I think I’m like that in life anyway- Anoushka Shankar

Posted on December 4, 2009
Filed Under East meets West | Leave a Comment

Love is in the air! Now that Valentines day is approaching it’s fun to fall in love and enjoy the big day.The cupid has struck Anoushka Shankar, daughter of legendary sitar maestro Ravi Shankar and a composer herself. And the guy is none other but London filmmaker Joe Wright of ‘Pride & Prejudice’ and ‘Atonement’ fame.

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Anoushka, who’s very much in love also explained what love means to her.“Love’s everything. Life obviously has a lot of meaning outside of romantic relationships, but they are, I think, perhaps the most spiritual of all the relationships.

But the ‘straight to the point’ demeanour sort of slackens when you ask her if she’s seeing someone. “Well, yeah,” she says, “He’s here with me right now. “We … ell, he’s British, a London filmmaker.” Really, who? She toys with the idea for a while, and then spills the beans, “err … umm … It’s Joe Wright. It’s unexpected and it’s gone really fast, but I’m fully in it.”

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But what does Anoushka really think about love and marriage, considering she’s said before that you don’t have to be married to have children? “I do believe in marriage, very much,” comes a vigorous reply, “But I also don’t believe it’s the only route. Love and relationships have to be defined by the people who’re in them.

As someone who describes herself as spiritual rather than religious, does she believe in all religions then, instead of following any particular one? “I think when you look at the meanings behind the words in almost any religion, you end up with the same message. So, there is a universality to the human spiritual experience.

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Anoushka grew up in three continents — she was born in London, studied in California and always shuttled between India and the States. Did she feel uprooted, or was it fun; was it both? “Well, yeah it’s both. As a child, I was given a lot by way of understanding the world, because what you’re experiencing is a much broader palette of life. But it was also very challenging. Any teenager struggles with identity, alienation, angst, and then you also throw in your cultural issues, and loneliness and travelling … there was a period when I went to two schools at the same time, in Delhi and London, and then I moved to the States!

But I wouldn’t change any of it, because it’s what’s made me who I am.” How soon was she aware that she was growing up in the household of a living legend? “I was aware from the beginning, but it didn’t affect my life very much until I was seven. That’s when my parents got married,”.

But when she was born her dad (Pandit Ravi Shankar) was much older than other dads. Does she think there’s a part of his life she’s missed out on? “I think there’s an arrogance on children’s parts in general, that we think we know our parents — because we just think of them as mum and dad. But they’ve all had a life before we popped up!” She laughs, “I think that’s universal, whether it’s 30 years or 60 years. There’s a life before us that most of us don’t pay any attention to. In my case, it’s the opposite. I’m lucky
because he’s Ravi Shankar. So I do have experiences of interacting with his life, with his past, with his history — my history. And the age difference between us, yeah, it would have been very challenging, but for me that’s part of the magic of being his student. It gives us a whole separate relationship; I don’t have that with anyone else.”

Having collaborated with her multiple Grammy winning half sister, Norah Jones, in her last album, are the two getting together again sometime? “Nothing is planned. Of course, my life doesn’t revolve around my sister. And the fact that we’ve collaborated together at all is more unusual than not collaborating. I don’t play with every jazz musician or pop star on the planet, do I? People ask the question just because we’re sisters, but there’s more to both of us than that.”

Meanwhile, what does she think about Hollywood values that consider celebrity to be the most supreme achievement? The obsession’s coming here gradually too … “It’s a weird obsession with celebrity that we’ve all been told is the God of this society today. So that concept of going on a reality show just to get your face on TV, just doing something shocking, so that you get written about, all of that is being encouraged. We’re losing some elements of class and integrity along the way. I sound like a really old lady!” laughs Joe Wright
She’s played for the background score of Water, and composed for a few Hollywood flicks, but what’s kept her away from the movies? She answers, “I’m very young and I’ve been performing since I was 13, recording since I was 16, but I’ve only been composing since I was 22 or so. So it’s a progression. Now I feel I’m entering a phase where composing is very attractive to me. There was a film that I almost did this year.”Could she do a mainstream Bollywood flick? “Mainstream is so different now. But, in general, I’d be more attracted to the slightly off-mainstream. I think I’m like that in life anyway.” Mr Wright is Mr right for Anoushka definitely  and can not go wrong.

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