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Remembering Zakir Hussain: Making Music
ByBorn in Mumbai, India, on 9 March 1951, Hussain learned tabla from his father, the great Ustad All Rakha Qureshi, accompanist to

Ravi Shankar
sitar1920 - 2012
Hussain's love of Indian classical music lasted his lifetime, but he was a curious musical traveler from the get-go, working his magic with pop and rock musicians such as George Harrison, The Grateful Dead's

Mickey Hart
drums
Van Morrison
vocalsb.1945

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021

George Brooks
saxophone
Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971

Dave Holland
bassb.1946
It was with English guitarist

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971

Shakti
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1974
Rock, Indian classical, Indo-jazz fusion, for Hussain it was all part of the same tapestry, as he told All About Jazz in a 2020 interview: "For me, it has become more and more clear. I do not find that there is Indian music and then there is this little bridge to cross and there is jazz. I find that the connections are fenceless and seamless... it's all part of the same tree."
It was not until 1987 that Hussain record his debut album as leader. For Making Music (ECM) Hussain assembled McLaughlin, saxophonist

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947
From Making On Music we offer you the exquisite title track, a fine calling card for Hussain's compositional strengths as well as his quite brilliant ensemble playing. The man may have gone, but the music and the legend live on.
Contact Ian Patterson on All About Jazz.
Ian is dedicated to the promotion of jazz and all creative music all over the world, and to catching just a little piece of it for himself.
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