Polyvocality and forgotten proverbs (and persons)

Ravi Shankar, George Harrison and Shambhu Das

Authors

  • Jeffrey W. Cupchik University of Rochester Medical Center Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v8i1.68

Keywords:

critical ethnography, George Harrison, historiography, polyvocality, South Indian (Carnatic) music, spirituality

Abstract

In 1993, Sara Cohen issued a challenge to popular music scholars, asserting that the ethnography of local amateur bands could be as theoretically fruitful as studying celebrities. This article suggests a third angle and related challenge, problematizing the inclusion of testimonies by musicians who play an important role in the collaborative constellation around celebrities, but are placed decidedly in the margins of dominant narratives of popular music history. George Harrison’s sitar studies led to his creating a new hybridic musico-spiritual sound that was heard on Beatles’ albums, infusing the sixties’ psychedelic soundscape with ‘raga-rock’. According to my interviews with Shambhu Das, Ravi Shankar’s disciple appointed initially to assist Harrison with sitar fingerings, Das played a much more significant role than previous historical accounts have admitted. This raises important questions about the theoretical approach and methodological application of a polyvocal texture where contradictions and ambiguities are revealed that challenge heretofore unquestioned narratives.

Author Biography

  • Jeffrey W. Cupchik, University of Rochester Medical Center

    Jeffrey W. Cupchik is formerly Visiting Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology at the Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester. He writes on the influence of Indian classical music on Western popular music and rock ’n’ roll culture in the era of psychedelia. He also researches and writes on megaconcerts, George Harrison, ethnography, music and religion, and music, health and wellness. He is the outgoing co-chair of the Medical Ethnomusicology Special Interest Group of the Society for Ethnomusicology.

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Published

2014-02-07

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Cupchik, J. (2014). Polyvocality and forgotten proverbs (and persons): Ravi Shankar, George Harrison and Shambhu Das. Popular Music History, 8(1), 68-90. https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v8i1.68