It’s a festive Friday evening in December and at one of Belgium’s great musical institutions, the Royal Conservatory in Ghent, one musician is being far from conservative.
Marco Bardoscia clambers across his double bass and stretches perilously low to wobble a single string and emulate an eastern drone instrument while also trying not to drop his spectacles. It’s quite a sight.
Even more intriguing than that precarious pose is the band’s overall sound.
Ragini Trio are a jazz act who only perform interpretations of Indian classical music and their work is winning friends across the world. Nathan Daems, a saxophonist who channels the sound of Indian flutes, is the founder.
“It’s a concept that we didn’t really premeditate,” says Daems after that rapturously received performance, part of Ghent’s annual Glimps festival. “I transcribe the melodies for myself and that’s the only thing I bring to a rehearsal. Usually the drummer and bass player don’t even listen to the original.”
Ragini Trio began three years ago as a music-school project. Daems had been encouraged to actively explore different genres and decided to combine his prime musical passions.
“I was studying jazz but listening to a lot of Indian classical music,” he says. “Indian classical is mainly about improvisation, just like jazz; they just have different parameters. So I took existing Indian melodies, some recent, some very old, some we don’t know exactly how old, and we started playing them, messing them up a little bit.”
He recruited another local enthusiast, Lander Gyselinck, a prolific young jazz drummer keen to explore Indian percussion, who was also familiar with previous Belgian/Indian jazz crossovers.
“This is something the Belgian scene was already quite known for,” says Gyselinck, “but Ragini Trio take it in a very different way.”
They certainly push their instruments in new directions, particularly the aforementioned double bassist. Bardoscia is “quite a big name” in his native Italy, according to Daems, but having relocated to Brussels he was looking for a new challenge. Ragini Trio stretches him musically and physically.
“I said yes because I’m always excited to do new things,” Bardoscia says, “but I didn’t know anything about Indian music before this collaboration and it took me a while to get in the mood. There is no double bass in the Indian classical repertoire, so I had to invent my role in it. It was kind of interesting to find my own way to approach it.”
The trio's live show spans various areas and eras, from the Hindustani anthem Raga Jog, famously performed by Ravi Shankar, to a traditional finale, the Carnatic Tillana.
Added atmosphere is achieved via their unofficial fourth member: a tanpura box, which drones throughout.
“It’s a recording of the instrument, the tanpura: you just switch it on and you don’t touch it,” says the saxophonist. “It’s the sound that we instantly relate to Indian music.”
That hybrid sound is travelling far beyond Belgium. The band will start recording their second album soon, with an international jazz figure pencilled in as producer, while responses from the Indian classical community have been positive.
Early last year the trio collaborated with the legendary singer Madhup Mudgal, and his compositions also now feature in the band’s repertoire.
“It’s nice to see how Indian musicians enjoy our music,” says Daems. “They appreciate it because they couldn’t play it our way, like we cannot play it exactly their way. Not unless we go to live there for 20 years.”
That might be inconvenient, as the trio play in other bands too, exploring everything from electronica to Ethiopian melodies. No sound is off limits.
“I don’t think of music as ‘genres’,” says Bardoscia. “As Duke Ellington said, there are only two kinds of music: good and bad.”
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Ophiolite: A section of the earth’s crust, which is oceanic in nature that has since been uplifted and exposed on land
Olivine: A commonly occurring magnesium iron silicate mineral that derives its name for its olive-green yellow-green colour
Brief scores:
Liverpool 3
Mane 24', Shaqiri 73', 80'
Manchester United 1
Lingard 33'
Man of the Match: Fabinho (Liverpool)
Six large-scale objects on show
- Concrete wall and windows from the now demolished Robin Hood Gardens housing estate in Poplar
- The 17th Century Agra Colonnade, from the bathhouse of the fort of Agra in India
- A stagecloth for The Ballet Russes that is 10m high – the largest Picasso in the world
- Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1930s Kaufmann Office
- A full-scale Frankfurt Kitchen designed by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, which transformed kitchen design in the 20th century
- Torrijos Palace dome
Results
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HER%20FIRST%20PALESTINIAN
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Farage on Muslim Brotherhood
Nigel Farage told Reform's annual conference that the party will proscribe the Muslim Brotherhood if he becomes Prime Minister.
"We will stop dangerous organisations with links to terrorism operating in our country," he said. "Quite why we've been so gutless about this – both Labour and Conservative – I don't know.
“All across the Middle East, countries have banned and proscribed the Muslim Brotherhood as a dangerous organisation. We will do the very same.”
It is 10 years since a ground-breaking report into the Muslim Brotherhood by Sir John Jenkins.
Among the former diplomat's findings was an assessment that “the use of extreme violence in the pursuit of the perfect Islamic society” has “never been institutionally disowned” by the movement.
The prime minister at the time, David Cameron, who commissioned the report, said membership or association with the Muslim Brotherhood was a "possible indicator of extremism" but it would not be banned.
Some of Darwish's last words
"They see their tomorrows slipping out of their reach. And though it seems to them that everything outside this reality is heaven, yet they do not want to go to that heaven. They stay, because they are afflicted with hope." - Mahmoud Darwish, to attendees of the Palestine Festival of Literature, 2008
His life in brief: Born in a village near Galilee, he lived in exile for most of his life and started writing poetry after high school. He was arrested several times by Israel for what were deemed to be inciteful poems. Most of his work focused on the love and yearning for his homeland, and he was regarded the Palestinian poet of resistance. Over the course of his life, he published more than 30 poetry collections and books of prose, with his work translated into more than 20 languages. Many of his poems were set to music by Arab composers, most significantly Marcel Khalife. Darwish died on August 9, 2008 after undergoing heart surgery in the United States. He was later buried in Ramallah where a shrine was erected in his honour.
More from Rashmee Roshan Lall
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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NYBL PROFILE
Company name: Nybl
Date started: November 2018
Founder: Noor Alnahhas, Michael LeTan, Hafsa Yazdni, Sufyaan Abdul Haseeb, Waleed Rifaat, Mohammed Shono
Based: Dubai, UAE
Sector: Software Technology / Artificial Intelligence
Initial investment: $500,000
Funding round: Series B (raising $5m)
Partners/Incubators: Dubai Future Accelerators Cohort 4, Dubai Future Accelerators Cohort 6, AI Venture Labs Cohort 1, Microsoft Scale-up