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Pride of Musicians Play Like Lions at MVFF34

Diverse array of musicians join tribute show to the late Indian classical musician Ali Akbar Khan, including his sons Alam and Manik as well as Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman.

 
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From left, Rob Wasserman, Salar Nader, Bob Weir, Manik Khan, Alam Khan and Arjun Verma performa tribute set to the late Ali Akbar Khan at 142 Throckmorton Theatre.
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Kwaku Daddy and a 15-piece percussion ensemble of his students from the City College of San Francisco perform at the Play Like a Lion Live concert at 142 Throckmorton Theatre as part of the 34th Mill Valley Film Festival.

"Alam never plays alone - he is always accompanied by his heritage."

So said Rohnert Park filmmaker Joshua Dylan Mellars in introducing the "Play Like a Lion Live" musical tribute to Alam Khan's father, the late Indian classical musician Ali Akbar Khan, at 142 Throckmorton Theatre Saturday night. The point was made clear by Mellars' documentary itself, which screened at the 34th Mill Valley Film Festival last week.

On this night, sarod player Alam Khan had plenty of accompaniment beyond his esteemed lineage, including his brother Manik Khan on tampura, Salar Nader on tabla and Arjun Verma on sitar. The early part of the night was dominated by the riveting interplay between Alam Khan and Nader, with a subtle nod from Khan sending the pair into a free-form, catch-me-if-you-can exchange that soared at times.

Mill Valley legends Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman joined the group for a groove-laden spell, and Ghanaian drummer and folklorist Kwaku Daddy brought along a 15-piece percussion ensemble of his students from the City College of San Francisco. Sukhawat Ali Khan and Riffat Sultana closed out the evening with a set of tunes inspired by North Indian and Pakistani classical music.

Interwoven between the performances were tributes from some of Ali Akbar Khan's collaborators and fans, including saxophonist John Handy, who jumped onstage and said that Khan "played notes in a way that sounded like praying." Guitarist Derek Trucks and tabla master Zakir Hussein recorded video tributes, with the latter saying that Khan was "the catalyst for Indian music becoming what it needed to become" and that "his contribution is unparalleled in the world of music."

About this column: Wall-to-wall coverage of the 34th edition of the Mill Valley Film Festival. Related Topics: 142 throckmorton theatre, Alam Khan, Mill Valley Film Festival, ali akbar khan, mvff34, and play like a lion
Did you go to to this performance? How was it? Upload your photos or videos here or email them to jimw@patch.com. Tell us in the comments.

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