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I found a great book at the Berklee library once. It's by George Ruckert, one of Ali Akbar Khan's students, and the book is called "An Introduction to the Classical Music of North India". It's supposed to simulate the first year of classes at his school in California, and it starts with the basic note names and Indian notation, and moves on to detailing individual ragas (only a few; according to him, it's better to really know a few ragas than to just "be familiar" with a whole lot of them) and rhythmic cycles (talas). After that, it's got a boatload of compositions you can learn to play. The book also deals with some of the religious and spiritual aspects of Indian music. It seems like a good place to start, if you've got $40 to spend. The school has a website at http://www.aacm.org/aacm/index.html and I think you can order this book (and others) directly from them. Have fun. Peter ----- Original Message ----- From: Gareth Whittock <whiteoak@dial.pipex.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@annihilist.com> Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2000 1:23 AM Subject: Re: Indian music > > Hi all, > Just wondering if someone could recommend a good introductory book on > Indian music? > > P.S. > > Live looping, Chapter Arts, UK 26th July featuring unstable moog > synthesizer, bizzarre guitarre, processed through a computer using Audio > Mulch. > > Cheers, > Gareth >