ethnographic Imaginations of Sound and Sacrality (published by Bloomsbury Academic, February 2023). The book uses the lens of sound and musical practices to tell the stories of two Christian communities in Goa and Meghalaya and introduces voice and genre as social objects. Given the imperial pasts of both regions, the book inquires how indigenous and cosmopolitan forces shape the sacred music repositories and their manifestations. The book takes us on a fascinating sojourn through seminaries, Bollywood Broadway, festivals, recitals, and belonging. Through the rituals of performativity and everyday interpretations of devotion, choral voices illuminate the interior and public lives of the sacred.

Image Credits:
Header: Santiago Lusardi Girelli conducting the Goa University Choir at the Monte Chapel during the Monte Festival in 2014. Photo credit, Old Goa Music Society.
Thumbnail and Poster: Book cover, Raisa Janice Vaz, illustrator.

Speakers

Sebanti Chatterjee

Senior Academic Fellow, NLSIU Bangalore

Sebanti Chatterjee is a cultural anthropologist, who is currently a Senior Academic Fellow at the National Law School of India University Bangalore. She holds a doctorate in Sociology. Her monograph, Choral Voices: Ethnographic Imaginations of Sound and Sacrality, was published by Bloomsbury Academic in Feb 2023. Sebanti's research interests span sound studies, gender studies, and religious studies. She has previously held regular and ad-hoc teaching positions at Sharda University, Greater Noida; Christ University, Bangalore; University of Delhi; and IIT Jodhpur. She has presented her work both nationally and internationally. Her research has been published in the journals of South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies and Society and Culture in South Asia. Sebanti also writes for children and occasionally wears the hat of a storyteller.

Karl Lutchmayer

Pianist

Karl Lutchmayer is equally renowned as a concert pianist and a lecturer. A Steinway Artist, Karl performs across the globe, and has worked with conductors including Lorin Maazel and Sir Andrew Davis, and performed at all the major London concert halls. He has broadcast on BBC Television and Radio, All India Radio and Classic FM, and is a regular chamber performer. A passionate advocate of contemporary music, Karl has also given over 90 world premieres and had many works written especially for him.

Karl’s lecture recital series, Conversational Concerts, has garnered critical and public acclaim, and following his landmark recitals in London celebrating the Liszt and Alkan Bicentenaries, he has received invitations from four continents to give concerts and lecture recitals. In 2019, he was part of the team introducing the London Prom concerts for BBC television, and he curated and performed in a three day festival of the music of Busoni in London, including a performance of the Piano Concerto for which he received extensive media attention. Karl held an academic lectureship at Trinity Laban (formerly Trinity College of Music) for 15 years and is a regular guest lecturer at conservatoires around the world, including the Juilliard and Manhattan Schools in New York.

An Overseas Citizen of India, of Goan parents, in recent years Karl has focussed much of his time and attention on nurturing the burgeoning Western classical music scene in India, his family home. Here, as well as giving regular concerts in the major cities, he helps young musicians and music teachers to fulfil their potential through developing educational opportunities and programmes, and has recently created an international pre-college music programme in collaboration with Musee Musical in Chennai. It was for this education work that he was awarded the Bharat Gaurav (Pride of India) Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015.

Karl studied at the Junior Department of Trinity College of Music, then at the Royal College of Music and undertook further studies with Lev Naumov at the Moscow Conservatoire. His research interests include the music of Liszt, Alkan, Busoni and Enescu; The Creative Transcription Network; reception theory; the history of piano recital programming; gesture and performance; and the piano concert arrangement as a challenge to the work concept.

For the last two years, Karl has been undertaking research at New College, Oxford where he was awarded with a Master of Philosophy degree, and is now at Cambridge University working towards his doctorate. However, he usually resides in London, where he is sometimes spotted in his alternative incarnation as keyboard, percussion and theremin player in the prog rock band The Connoisseur.

Sarbani Sharma

Assistant Professor, Azim Premji University

Sarbani Sharma is an Assistant Professor at the School of Development, Azim Premji University, Bangalore. Her work focuses on itineraries of political aspirations for freedom and everyday life in Kashmir. She has previously taught Sociology and Social Anthropology at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Tübingen, Germany, and at the University of Delhi. Her research has been published in the Journal of Human Rights, Contributions to Indian Sociology, Society and Culture in South Asia, Allegra Labs, and Political and Legal Anthropological Review.