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DESCRIPTION:Ancient Future Guitar-Sitar Jugalbandi at SFIAF \n\n  Shown: Pandit Habib 
 Khan (sitar) and Matthew Montfort (scalloped fretboard guitar)\nFeaturing 
 Pandit Habib Khan (Sitar), Matthew Montfort (Guitar), and Ferhan Qureshi 
 (Tabla)\nJugalbandi is a classical North Indian musical duet (meaning 
 literally "tied together"). The guitar is not often used in the music of 
 India. However, Matthew Montfort has studied sitar and is a pioneer of the 
 scalloped fretboard guitar, an instrument combining qualities of the South 
 Indian vina and the steel string guitar. This jugalbandi works well because 
 Matthew Montfort is a guitarist with knowledge of sitar, and Pandit Habib 
 Khan has been described as the "Jimi Hendrix of the sitar" by L'Orient le 
 Jour, Beirut's French language newspaper. They will be accompanied by tabla 
 master Ferhan Qureshi.\nAncient Future is the first and longest running 
 musical organization dedicated exclusively to the mission of creating world 
 fusion music. The term was coined by bandleader Matthew Montfort in 1978 to 
 describe Ancient Future’s unusual blend of musical traditions from around 
 the world. BILLBOARD calls the group "trendsetters" for their early 
 contributions to the movement, which seeks to show how people from 
 different cultures can grow by learning from each other. \nThursday, June 
 1, 2017, 8 PMSan Francisco International Arts FestivalFort Mason ChapelSan 
 Francisco, CA 94109Adm.: $25 gen., $12.50 under 18. Students with ID and 
 seniors, $4 off cover price.\nBox office: 415-345-7575. Buy Tix. Festival 
 Pass (5 shows for $70).Event page. Facebook artist page. Facebook event 
 page.Press release: Ancient-Future.Com Recording Artists  at 
 SFIAF.\n\nConcert Review \n"Their  concert was billed as a guitar-sitar 
 ‘jugalbandi’ concert – a blend of classical Eastern and Western music 
 featuring Montfort on guitar and Pandit Habib Kahn on sitar, with guests on 
 dulcimer and percussion – and was simply an outstanding presentation. 
 What made the 'jugalbandi' concert so special was the fact that guitar is 
 seldom featured in Indian classic music – yet Montfort is a pioneer of 
 such and uses the scalloped fretboard guitar to bring out the best in 
 Indian sounds. His background as a student of the notoriously-difficult 
 sitar lends to translations which shine on guitar; and by having a blend of 
 sitar and rare guitar interactions, the concert became an extraordinary 
 presentation indeed, spiced by the intimacy of stage which felt nearly 
 small and close enough to be a living room. Ancient Future’s focus on 
 world fusion music has always produced extraordinary artist interactions 
 and results; but this concert was an exceptional meld of East and West and 
 offered up unique fingerings, approaches and collaborative efforts. It also 
 held the unique ability to reach out not only to audience members already 
 versed in Indian classic music, but to newcomers to the genre. It’s not 
 to be missed." — WorldDiscoveries.net\nVideo\n\nThis Ancient Future 
 Guitar-Sitar Jugalbandi video has been viewed more than 229,000 times on 
 youtube. It features a Guitar-Sitar Jugalbandi version of 'Dawn of Love' by 
 Matthew Montfort.\nBios\nMatthew Montfort (scalloped fretboard guitar)\n\n  
 Photo of Matthew Montfort by Julie Marten\nThe leader of the world music 
 group Ancient Future, Matthew Montfort, is a pioneer of the scalloped 
 fretboard guitar who is recognized as one of the world's 100 Greatest 
 Acoustic Guitarists by DigitalDreamDoor.com for his work expanding the 
 boundaries of guitar playing through the study of the world's great music 
 traditions. For example, in 1979 Montfort immersed himself in an intensive 
 study with vina master K.S. Subramanian in order to fully apply the South 
 Indian gamaka (note-bending) techniques to the scalloped fretboard guitar.  
 In addition to his recordings as a bandleader, he has released two solo 
 guitar recordings: Seven Serenades for Scalloped Fretboard Guitar and 
 Sympathetic Serenade. The December 2009 Les Paul issue of Guitar Player 
 Magazine includes a full page feature on Montfort with a corresponding 
 GuitarPlayer.Com video and lesson entitled "The Music of Jimi Hendrix 
 Applied to Indian Raga." He has performed worldwide, from the Festival 
 Internacional de la Guitarra on the golden coast of Spain to the Festival 
 of India in Mumbai, and live on national radio and TV shows such as the 
 Echoes Living Room Concerts on Public Radio International and the Rachel 
 Maddow Show on MSNBC. He has worked with many world music legends, 
 including tabla phenomenon Zakir Hussain and Chinese zither master Zhao 
 Hui. Montfort wrote the book Ancient Traditions – Future Possibilities: 
 Rhythmic Training Through the Traditions of Africa, Bali, and India, which 
 has been used by many musicians to improve their rhythm skills.\nPandit 
 Habib Khan (sitar)\n\nPandit Habib Khan is regarded as one of the best 
 sitar players in the country today. He was born into a family of musicians 
 and can trace his lineage back several generations to when classical music 
 enjoyed the patronage of the nobility and royalty of India. He began his 
 training at the tender age of five under the strict eye of his accomplished 
 father, Ustad Hameed Jaffer Khan. The Jaffer Khan family was from Indore 
 and were well known for their unique style of playing the sitar, melding 
 the effect of the human voice and the instrumental tone into a harmonious 
 whole. Habib Khan has carved out a distinct style of his own which is a 
 blend of his father's traditional techniques and his own imaginative 
 inventions. He is as much at ease with light classical and religious music 
 as he is with pure classical renderings of ragas.\nFerhan Qureshi 
 (tabla)\n\nFerhan Najeeb Qureshi is a senior disciple of the legendary 
 tabla master Ustad Tari Khan. Prior to his ongoing training with Ustad Tari 
 Khan, Ferhan took his initial lessons in Hindustani (North Indian 
 classical) music theory and practice with Surinder Singh Mann. Ferhan 
 studies the Punjab gharana (school) of classical tabla which both of his 
 teachers represent. In addition to performing tabla lehara (tabla solo), 
 Ferhan Qureshi has also accompanied numerous distinguished classical 
 artists (vocalists, instrumentalists and dancers) both in the United States 
 and in Pakistan.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/04/08/18798116.php
SUMMARY:Ancient Future Guitar-Sitar Jugalbandi at SF International Arts Festival
LOCATION:San Francisco International Arts Festival, Fort Mason Chapel, Golden Gate 
 National Recreation Area, San Francisco, CA 94109. SFIAF celebrates the 
 arts by bringing together a global community of artists and audiences, 
 presenting innovative projects focused on increasing human awareness and 
 understanding. SFIAF’s curatorial priorities include developing 
 collaborative projects led by Bay Area artists working with their national 
 and international peers and presenting world-class international artists 
 whose work is rarely seen in the United States.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/04/08/18798116.php
DTSTART:20170602T030000Z
DTEND:20170602T043000Z
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