The packed Sydney Opera House which hosted Confluence. Photo: Special Arrangement
As a part of the ongoing Confluence - Festival of India in Australia, artistes from across disciplines collaborated.
What does a didgeridoo, tablas and opera music have in common? Not much. But these sounds reverberated through the iconic Sydney Opera House on September 18 as Indian and Australian artistes came together to perform.
As a part of the ongoing Confluence - Festival of India in Australia, artistes from across disciplines collaborated – aboriginal dancers from Australia shared the stage with the Pung Cholom dancers from India's Manipur, and a Western a cappella group sang with Indian classical singers.
It wasn't all easy. For the Pung Cholom dancer, Ngangbam Sunil Singh, the challenge was to adapt to a very different kind of form.
“We had two days to figure out how to blend our form with the aboriginal dancers. Both our groups have very different rhythms. So it was a challenge, but we took some parts of their dance and some of ours and combined them,” said Mr. Singh.
Binkin Ngugi, who played the didgeridoo with the Nunukul Yuggera Aboriginal Dancers group, said though it was the first time that they colloborated with Indian folk and classical artistes, it came naturally.
“There are some similarities in the music and in the meaning of songs,” he said.
The manager of the aboriginal dance group, Eddie Ruskin, added that indigenous Australians and Indians shared a mutual respect for each other's cultures.
“For instance, we have a common respect for our elders,” he said.
For Sue Sturgess, who was a part of the a cappella group, working with Indian musicians and singers was “relaxing”.
“We're used to a very restricted form, so it required a mental shift to be making up the notes as we sang. It was relaxing for a change,” she said.
While the festival, which is touring seven Australian cities, began last month, the gala at the Opera House was the showcase for both Indian and Australian authorities. Union Culture Minister Dr. Mahesh Sharma, who attended the show, said at a reception earlier in the evening that it was a “proud moment for both India and Australia” that the Festival of India, as announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in November 2014, had been successful.
“It's high time that we celebrate India and Australia's relations in a big way,” said Dr. Sharma, before adding that Indians should be “proud to have a Prime Minister like Mr. Modi”.
At the Opera House, the audience was in a celebratory mood, with people singing along to the Raghu Dixit Project, which closed the show.
Speaking to The Hindu earlier in the day, Indian High Commissioner to Australia Navdeep Suri said that the main aim of the festival was to attract the mainstream arts-loving community, not just the Indian diaspora.
“We looked for premium venues like the Sydney Opera House to showcase premium acts. The festival has had a very successful week,” he said.
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