Shivkumar Sharma
50 top tracks
Shivkumar Sharma
50 top tracks
Albums

Soundscapes - Music of the Mountains
Shivkumar Sharma

Raga Bhopali
Shivkumar Sharma

Raga Rageshri
Shivkumar Sharma

Yugal Bundi
Shivkumar Sharma

The Elements - Water
Shivkumar Sharma

Rag Madhuvanti & Rag Misra Tilang
Shivkumar Sharma

Call of the Valley
Shivkumar Sharma

Maestro's Choice - Shivkumar Sharma
Shivkumar Sharma

Maestro's Choice Series Two - Shivkumar Sharma
Shivkumar Sharma

Mountain Breeze
Shivkumar Sharma

Sound Scapes - Music of the Mountains
Shivkumar Sharma

The Valley Recalls - Peace, Love & Harmony (Live at The Nehru Centre, Bombay, December, 1995)
Shivkumar Sharma
Biography
Shivkumar Sharma (born 13 January 1938; died 10 May 2022) was an Indian classical musician and santoor player who is credited with adapting the santoor for Indian classical music. As a music composer he collaborated with Indian flautist Hariprasad Chaurasia under the collaborative name Shiv-Hari and composed music for many Indian films including Faasle (1985), Chandni (1989), Lamhe (1991), and Darr (1993). Sharma was awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1986 <a href="https://www.last.fm/mu...Read more on Last.fm
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Shivkumar Sharma (born 13 January 1938; died 10 May 2022) was an Indian classical musician and santoor player who is credited with adapting the santoor for Indian classical music. As a music composer he collaborated with Indian flautist Hariprasad Chaurasia under the collaborative name Shiv-Hari and composed music for many Indian films including Faasle (1985), Chandni (1989), Lamhe (1991), and Darr (1993). Sharma was awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1986, the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian award in 1991, and the Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian award in 2001.
Sharma, working in the Hindustani classical music tradition, was a master of the santoor, a folk instrument from the valley of Kashmir. It is a type of hammered dulcimer whose strings are struck with a pair of light carved wooden mallets. Before him the santoor was regarded as only an accompanying instrument.
He is credited with single-handedly making the santoor a popular classical instrument, to the extent that the santoor and Pandit Shivkumar Sharma are synonymous. Sharma modified the Kashmiri folk instrument to make it more suitable for his classical technique, increasing the range of the instrument to three full octaves and making it capable of a smoother meend (the glissando or gliding between notes required in Hindustani classical music to emulate the human voice). He also created a new technique of playing with which he could sustain notes and maintain sound continuity.
Sharma performed many concerts with renowned musicians such as the tabla maestro Ustad Zakir Hussain. He has also partnered the well-known flautist Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia to form a group called Shiv-Hari for composing Hindi film music.
Sharma is the recipient of many national and international awards including honorary citizenship of the city of Baltimore, USA (1985), Sangeet Natak Academy Award (1986), Maharashtra Gaurav Puraskar (1990), Honorary Doctorate from the University of Jammu (1991), Padmashree (1991), Ustad Hafiz Ali Khan Award (1998), and Padma Vibhushan (2001). <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Shivkumar+Sharma">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
