Listen To "We Burn So Brightly" Here
Shankar's New Experimental Album ‘Chapter III: We Return To Light’ Out March 14 On Nils Frahm's LEITER Label
US Tour Kicks Off Next Month With Performances At Big Ears Festival + Stops In Los Angeles, New York And More
|
Photo Credit: Carly Hildebrant
PRE-ORDER/PRE-SAVE ‘CHAPTER III: WE RETURN TO LIGHT’
Friday, February 20th, 2025 – Today, Anoushka Shankar, the acclaimed sitarist, producer and composer releases the new track "We Burn So Brightly," the second preview single from her forthcoming album Chapter III: We Return To Light out March 14th via Nils Frahm's LEITER label. "We Burn So Brightly" captures the energy of alchemy – the transformative power of movement, dance, and raw expression.
Listen to “We Burn So Brightly” here:
https://ltr.lnk.to/WeBurnSoBrightly
“I've experienced that so many times, you know, the experience of feeling like I'm just burning things up and out of me, says Shankar. "I wanted to capture that on this piece.” One of the most dynamic moments on the forthcoming mini-album, it sees Shankar and her collaborators – London-based Indian multi-instrumentalist Sarathy Korwar and composer and sarod player Alam Khan – let loose, weaving intricate melodies in a seven-beat cycle.
“Three chapters, three geographies,” Shankar scribbled in a diary at a café in Goa on New Year’s Day two years ago, manifesting the ambitious trilogy with nods to her roots, across continents and collaborators. Where Ch I: Forever, For Now – produced by Arooj Aftab and featuring Nils Frahm – conjures the immense stillness and beauty of a sun-kissed garden, the Peter Raeburn-produced Ch. II: How Dark It Is Before Dawn veiled the garden over, giving rise to the womblike power of darkness. The second chapter was up for Best New Age, Ambient or Chant Album at this year’s GRAMMYs, and her featured role on Jacob Collier’s song “A Rock Somewhere” was up for the Best Global Performance, marking Shankar’s 10th and 11th nominations.
Revisit an impassioned live performance from Shankar and Jacob Collier recently in Amsterdam here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgVRqM_PT5k
Central to Ch. III is the mindfulness of India at the root of all her music. For the record, she joined with London-based, Indian multi-instrumentalist Sarathy Korwar, a leading voice in the British jazz scene along with composer and sarod player Alam Khan, son of the famed Indian classical guru, Ali Akbar Khan. Together, the three tap into Shankar’s fascination with Goa Trance – India’s electronic music export - which began in her twenties, when she escaped to the beach state and chased dance floor epiphanies in secret forest raves, participating with wild, youthful abandon.
“Hiraeth,” the first song the trio worked on together that they recently shared, features looping melodies and backward sarod lines, an idea seeded by Khan and developed with Korwar and Shankar. For close listeners, it features an Easter egg in the form of the popular Hindu classical, Raga Palas Kafi, created by Ravi Shankar. Similarly, “Dancing on Scorched Earth” sees the artists locking into each other’s rhythms, radiating a collective intensity built on a foundation of hypnotic simplicity. “I discovered my love of a POG pedal on this track to really enjoy that lower octave crunchiness on my sitar,” says Shankar.
On Ch. III, Shankar fully embraces a looping and bending sound technique, adding a further dimension to her voice and bringing her music outside of Western definitions of “neoclassical” and even further away from sub-continental norms of “fusion,” a dated, catch-all banner for collaborative, experimental music.
The trilogy closes with “We Return to Love,” based on one of Shankar’s favorite ragas, “Manj Khamaj,” played on a beautiful major scale with a twinge of nostalgia. It’s an apt conclusion as the recording was made famous by Shankar and Khan’s fathers who famously concluded many concerts and recordings with it.
This is where the story ends, where the music returns to ancestral echoes while carving a path for modern Indian sounds, where all three artists step into a space of deep-rooted celebration. Ch. III’s final frame is of someone stepping out from a forest rave into the quietude of a shoreline. The feeling is a mix of nostalgia and renewal. It echoes Shankar’s journey through those Goa raves where all she could do was follow a sign and a person, except it’s now Shankar who is signposting the listener. With Chapter III: We Return to Light, feet meet the water, marking the end of a journey, a return to love, and a place of rest—a perfect, radiant conclusion to the trilogy.
Following the album release Shankar will perform at Big Ears festival in Knoxville and begin a headlining tour with stops in Los Angeles, Houston, Toronto, New York City, and more. See below for a full list of tour dates and stay tuned for more to come from Anoushka Shankar.
PRE-ORDER/PRE-SAVE ‘CHAPTER III: WE RETURN TO LIGHT’
Anoushka Shankar 2025 Tour Dates:
March 13 - The Moore Theatre, Seattle
March 14 - Bing Concert Hall, Stanford
March 15 - Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles
March 16 - Epstein Family Amphitheater, San Diego
March 18 - Eisemann Center, Richardson
March 19 - Cullen Theater, Houston
March 20 - Hodgson Concert Hall, Athens
March 22 - Auburn University, Auburn (Alabama)
March 23 - Ruby Diamond Concert Hall, Tallahassee
March 25 - Massey Hall, Toronto (Canada)
March 28 - Town Hall, New York
March 30 - Big Ears - Tennessee Theater, Knoxville
About Anoushka Shankar:
To read a list of Anoushka Shankar’s accomplishments is to read many life stories in one: masterful sitarist; prolific recording artist with thirteen solo albums to her name; film composer; impassioned activist. Anoushka was the youngest and first female recipient of a British House of Commons Shield at the age of eighteen; the first Indian woman to perform live or serve as presenter at the Grammy® Awards with an incredible nine nominations under her belt, and the first Indian woman to be nominated; an Ivor Novello-nominee for her A Suitable Boy soundtrack; an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music; one of the first five female composers to
have been added onto the UK A-level music syllabus; and most recently in June 2024, the recipient of an Honorary Degree in Music from Oxford University.
Anoushka began studying the sitar and Indian classical music from the age of nine under the intensive tutelage of her father, Pandit Ravi Shankar, learning by ear not only the musical tradition that has been passed on through generations but also the improvisatory freedom for which her father was so renowned. A love of this connection across borders and timelines has drawn her to collaborate with diverse artists including Herbie Hancock, Patti Smith, Sting, Jacob Collier, Joshua Bell, Arooj Aftab, Nils Frahm, M.I.A, Rodrigo y Gabriela, His Holiness the Dalai
Lama and her half-sister Norah Jones. Her touring career has taken her from legendary jazz cafes to iconic symphony halls and festival stages in front of 40,000 people, her versatility transforming each of these locations into an intimate experience for all listening. That versatility comes out of years spent building the confidence to be artistically truthful and to connect to her audience from the heart.
Celebrating 30 years of stage performance in 2025 with the release of the third chapter in her current trilogy of mini-albums and the Creative Directorship of Brighton Festival, she is a singular, genre-defying artist known for breaking new ground across realms. From global and electronic music to jazz and neo-classical, Anoushka’s commitment to wild experimentation and fresh collaboration knows no bounds.
Anoushka Shankar Online:
###