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Raga rock

Raga rock is rock or pop music with a pronounced Indian influence, either in its construction, its timbre, or its use of Indian musical instruments, such as the sitar, tambura, and tabla. The term "raga" refers to the specific melodic modes used in Indian classical music.

Raga rock
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsMid-1960s, United Kingdom and United States
Derivative forms

The style emerged as part of the psychedelic rock aesthetic in the 1960s.[1] Most raga rock recordings originate from that decade, although there are subsequent examples of Indian-derived sounds in rock and pop music, particularly during the 1990s.

Development edit

Definition edit

Ragas are specific melodic modes used in the classical music of the Indian subcontinent. The term "raga rock" originated in March 1966 as a description of rock music that featured Indian sitar styling. According to musicologist Jonathan Bellman, citing Lillian Roxon's 1969 book Rock Encyclopedia: "This catchphrase eventually came to describe any Rock song that evoked an Indian or general Oriental mood, whether by use of sitar or another instrument imitating it."[2] Music journalist Rob Chapman says the phrase was a "catch-all term" and "something of a misnomer", since it was often applied to any piece of rock music that "used non-European instrumentation or music styles to denote its exotic qualities".[3]

A major influence on raga rock was the music of Bengali sitarist Ravi Shankar. He himself became a pop music icon in 1966, following the rise of the raga rock trend.[4] Rock's use of elements from the Indian classical tradition included:

  • sitar (usually serving the role of an electric guitar)
  • drone, provided by tambura in raga performances and by Indian harmonium in vocal pieces
  • modal melodies based on Indian scales
  • vocal stylings
  • additive, rather than divisive, rhythms (tal)
  • question-and-answer interplay (jawab-sawal) between lead instruments
  • lead instruments mirroring the vocal line
  • lyrical themes related to mysticism or religious symbolism.[5][6]

Antecedents edit

Writing for Crawdaddy! in December 1966, Sandy Pearlman traced the origins of raga rock to folk music, specifically the drone-producing guitar tunings which American folk musician Sandy Bull had been incorporating into his music since 1963.[7] More recently, Chapman and author John Schaefer have both noted that English folk guitarist Davey Graham's raga-tinged arrangement of the Irish ballad "She Moved Through the Fair", from 1963's From a London Hootenanny EP, predated the raga rock experimentation of 1960s rock groups by two years.[3][8]

1960s edit

Early examples edit

Music researcher William Echard states that "Heart Full of Soul" by the Yardbirds, which was released in June 1965, "is frequently cited as a key text in starting the trend" towards incorporating Indian-inspired elements in rock music.[9] An Indian sitarist and a tabla player accompanied the Yardbirds on a demo recording of the song, but only the tabla part was deemed usable.[10] Instead, Jeff Beck emulated the sitar figure, tone and accompanying drone on the electric guitar for the master recording.[11] The song reached number 2 on the UK chart[12] and number 9 in the US.[13] According to Chapman, the other record "chiefly credited with introducing raga motifs into Western pop" is the Kinks' July 1965 single "See My Friends", which was another top-ten hit in the UK.[3] Written by Ray Davies and inspired by a visit to India,[14] the song used open-tuned guitars to imitate the drone produced by an Indian tambura.[15][16] Davies' vocal affectations added to the track's Indian quality;[17] in author Peter Lavezzoli's description, "See My Friends" was "the first pop song to evoke an Indian feel".[18] Before either of these examples, the Beatles' April 1965 single "Ticket to Ride", which was number 1 in many countries around the world, featured a melody that author Ian MacDonald terms "raga-like"[19] over a subtle Indian drone produced by electric guitars.[20]

"Heart Full of Soul" and "See My Friends" were both influential on the emerging trend,[21] but according to author Jon Savage, "the first truly mass exposure" was through the Beatles' 1965 film Help!, which included incidental music played by Indian session musicians.[22][nb 1] Writing in 1997, Bellman commented that the Yardbirds and Kinks recordings were often overlooked in discussions of raga rock's origins, as history instead highlighted the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)".[14] Issued in December 1965 on the band's Rubber Soul album, the folk-styled "Norwegian Wood" was the first Western pop song to incorporate the sitar, which was played by lead guitarist George Harrison,[24][25] and the first to feature Indian instrumentation played by a rock musician.[26] The song's popularity inspired a wave of interest in the sitar and Indian sounds, a phenomenon that Shankar later called "the great sitar explosion".[27][28] According to authors Nicholas Schaffner and Bernard Gendron, raga rock was inaugurated by the release of "Norwegian Wood".[29][30][nb 2]

The Byrds' raga-rock press conference edit

 
The Byrds hosting their "raga rock" press conference for the release of "Eight Miles High" in March 1966

The Byrds' March 1966 single "Eight Miles High" and its B-side, "Why", were also influential in originating the subgenre.[32] Whereas earlier recordings by the Kinks, the Yardbirds and the Beatles had used Indian sounds to complement standard song forms, the Byrds incorporated the improvisational technique typical of Shankar's work and of John Coltrane's jazz interpretations of ragas.[33] In his 1968 Pop Chronicles interview, however, Byrds member Roger McGuinn denied that "Eight Miles High" was raga rock;[34] co-writer David Crosby also dismissed the term.[35] While many listeners assumed that the lead instrument on these and other songs on the Byrds' Fifth Dimension album was a sitar,[36] McGuinn played a Rickenbacker 12-string electric guitar throughout, and had customised his guitar amplifier to achieve the sitar-like sound.[37]

It's rock 'n' roll, it's neither jazz nor Indian music. But we listen to their music and we like it and it influences our minds and our playing ... Rock is going to keep growing. It has in it now African, South American, jazz, folk, church, Bach, Indian, Greek, country, bluegrass.[38]

David Crosby discussing the Byrds' raga rock sound in 1966, although he later rejected the term

The term "raga rock" was coined by the Byrds' publicist in press releases for "Eight Miles High" and was first used in print by Sally Kempton of The Village Voice in her report of the band's press conference for the single's release.[2][39] The press conference was organised by former Beatles publicist Derek Taylor and took place in New York on 28 March, with a sitar symbolically placed in front of the table where the Byrds sat.[40] Kempton wrote dismissively of the event,[30] during which McGuinn and Crosby spoke earnestly of the group's adoption of Indian influences, with the two musicians demonstrating raga techniques on sitar and acoustic guitar, respectively, while their two bandmates appeared bored and instead read magazines.[39] Kempton said that the message was lost on those attending the press conference, namely female reporters from teen magazines and conservative-looking representatives from the music industry.[30]

Hit Parader reported on the Byrds demonstrating how "sitar-like sounds" could be played on guitar by tuning the standard E strings down to D; this allowed the guitarist to play in partial open tuning, whereby "the bottom three strings provide the drone sound and the upper strings are bent to play the melody."[32] The term "raga rock" was soon adopted by British music publications such as the New Musical Express and Music Echo,[41] and an early discussion of raga rock appeared in Melody Maker in April.[42] According to Gendron, however, the fusion of Indian and Western sounds continued to be treated with disdain by writers from the American cultural press, who viewed the new subgenre as part of the consolidation of folk rock.[43]

Peak popularity and impact edit

In May 1966, the Rolling Stones issued the raga rock single "Paint It Black",[44] which featured a sitar part played by guitarist Brian Jones and became an international number 1 hit.[45] According to author Mark Brend, the song "spawned a whole subgenre of minor-key psychedelia".[46] The Hollies' "Bus Stop", released as a single in June, was another example of the style's growing popularity.[47] Echard identifies the song's sitar-like guitar solo as both an authentic indicator of raga rock and a device seemingly aimed at exploiting the trend.[48]

Along with "Eight Miles High", Echard highlights the Beatles' Revolver album among the "landmark" raga rock music issued in 1966.[49] Released in August, it included "Love You To",[50] written by Harrison especially for sitar and tabla interplay, and "Tomorrow Never Knows", which featured heavy tambura drone, tape loops and psychedelic instrumentation.[51][nb 3] The album represented pop music's most overt incorporation of Indian instruments, musical form and philosophy up to that point,[52] with the influence also evident in the use of vocal melisma[53] and in the Indian-inspired guitar solos on "Taxman" and "I'm Only Sleeping".[54] That same month, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band released the album East-West, the title track of which (originally titled "The Raga") had evolved from their live performances since February. Led by guitarist Mike Bloomfield, the 13-minute instrumental fully explored the modal improvisation introduced by McGuinn on "Eight Miles High".[55] Bloomfield likened the Indian drone to "the sound a bee makes: a steady hum" and said that while the pattern was essentially simple, the "challenge" was in "improvis[ing] a free melody around the one basic drone".[32] In Lavezzoli's view, Bloomfield's playing on "East-West" "opened the door to unlimited freedom of expression for all rock guitarists, from Eric Clapton and Jerry Garcia to Duane Allman and Jimi Hendrix".[55]

During the height of the subgenre's popularity that year, Indian musicians also contributed to its development.[56] Released on the World Pacific record label in June,[57] the Folkswingers' Raga Rock album featured Harihar Rao, a Los Angeles-based sitarist[46] and ethnomusicologist, accompanied by jazz musicians and members of the Wrecking Crew.[58][nb 4] A September 1966 issue of Life magazine reported on the growth of the raga rock trend in association with the proliferation of psychedelic-themed shops in San Francisco and New York.[4] Acts such as Donovan, the Moody Blues, Them, the Doors, the Pretty Things and Traffic also recorded in the raga rock style.[17] Having been accepted as a student by Shankar in June 1966, Harrison travelled to India for intensive sitar study in September.[63] Harrison's championing of Indian culture further popularised the trend among Western musicians and, in Schaffner's description, earned him the sobriquet "the maharaja of raga-rock".[64] While many musicians at this time adopted the sitar as a fad, he, Jones, Shawn Phillips (Donovan's guitarist) and session player Big Jim Sullivan were among the London-based guitarists who approached the instrument with a serious interest and shared their ideas.[65]

In his article for Crawdaddy!, Pearlman identified two categories of contemporary raga rock songs: those that merely adopted Indian sounds as an exotic feature, such as "Norwegian Wood", "Paint It Black" and Donovan's Sunshine Superman track "Three King Fishers"; and recordings that incorporated aspects of Indian music in their compositional form, such as "Eight Miles High" and Donovan's "The Trip".[7] Davies' second raga rock song with the Kinks, "Fancy", from 1966's Face to Face album, again used chord changes minimally, but sufficient to keep the composition identifiable as Western pop.[66] By contrast, Harrison adhered to the authentically Indian, single-chord form in "Love You To" and "Within You Without You", released on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in June 1967, and both songs were arranged in a Hindustani classical structure,[67] with distinct alap, gat and drut gat sections.[68][nb 5] He also incorporated a wide range of Indian instrumentation by 1967, with sitar, tambura, tabla, dilruba and swarmandal,[69] and later on, sarod, shehnai, bansuri and pakhavaj.[70] Another foray into raga rock on Sgt. Pepper,[50] John Lennon's "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" included tambura drone and a guitar part in which Harrison, playing in unison with Lennon's vocal, imitated the role of a sarangi player accompanying a khyal singer.[71][nb 6]

 
The Doors in late 1966, a few months after recording the lengthy track, "The End".

One of Crosby's final songs with the Byrds, "Mind Gardens", from the 1967 album Younger Than Yesterday, incorporated drone and raga rock ambience,[74] and vocals evoking the khyal tradition in style and ornamentation.[75] The Doors closed their self-titled 1967 album with "The End",[55] an 11-minute piece in the raga rock style.[76] In Lavezzoli's description, guitarist Robby Krieger successfully conveyed "the brooding quality of the darker ragas" in his contribution to "The End", by first creating a drone on plucked open-tuned strings while also playing a motif in the manner of a sitar or veena, and then, towards the climax of the song, adopting the Indian jhala style, with rapid strumming alternating with the melody line.[55] Lavezzoli writes that sitar sounds were becoming a "fixture in pop music" in 1967, with Dave Mason contributing sitar parts to Traffic's first two hit singles, "Paper Sun" and "Hole in My Shoe".[71] Other acts used a Coral electric sitar, designed by American guitarist Vinnie Bell and manufactured by the Danelectro guitar company.[77] Bell's 1967 album Pop Goes the Electric Sitar added to the collection of what Brend terms "sitarploitation" LPs – containing raga rock-style cover versions of well-known pop songs – a phenomenon that, inaugurated by Rao's Raga Rock, also included Sitar Beat and Lord Sitar by Big Jim Sullivan.[78]

Consolidation and decline edit

Further examples of the subgenre in 1968 were the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man", with its use of tambura and shehnai over distorted acoustic rhythm guitars,[79] and Harrison's final Indian-style composition for the Beatles, "The Inner Light",[50] which he recorded in January with Indian classical musicians in Bombay.[80][81][nb 7] These Bombay sessions also yielded part of Harrison's first solo album,[84] a raga rock soundtrack to the 1968 film Wonderwall, titled Wonderwall Music.[85] Music journalist Chris Ingham has noted Wonderwall Music's influence on the later raga rock sound of 1990s indie band Kula Shaker.[86] In addition to using Indian elements in their single "Dark Star",[87] Garcia's band the Grateful Dead incorporated raga rock, among several other styles, into the extended jams they performed in concert in 1968.[88]

According to Echard, the raga rock trend was largely over by early 1968, having declined late the previous year.[89] In Bellman's opinion, the musical exploration evident in raga rock over 1965–67 was largely replaced by a formulaic approach in 1968.[90] He cited the Moody Blues' July 1968 release In Search of the Lost Chord as a work that combined the now-familiar sounds of sitar and tabla with an album-wide concept that reinforced the perceived connection between LSD and Transcendental Meditation (TM), following the Beatles' and Donovan's public endorsement of TM guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.[91]

1970s and beyond edit

From 1969 and through the early 1970s, the British progressive rock band Quintessence mixed elements of Indian classical music with rock and jazz.[92] Ananda Shankar (a nephew of Ravi Shankar) released his self-titled album in 1970, a raga rock work[93] that blended sitar with Moog synthesizer.[94] Later in the decade, guitarist John McLaughlin and his band Shakti introduced a jazz-influenced version of raga rock over the course of three albums.[95]

In the 1990s, the British indie rock group Cornershop began to assimilate Asian instruments such as the sitar and dholki into their music, culminating with their 1997 album When I Was Born for the 7th Time.[96] The album, which fused Indian music with rock, funk, hip hop and country music, featured the UK number 1 single "Brimful of Asha" (itself a tribute to Indian singer Asha Bhosle) and a cover of the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" sung entirely in Punjabi.[96][97] In 1996, the British rock group Kula Shaker had top 10 raga rock hits with "Tattva" and "Govinda", both of which included Sanskrit lyrics. The band continued to introduce raga rock material into their repertoire, including "Song of Love/Narayana", which lead singer Crispian Mills had also sung on the Prodigy's 1997 album The Fat of the Land.[98] The Brian Jonestown Massacre released the albums Their Satanic Majesties' Second Request in 1996 and Give It Back! in 1997, both of which contained Indian and psychedelic rock influences.

Recently, a revival of sorts has been heralded by Western bands such as the Black Angels and the Brian Jonestown Massacre and Indian bands such as the Raghu Dixit Project, Agam and Swarathma, with an increasing blend of Western instruments with the traditional Indian ones – the flute and the sitar.

Lyrical themes and Orientalism edit

Some scholars approach raga rock and other uses of non-Western musical materials in Western popular music from sociological perspectives, especially as a manifestation of Orientalism. Common lyrical themes include drug use, sexual exploration, and spirituality.

"Eight Miles High" was the subject of radio bans in the United States due to its interpretation as an LSD song in which "high" referred to drug-induced euphoria.[35][99] "Love You To" reflected countercultural ideology[100] and, according to music critic Kenneth Womack, advocated hedonistic and carnal pursuits,[101] while Lennon's lyrics in "Tomorrow Never Knows" were taken from the book The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead by Timothy Leary, Richard Alpert and Ralph Metzner.[102] Partly under Shankar's guidance, Harrison channelled the teachings of the Hindu Vedas into his lyrics for "Within You Without You",[103] providing a message that also served as the ethos behind the 1967 Summer of Love.[104] Bellman writes that "the Kinks' use of eastern musical influences to allude to personal and sexual matters is directly in keeping with historical uses of exoticism as signifier for forbidden sexuality."[105] Bellman and other scholars suggest that, through raga rock, the Orient once again becomes a Western fantasy land, mediated to mass culture audiences of the mid- and late twentieth century through rock and roll.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The film's focus on Kali and other Hindu themes anticipated the counterculture's fascination with Indian philosophy and music. These aspects were nevertheless portrayed in a largely negative and stereotypical way by director Richard Lester.[23]
  2. ^ Writing in 1988, musicologist Gerry Farrell said the recognition afforded the Beatles for changes in the musical landscape during the 1960s was because their popularity and influence was such that they represented "a kind of spirit-level of pop music". He also wrote: "Attempts at fusions with Indian music, especially with jazz, go back to the late fifties but it took the Beatles and a media which had a seemingly insatiable hunger for all that band's activities to catapult Indian music to the forefront of public awareness and, briefly, makes the sitār a common feature of popular culture in the West."[31]
  3. ^ Echard cites "Tomorrow Never Knows" as an example of raga rock "rubb[ing] shoulders with the classical avant-garde".[49]
  4. ^ Raga Rock included cover versions of "Norwegian Wood", "Paint It Black",[56] "Eight Miles High"[59] and the Yardbirds' "Shapes of Things", among other contemporary rock songs.[58][60] Rao was a longstanding associate of Shankar[61] and briefly taught Brian Jones the sitar.[62]
  5. ^ Pearlman nevertheless categorised "Love You To" among the songs in which an Indian influence was more decorative than an intrinsic part of the composition.[7]
  6. ^ During this period, the Beatles also recorded two Indian-inspired songs that Harrison performed on Hammond organ – "It's All Too Much" and "Blue Jay Way" – using the instrument to achieve a harmonised drone. In addition to borrowing from the Hindustani ragas Kosalam and Multani,[72] "Blue Jay Way" featured a cello part played in the style of a sitar.[73]
  7. ^ Harrison continued to draw inspiration as a songwriter from Indian music, however, particularly following the Beatles' break-up in 1970.[82] Lavezzoli describes his slide guitar approach as "unique" and highlights Harrison's evocation of an Indian sarod or veena in the instrumental "Marwa Blues", his Hawaiian-influenced adaptation of Raga Marwa.[83]

References edit

  1. ^ Bellman, Jonathan (1998). The Exotic in Western Music. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN 1-55553-319-1. p. 294-95.
  2. ^ a b Bellman 1998, p. 351.
  3. ^ a b c Chapman 2015, p. 525.
  4. ^ a b Life staff (9 September 1966). "Psychedelic Art". Life. p. 68. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  5. ^ Echard 2017, p. 61.
  6. ^ Farrell 1988, p. 191.
  7. ^ a b c Pearlman, Sandy (December 1966). "Patterns and Sounds: The Uses of Raga in Rock". Crawdaddy. Available at pastemagazine.com (9 June 2015). Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  8. ^ Schaefer, John (1987). New Sounds: A Listener's Guide to New Music. New York City: HarperCollins. p. 115. ISBN 0-06097-081-2.
  9. ^ Echard 2017, p. 32.
  10. ^ Santoro 1991, p. 13.
  11. ^ Echard 2017, pp. 31, 32, 35.
  12. ^ Strong, Martin C (2004). The Great Rock Discography (7th ed.). Edinburgh: Canongate Books. p. 1707. ISBN 1841955515.
  13. ^ Jackson 2015, p. xix.
  14. ^ a b Bellman 1998, pp. 294–95.
  15. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 154–55.
  16. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 144–45.
  17. ^ a b Jackson 2015, p. 256.
  18. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 155.
  19. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 144fn, 165fn.
  20. ^ Jackson 2015, pp. 70–71.
  21. ^ Chapman 2015, p. 527.
  22. ^ Savage 2015, p. 124.
  23. ^ Jackson 2015, p. 164.
  24. ^ Bellman 1998, p. 297.
  25. ^ Brend 2005, p. 147.
  26. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 173.
  27. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 171.
  28. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 146, 147, 154.
  29. ^ Schaffner 1978, p. 66.
  30. ^ a b c Gendron 2002, p. 345.
  31. ^ Farrell 1988, p. 189.
  32. ^ a b c Priore 2007, p. 82.
  33. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 155–56, 157.
  34. ^ "Pop Chronicles: Show 35 – The Rubberization of Soul: The Great Pop Music Renaissance". University of North Texas. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  35. ^ a b Lavezzoli 2006, p. 156.
  36. ^ Prendergast 2003, p. 229.
  37. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 155–56, 159.
  38. ^ Hjort 2008, pp. 88–89.
  39. ^ a b Hjort 2008, p. 88.
  40. ^ Savage 2015, p. 125.
  41. ^ Hjort 2008, p. 89.
  42. ^ Everett 1999, pp. 325, 428.
  43. ^ Gendron 2002, pp. 189, 345.
  44. ^ Schaffner 1982, p. 69.
  45. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 174–75.
  46. ^ a b Brend 2005, p. 151.
  47. ^ Everett 1999, p. 40.
  48. ^ Echard 2017, pp. 25, 26.
  49. ^ a b Echard 2017, p. 6.
  50. ^ a b c Schaffner 1978, p. 68.
  51. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 175–76.
  52. ^ Philo 2015, pp. 110–11.
  53. ^ Prendergast 2003, p. 206.
  54. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 200, 202.
  55. ^ a b c d Lavezzoli 2006, p. 158.
  56. ^ a b Brend 2005, p. 152.
  57. ^ Tiegel, Eliot (2 July 1966). "The Jazz Beat". Billboard. p. 20. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  58. ^ a b Unterberger, Richie. "The Folkswingers Raga Rock". AllMusic. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
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  60. ^ Chapman 2015, pp. 577–78.
  61. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 294–95.
  62. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 151–52.
  63. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 176–78.
  64. ^ Schaffner 1978, pp. 63, 65–66.
  65. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 148–49, 151.
  66. ^ Bellman 1998, pp. 295–96, 303.
  67. ^ Bellman 1998, pp. 294, 295.
  68. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 175, 178.
  69. ^ Bellman 1998, p. 294.
  70. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 183.
  71. ^ a b Lavezzoli 2006, p. 180.
  72. ^ Everett 1999, p. 141.
  73. ^ Schaffner 1978, p. 91.
  74. ^ Rogan 1998, pp. 196–202.
  75. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 159.
  76. ^ Borgzinner, Jon (18 August 1967). "How a Shy Pandit Became a Pop Hero". Life. p. 36. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  77. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 154, 177.
  78. ^ Brend 2005, pp. 152, 177.
  79. ^ Schaffner 1982, p. 77.
  80. ^ Everett 1999, p. 153.
  81. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 182–83.
  82. ^ Reck 2009, pp. 296–97.
  83. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 198.
  84. ^ MacDonald 2005, p. 274.
  85. ^ Schaffner 1982, p. 301.
  86. ^ Ingham, Chris (2003). The Rough Guide to the Beatles. London: Rough Guides/Penguin Random House. p. 162. ISBN 1-84353-140-2.
  87. ^ Farrell 1988, p. 198.
  88. ^ Echard 2017, p. 146.
  89. ^ Echard 2017, p. 5.
  90. ^ Bellman 1998, p. 301.
  91. ^ Bellman 1998, pp. 299–302.
  92. ^ Eder, Bruce. "Quintessence Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  93. ^ Priore 2007, p. 151.
  94. ^ Pruett, Jon. "Ananda Shankar Ananda Shankar". AllMusic. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  95. ^ Huey, Steve. "John McLaughlin Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  96. ^ a b Hyder, Rehan. (2004). Brimful of Asia: Negotiating Ethnicity on the UK Music Scene. Ashgate Publishing Limited. p. 7. ISBN 0-7546-4064-7.
  97. ^ Gopinath, Gayatri. (2005). Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures. Duke University Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-8223-3513-1.
  98. ^ Hyder, Rehan. (2004). Brimful of Asia: Negotiating Ethnicity on the UK Music Scene. Ashgate Publishing Limited. p. 62. ISBN 0-7546-4064-7.
  99. ^ Rogan 1998, pp. 158–62.
  100. ^ Harris, John (2003). "Cruel Britannia". Mojo Special Limited Edition: 1000 Days of Revolution (The Beatles' Final Years – Jan 1, 1968, to Sept 27, 1970). London: Emap. p. 41.
  101. ^ Womack 2007, p. 140.
  102. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, p. 175.
  103. ^ Lavezzoli 2006, pp. 177–79.
  104. ^ Womack 2007, pp. 176–77.
  105. ^ Bellman 1998, p. 304.

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  • Santoro, Gene (1991). Beckology (Boxed set booklet). Jeff Beck. New York City: Epic Records/Legacy Recordings. OCLC 144959074. 48661.
  • Savage, Jon (2015). 1966: The Year the Decade Exploded. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-27763-6.
  • Schaffner, Nicholas (1978). The Beatles Forever. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-055087-5.
  • Schaffner, Nicholas (1982). The British Invasion: From the First Wave to the New Wave. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-055089-1.
  • Womack, Kenneth (2007). Long and Winding Roads: The Evolving Artistry of the Beatles. New York, NY: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-1746-6.

External links edit

raga, rock, confused, with, reggae, rock, rock, music, with, pronounced, indian, influence, either, construction, timbre, indian, musical, instruments, such, sitar, tambura, tabla, term, raga, refers, specific, melodic, modes, used, indian, classical, music, s. Not to be confused with Reggae rock Raga rock is rock or pop music with a pronounced Indian influence either in its construction its timbre or its use of Indian musical instruments such as the sitar tambura and tabla The term raga refers to the specific melodic modes used in Indian classical music Raga rockStylistic originsRockragapsychedelic rockpopother Indian forms of musicCultural originsMid 1960s United Kingdom and United StatesDerivative formsIndian rockThe style emerged as part of the psychedelic rock aesthetic in the 1960s 1 Most raga rock recordings originate from that decade although there are subsequent examples of Indian derived sounds in rock and pop music particularly during the 1990s Contents 1 Development 1 1 Definition 1 2 Antecedents 2 1960s 2 1 Early examples 2 2 The Byrds raga rock press conference 2 3 Peak popularity and impact 2 4 Consolidation and decline 3 1970s and beyond 4 Lyrical themes and Orientalism 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksDevelopment editDefinition edit Ragas are specific melodic modes used in the classical music of the Indian subcontinent The term raga rock originated in March 1966 as a description of rock music that featured Indian sitar styling According to musicologist Jonathan Bellman citing Lillian Roxon s 1969 book Rock Encyclopedia This catchphrase eventually came to describe any Rock song that evoked an Indian or general Oriental mood whether by use of sitar or another instrument imitating it 2 Music journalist Rob Chapman says the phrase was a catch all term and something of a misnomer since it was often applied to any piece of rock music that used non European instrumentation or music styles to denote its exotic qualities 3 A major influence on raga rock was the music of Bengali sitarist Ravi Shankar He himself became a pop music icon in 1966 following the rise of the raga rock trend 4 Rock s use of elements from the Indian classical tradition included sitar usually serving the role of an electric guitar drone provided by tambura in raga performances and by Indian harmonium in vocal pieces modal melodies based on Indian scales vocal stylings additive rather than divisive rhythms tal question and answer interplay jawab sawal between lead instruments lead instruments mirroring the vocal line lyrical themes related to mysticism or religious symbolism 5 6 Antecedents edit Writing for Crawdaddy in December 1966 Sandy Pearlman traced the origins of raga rock to folk music specifically the drone producing guitar tunings which American folk musician Sandy Bull had been incorporating into his music since 1963 7 More recently Chapman and author John Schaefer have both noted that English folk guitarist Davey Graham s raga tinged arrangement of the Irish ballad She Moved Through the Fair from 1963 s From a London Hootenanny EP predated the raga rock experimentation of 1960s rock groups by two years 3 8 1960s editEarly examples edit Music researcher William Echard states that Heart Full of Soul by the Yardbirds which was released in June 1965 is frequently cited as a key text in starting the trend towards incorporating Indian inspired elements in rock music 9 An Indian sitarist and a tabla player accompanied the Yardbirds on a demo recording of the song but only the tabla part was deemed usable 10 Instead Jeff Beck emulated the sitar figure tone and accompanying drone on the electric guitar for the master recording 11 The song reached number 2 on the UK chart 12 and number 9 in the US 13 According to Chapman the other record chiefly credited with introducing raga motifs into Western pop is the Kinks July 1965 single See My Friends which was another top ten hit in the UK 3 Written by Ray Davies and inspired by a visit to India 14 the song used open tuned guitars to imitate the drone produced by an Indian tambura 15 16 Davies vocal affectations added to the track s Indian quality 17 in author Peter Lavezzoli s description See My Friends was the first pop song to evoke an Indian feel 18 Before either of these examples the Beatles April 1965 single Ticket to Ride which was number 1 in many countries around the world featured a melody that author Ian MacDonald terms raga like 19 over a subtle Indian drone produced by electric guitars 20 Heart Full of Soul and See My Friends were both influential on the emerging trend 21 but according to author Jon Savage the first truly mass exposure was through the Beatles 1965 film Help which included incidental music played by Indian session musicians 22 nb 1 Writing in 1997 Bellman commented that the Yardbirds and Kinks recordings were often overlooked in discussions of raga rock s origins as history instead highlighted the Beatles Norwegian Wood This Bird Has Flown 14 Issued in December 1965 on the band s Rubber Soul album the folk styled Norwegian Wood was the first Western pop song to incorporate the sitar which was played by lead guitarist George Harrison 24 25 and the first to feature Indian instrumentation played by a rock musician 26 The song s popularity inspired a wave of interest in the sitar and Indian sounds a phenomenon that Shankar later called the great sitar explosion 27 28 According to authors Nicholas Schaffner and Bernard Gendron raga rock was inaugurated by the release of Norwegian Wood 29 30 nb 2 The Byrds raga rock press conference edit nbsp The Byrds hosting their raga rock press conference for the release of Eight Miles High in March 1966The Byrds March 1966 single Eight Miles High and its B side Why were also influential in originating the subgenre 32 Whereas earlier recordings by the Kinks the Yardbirds and the Beatles had used Indian sounds to complement standard song forms the Byrds incorporated the improvisational technique typical of Shankar s work and of John Coltrane s jazz interpretations of ragas 33 In his 1968 Pop Chronicles interview however Byrds member Roger McGuinn denied that Eight Miles High was raga rock 34 co writer David Crosby also dismissed the term 35 While many listeners assumed that the lead instrument on these and other songs on the Byrds Fifth Dimension album was a sitar 36 McGuinn played a Rickenbacker 12 string electric guitar throughout and had customised his guitar amplifier to achieve the sitar like sound 37 It s rock n roll it s neither jazz nor Indian music But we listen to their music and we like it and it influences our minds and our playing Rock is going to keep growing It has in it now African South American jazz folk church Bach Indian Greek country bluegrass 38 David Crosby discussing the Byrds raga rock sound in 1966 although he later rejected the term The term raga rock was coined by the Byrds publicist in press releases for Eight Miles High and was first used in print by Sally Kempton of The Village Voice in her report of the band s press conference for the single s release 2 39 The press conference was organised by former Beatles publicist Derek Taylor and took place in New York on 28 March with a sitar symbolically placed in front of the table where the Byrds sat 40 Kempton wrote dismissively of the event 30 during which McGuinn and Crosby spoke earnestly of the group s adoption of Indian influences with the two musicians demonstrating raga techniques on sitar and acoustic guitar respectively while their two bandmates appeared bored and instead read magazines 39 Kempton said that the message was lost on those attending the press conference namely female reporters from teen magazines and conservative looking representatives from the music industry 30 Hit Parader reported on the Byrds demonstrating how sitar like sounds could be played on guitar by tuning the standard E strings down to D this allowed the guitarist to play in partial open tuning whereby the bottom three strings provide the drone sound and the upper strings are bent to play the melody 32 The term raga rock was soon adopted by British music publications such as the New Musical Express and Music Echo 41 and an early discussion of raga rock appeared in Melody Maker in April 42 According to Gendron however the fusion of Indian and Western sounds continued to be treated with disdain by writers from the American cultural press who viewed the new subgenre as part of the consolidation of folk rock 43 Peak popularity and impact edit In May 1966 the Rolling Stones issued the raga rock single Paint It Black 44 which featured a sitar part played by guitarist Brian Jones and became an international number 1 hit 45 According to author Mark Brend the song spawned a whole subgenre of minor key psychedelia 46 The Hollies Bus Stop released as a single in June was another example of the style s growing popularity 47 Echard identifies the song s sitar like guitar solo as both an authentic indicator of raga rock and a device seemingly aimed at exploiting the trend 48 Along with Eight Miles High Echard highlights the Beatles Revolver album among the landmark raga rock music issued in 1966 49 Released in August it included Love You To 50 written by Harrison especially for sitar and tabla interplay and Tomorrow Never Knows which featured heavy tambura drone tape loops and psychedelic instrumentation 51 nb 3 The album represented pop music s most overt incorporation of Indian instruments musical form and philosophy up to that point 52 with the influence also evident in the use of vocal melisma 53 and in the Indian inspired guitar solos on Taxman and I m Only Sleeping 54 That same month the Paul Butterfield Blues Band released the album East West the title track of which originally titled The Raga had evolved from their live performances since February Led by guitarist Mike Bloomfield the 13 minute instrumental fully explored the modal improvisation introduced by McGuinn on Eight Miles High 55 Bloomfield likened the Indian drone to the sound a bee makes a steady hum and said that while the pattern was essentially simple the challenge was in improvis ing a free melody around the one basic drone 32 In Lavezzoli s view Bloomfield s playing on East West opened the door to unlimited freedom of expression for all rock guitarists from Eric Clapton and Jerry Garcia to Duane Allman and Jimi Hendrix 55 During the height of the subgenre s popularity that year Indian musicians also contributed to its development 56 Released on the World Pacific record label in June 57 the Folkswingers Raga Rock album featured Harihar Rao a Los Angeles based sitarist 46 and ethnomusicologist accompanied by jazz musicians and members of the Wrecking Crew 58 nb 4 A September 1966 issue of Life magazine reported on the growth of the raga rock trend in association with the proliferation of psychedelic themed shops in San Francisco and New York 4 Acts such as Donovan the Moody Blues Them the Doors the Pretty Things and Traffic also recorded in the raga rock style 17 Having been accepted as a student by Shankar in June 1966 Harrison travelled to India for intensive sitar study in September 63 Harrison s championing of Indian culture further popularised the trend among Western musicians and in Schaffner s description earned him the sobriquet the maharaja of raga rock 64 While many musicians at this time adopted the sitar as a fad he Jones Shawn Phillips Donovan s guitarist and session player Big Jim Sullivan were among the London based guitarists who approached the instrument with a serious interest and shared their ideas 65 In his article for Crawdaddy Pearlman identified two categories of contemporary raga rock songs those that merely adopted Indian sounds as an exotic feature such as Norwegian Wood Paint It Black and Donovan s Sunshine Superman track Three King Fishers and recordings that incorporated aspects of Indian music in their compositional form such as Eight Miles High and Donovan s The Trip 7 Davies second raga rock song with the Kinks Fancy from 1966 s Face to Face album again used chord changes minimally but sufficient to keep the composition identifiable as Western pop 66 By contrast Harrison adhered to the authentically Indian single chord form in Love You To and Within You Without You released on Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band in June 1967 and both songs were arranged in a Hindustani classical structure 67 with distinct alap gat and drut gat sections 68 nb 5 He also incorporated a wide range of Indian instrumentation by 1967 with sitar tambura tabla dilruba and swarmandal 69 and later on sarod shehnai bansuri and pakhavaj 70 Another foray into raga rock on Sgt Pepper 50 John Lennon s Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds included tambura drone and a guitar part in which Harrison playing in unison with Lennon s vocal imitated the role of a sarangi player accompanying a khyal singer 71 nb 6 nbsp The Doors in late 1966 a few months after recording the lengthy track The End One of Crosby s final songs with the Byrds Mind Gardens from the 1967 album Younger Than Yesterday incorporated drone and raga rock ambience 74 and vocals evoking the khyal tradition in style and ornamentation 75 The Doors closed their self titled 1967 album with The End 55 an 11 minute piece in the raga rock style 76 In Lavezzoli s description guitarist Robby Krieger successfully conveyed the brooding quality of the darker ragas in his contribution to The End by first creating a drone on plucked open tuned strings while also playing a motif in the manner of a sitar or veena and then towards the climax of the song adopting the Indian jhala style with rapid strumming alternating with the melody line 55 Lavezzoli writes that sitar sounds were becoming a fixture in pop music in 1967 with Dave Mason contributing sitar parts to Traffic s first two hit singles Paper Sun and Hole in My Shoe 71 Other acts used a Coral electric sitar designed by American guitarist Vinnie Bell and manufactured by the Danelectro guitar company 77 Bell s 1967 album Pop Goes the Electric Sitar added to the collection of what Brend terms sitarploitation LPs containing raga rock style cover versions of well known pop songs a phenomenon that inaugurated by Rao s Raga Rock also included Sitar Beat and Lord Sitar by Big Jim Sullivan 78 Consolidation and decline edit Further examples of the subgenre in 1968 were the Rolling Stones Street Fighting Man with its use of tambura and shehnai over distorted acoustic rhythm guitars 79 and Harrison s final Indian style composition for the Beatles The Inner Light 50 which he recorded in January with Indian classical musicians in Bombay 80 81 nb 7 These Bombay sessions also yielded part of Harrison s first solo album 84 a raga rock soundtrack to the 1968 film Wonderwall titled Wonderwall Music 85 Music journalist Chris Ingham has noted Wonderwall Music s influence on the later raga rock sound of 1990s indie band Kula Shaker 86 In addition to using Indian elements in their single Dark Star 87 Garcia s band the Grateful Dead incorporated raga rock among several other styles into the extended jams they performed in concert in 1968 88 According to Echard the raga rock trend was largely over by early 1968 having declined late the previous year 89 In Bellman s opinion the musical exploration evident in raga rock over 1965 67 was largely replaced by a formulaic approach in 1968 90 He cited the Moody Blues July 1968 release In Search of the Lost Chord as a work that combined the now familiar sounds of sitar and tabla with an album wide concept that reinforced the perceived connection between LSD and Transcendental Meditation TM following the Beatles and Donovan s public endorsement of TM guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 91 1970s and beyond editFrom 1969 and through the early 1970s the British progressive rock band Quintessence mixed elements of Indian classical music with rock and jazz 92 Ananda Shankar a nephew of Ravi Shankar released his self titled album in 1970 a raga rock work 93 that blended sitar with Moog synthesizer 94 Later in the decade guitarist John McLaughlin and his band Shakti introduced a jazz influenced version of raga rock over the course of three albums 95 In the 1990s the British indie rock group Cornershop began to assimilate Asian instruments such as the sitar and dholki into their music culminating with their 1997 album When I Was Born for the 7th Time 96 The album which fused Indian music with rock funk hip hop and country music featured the UK number 1 single Brimful of Asha itself a tribute to Indian singer Asha Bhosle and a cover of the Beatles Norwegian Wood sung entirely in Punjabi 96 97 In 1996 the British rock group Kula Shaker had top 10 raga rock hits with Tattva and Govinda both of which included Sanskrit lyrics The band continued to introduce raga rock material into their repertoire including Song of Love Narayana which lead singer Crispian Mills had also sung on the Prodigy s 1997 album The Fat of the Land 98 The Brian Jonestown Massacre released the albums Their Satanic Majesties Second Request in 1996 and Give It Back in 1997 both of which contained Indian and psychedelic rock influences Recently a revival of sorts has been heralded by Western bands such as the Black Angels and the Brian Jonestown Massacre and Indian bands such as the Raghu Dixit Project Agam and Swarathma with an increasing blend of Western instruments with the traditional Indian ones the flute and the sitar Lyrical themes and Orientalism editSee also Indomania Some scholars approach raga rock and other uses of non Western musical materials in Western popular music from sociological perspectives especially as a manifestation of Orientalism Common lyrical themes include drug use sexual exploration and spirituality Eight Miles High was the subject of radio bans in the United States due to its interpretation as an LSD song in which high referred to drug induced euphoria 35 99 Love You To reflected countercultural ideology 100 and according to music critic Kenneth Womack advocated hedonistic and carnal pursuits 101 while Lennon s lyrics in Tomorrow Never Knows were taken from the book The Psychedelic Experience A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead by Timothy Leary Richard Alpert and Ralph Metzner 102 Partly under Shankar s guidance Harrison channelled the teachings of the Hindu Vedas into his lyrics for Within You Without You 103 providing a message that also served as the ethos behind the 1967 Summer of Love 104 Bellman writes that the Kinks use of eastern musical influences to allude to personal and sexual matters is directly in keeping with historical uses of exoticism as signifier for forbidden sexuality 105 Bellman and other scholars suggest that through raga rock the Orient once again becomes a Western fantasy land mediated to mass culture audiences of the mid and late twentieth century through rock and roll See also editSitar in popular music Indo jazz Psychedelic music Ten Ragas to a Disco BeatNotes edit The film s focus on Kali and other Hindu themes anticipated the counterculture s fascination with Indian philosophy and music These aspects were nevertheless portrayed in a largely negative and stereotypical way by director Richard Lester 23 Writing in 1988 musicologist Gerry Farrell said the recognition afforded the Beatles for changes in the musical landscape during the 1960s was because their popularity and influence was such that they represented a kind of spirit level of pop music He also wrote Attempts at fusions with Indian music especially with jazz go back to the late fifties but it took the Beatles and a media which had a seemingly insatiable hunger for all that band s activities to catapult Indian music to the forefront of public awareness and briefly makes the sitar a common feature of popular culture in the West 31 Echard cites Tomorrow Never Knows as an example of raga rock rubb ing shoulders with the classical avant garde 49 Raga Rock included cover versions of Norwegian Wood Paint It Black 56 Eight Miles High 59 and the Yardbirds Shapes of Things among other contemporary rock songs 58 60 Rao was a longstanding associate of Shankar 61 and briefly taught Brian Jones the sitar 62 Pearlman nevertheless categorised Love You To among the songs in which an Indian influence was more decorative than an intrinsic part of the composition 7 During this period the Beatles also recorded two Indian inspired songs that Harrison performed on Hammond organ It s All Too Much and Blue Jay Way using the instrument to achieve a harmonised drone In addition to borrowing from the Hindustani ragas Kosalam and Multani 72 Blue Jay Way featured a cello part played in the style of a sitar 73 Harrison continued to draw inspiration as a songwriter from Indian music however particularly following the Beatles break up in 1970 82 Lavezzoli describes his slide guitar approach as unique and highlights Harrison s evocation of an Indian sarod or veena in the instrumental Marwa Blues his Hawaiian influenced adaptation of Raga Marwa 83 References edit Bellman Jonathan 1998 The Exotic in Western Music Lebanon NH University Press of New England ISBN 1 55553 319 1 p 294 95 a b Bellman 1998 p 351 a b c Chapman 2015 p 525 a b Life staff 9 September 1966 Psychedelic Art Life p 68 Retrieved 5 July 2017 Echard 2017 p 61 Farrell 1988 p 191 a b c Pearlman Sandy December 1966 Patterns and Sounds The Uses of Raga in Rock Crawdaddy Available at pastemagazine com 9 June 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Schaefer John 1987 New Sounds A Listener s Guide to New Music New York City HarperCollins p 115 ISBN 0 06097 081 2 Echard 2017 p 32 Santoro 1991 p 13 Echard 2017 pp 31 32 35 Strong Martin C 2004 The Great Rock Discography 7th ed Edinburgh Canongate Books p 1707 ISBN 1841955515 Jackson 2015 p xix a b Bellman 1998 pp 294 95 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 154 55 Brend 2005 pp 144 45 a b Jackson 2015 p 256 Lavezzoli 2006 p 155 MacDonald 2005 pp 144fn 165fn Jackson 2015 pp 70 71 Chapman 2015 p 527 Savage 2015 p 124 Jackson 2015 p 164 Bellman 1998 p 297 Brend 2005 p 147 Lavezzoli 2006 p 173 Lavezzoli 2006 p 171 Brend 2005 pp 146 147 154 Schaffner 1978 p 66 a b c Gendron 2002 p 345 Farrell 1988 p 189 a b c Priore 2007 p 82 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 155 56 157 Pop Chronicles Show 35 The Rubberization of Soul The Great Pop Music Renaissance University of North Texas Retrieved 14 April 2011 a b Lavezzoli 2006 p 156 Prendergast 2003 p 229 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 155 56 159 Hjort 2008 pp 88 89 a b Hjort 2008 p 88 Savage 2015 p 125 Hjort 2008 p 89 Everett 1999 pp 325 428 Gendron 2002 pp 189 345 Schaffner 1982 p 69 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 174 75 a b Brend 2005 p 151 Everett 1999 p 40 Echard 2017 pp 25 26 a b Echard 2017 p 6 a b c Schaffner 1978 p 68 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 175 76 Philo 2015 pp 110 11 Prendergast 2003 p 206 MacDonald 2005 pp 200 202 a b c d Lavezzoli 2006 p 158 a b Brend 2005 p 152 Tiegel Eliot 2 July 1966 The Jazz Beat Billboard p 20 Retrieved 3 July 2017 a b Unterberger Richie The Folkswingers Raga Rock AllMusic Retrieved 3 July 2017 Hjort 2008 p 94 Chapman 2015 pp 577 78 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 294 95 Brend 2005 pp 151 52 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 176 78 Schaffner 1978 pp 63 65 66 Brend 2005 pp 148 49 151 Bellman 1998 pp 295 96 303 Bellman 1998 pp 294 295 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 175 178 Bellman 1998 p 294 Lavezzoli 2006 p 183 a b Lavezzoli 2006 p 180 Everett 1999 p 141 Schaffner 1978 p 91 Rogan 1998 pp 196 202 Lavezzoli 2006 p 159 Borgzinner Jon 18 August 1967 How a Shy Pandit Became a Pop Hero Life p 36 Retrieved 15 February 2019 Brend 2005 pp 154 177 Brend 2005 pp 152 177 Schaffner 1982 p 77 Everett 1999 p 153 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 182 83 Reck 2009 pp 296 97 Lavezzoli 2006 p 198 MacDonald 2005 p 274 Schaffner 1982 p 301 Ingham Chris 2003 The Rough Guide to the Beatles London Rough Guides Penguin Random House p 162 ISBN 1 84353 140 2 Farrell 1988 p 198 Echard 2017 p 146 Echard 2017 p 5 Bellman 1998 p 301 Bellman 1998 pp 299 302 Eder Bruce Quintessence Biography AllMusic Retrieved 14 April 2011 Priore 2007 p 151 Pruett Jon Ananda Shankar Ananda Shankar AllMusic Retrieved 15 February 2019 Huey Steve John McLaughlin Biography AllMusic Retrieved 14 April 2011 a b Hyder Rehan 2004 Brimful of Asia Negotiating Ethnicity on the UK Music Scene Ashgate Publishing Limited p 7 ISBN 0 7546 4064 7 Gopinath Gayatri 2005 Impossible Desires Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures Duke University Press p 40 ISBN 0 8223 3513 1 Hyder Rehan 2004 Brimful of Asia Negotiating Ethnicity on the UK Music Scene Ashgate Publishing Limited p 62 ISBN 0 7546 4064 7 Rogan 1998 pp 158 62 Harris John 2003 Cruel Britannia Mojo Special Limited Edition 1000 Days of Revolution The Beatles Final Years Jan 1 1968 to Sept 27 1970 London Emap p 41 Womack 2007 p 140 Lavezzoli 2006 p 175 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 177 79 Womack 2007 pp 176 77 Bellman 1998 p 304 Sources editBellman Jonathan 1998 The Exotic in Western Music Lebanon New Hampshire UPNE ISBN 1 55553 319 1 Brend Mark 2005 Strange Sounds Offbeat Instruments and Sonic Experiments in Pop San Francisco CA Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 879308551 Chapman Rob 2015 Psychedelia and Other Colours London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 28200 5 Echard William 2017 Psychedelic Popular Music A History through Musical Topic Theory Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253026590 Everett Walter 1999 The Beatles as Musicians Revolver Through the Anthology New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512941 0 Farrell Gerry May 1988 Reflecting Surfaces The Use of Elements of Indian Music in Popular Music and Jazz Popular Music 7 2 189 205 doi 10 1017 S0261143000002750 S2CID 194102429 Gendron Bernard 2002 Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club Popular Music and the Avant Garde Chicago IL University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 28737 9 Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 London Jawbone Press ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Jackson Andrew Grant 2015 1965 The Most Revolutionary Year in Music New York NY Thomas Dunne Books ISBN 978 1 250 05962 8 Lavezzoli Peter 2006 The Dawn of Indian Music in the West New York NY Continuum ISBN 0 8264 2819 3 Locke Ralph P 2011 2009 Musical Exoticism Images and Reflections Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 34955 0 MacDonald Ian 2005 Revolution in the Head The Beatles Records and the Sixties London Pimlico ISBN 1 84413 828 3 di Perna Alan 2012 Guitar Masters Intimate Portraits Hal Leonard ISBN 978 1 4803 2970 6 Philo Simon 2015 British Invasion The Crosscurrents of Musical Influence Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 8626 1 Prendergast Mark 2003 The Ambient Century From Mahler to Moby The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age New York NY Bloomsbury ISBN 1 58234 323 3 Priore Domenic 2007 Riot on Sunset Strip Rock n Roll s Last Stand in Hollywood London Jawbone Press ISBN 978 1 906002 04 6 Reck David B 2009 India South India In Titon Jeff Todd ed Worlds of Music An Introduction to the Music of the World s Peoples 5th edn Belmont CA Schirmer Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 534 59539 5 Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited Rogan House ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Santoro Gene 1991 Beckology Boxed set booklet Jeff Beck New York City Epic Records Legacy Recordings OCLC 144959074 48661 Savage Jon 2015 1966 The Year the Decade Exploded London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 27763 6 Schaffner Nicholas 1978 The Beatles Forever New York NY McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Schaffner Nicholas 1982 The British Invasion From the First Wave to the New Wave New York NY McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 055089 1 Womack Kenneth 2007 Long and Winding Roads The Evolving Artistry of the Beatles New York NY Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 1746 6 External links editIndian influences in Western music Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raga rock amp oldid 1212643580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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