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Riverboat UK Music
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World
World music is a broad, industry-coined umbrella for traditional, folk, and contemporary popular styles from around the globe that fall outside the Anglo-American pop mainstream. The label emerged in the 1980s as a retail and marketing category to group diverse regional musics for international distribution. Musically, it spans acoustic and electric instrumentation; modal, pentatonic, and microtonal pitch systems; and rhythms ranging from cyclical grooves and polyrhythms to asymmetrical meters. While the term can obscure local specificity, it also facilitated cross-cultural collaboration, festivals, and recordings that brought regional genres to wider audiences.
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Indian Fusion
Indian fusion blends the raga- and tala-based frameworks of Indian classical and folk traditions with the harmony, instrumentation, and production practices of genres such as jazz, rock, electronic music, and hip hop. Hallmarks include raga-derived melodies ornamented with gamakas (microtonal inflections), cyclical tala grooves articulated on tabla or mridangam, a sustained drone (often tanpura), and extended improvisation. These sit alongside Western chord progressions, backbeat or syncopated drum-kit patterns, electric bass ostinatos, keyboards/synths, guitar effects, and contemporary studio techniques. The style emerged from cross-cultural collaborations in the late 1960s and 1970s and matured through both India-based and diaspora scenes, later expanding into club culture and film music. Its flexibility allows acoustic concert formats, amplified jazz-rock lineups, and fully electronic live/DJ sets.
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Tabla
Tabla is a North Indian hand-drum tradition and performance practice centered on a pair of tuned drums: the treble dayan (tabla) and the bass bayan. It serves both as a solo art and as the principal rhythmic accompaniment in Hindustani classical, light-classical, and many popular and devotional styles. The music of tabla is encoded in a spoken mnemonic language called bols (e.g., "dha dhin na tin ta ge ke"), organized into cyclic meters (tāl) such as Teentāl (16 beats), Jhaptāl (10), Rupak (7), Ektāl (12), and Deepchandi (14). Performers elaborate the basic groove (thekā) through composed forms—peshkār, qāyda/kāydā, relā, gats, tukrā, and chakradār—and through improvisation and cadential tihais. Distinct stylistic lineages (gharanas)—Delhi, Ajrada, Lucknow, Farrukhabad, Benares (Banaras), and Punjab—shape technique, repertoire, tone production, and aesthetic priorities. Beyond the concert stage, tabla’s timbre and vocabulary have permeated film scores, ghazal and thumri salons, Sufi ensembles, Indian pop, and global fusion, making it one of the world’s most recognizable percussion traditions.
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Sarangi
Sarangi refers to the North Indian (Hindustani) classical and folk repertoire centered on the bowed, skin‑topped lute called the sarangi, celebrated for its voice‑like timbre and microtonal nuance. In performance, sarangi either accompanies vocal genres (such as khayal, thumri, dadra and ghazal) or serves as a solo raga instrument. Its three main gut strings are traditionally tuned to tonic–dominant–tonic, while a choir of sympathetic strings (often 30+), tuned to the raga scale, creates a rich halo of resonance. Meend (glides), andolans (slow oscillations), and fast gamaks (shakes) enable the instrument to closely imitate the human voice. Stylistically, sarangi music follows Hindustani raga grammar and tala cycles, moving from unmetered alap to composed gats in vilambit, madhya and drut tempi with tabla, sustained by tanpura or swarmandal drones. The instrument is equally at home in courtly light‑classical forms and in vibrant regional folk idioms across Rajasthan, Punjab, and adjoining regions.
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Artists
Various Artists
Beatles, The
Buttery, Guy
Khan, Mohd. Amjad
Khan, Mudassir
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
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