Spring music festival

Sri Rama Lalitha Kala Mandira has organised a series of concerts for a period of one week

Sri Rama Lalitha Kala Mandira was started way back in 1955 by Sri G Vedanta Iyengar. The institute has since been conducting various music related programmes. It, in fact, celebrated its Thousandth concert day on 13th February 2008.

Sri rama Lalitha Kala Mandir

Sri Rama Lalitha Kala Mandir

As usual, this year, a series of concerts are being organized for a period of one week, starting 7th February 2009. The venue is Mangala Mantapa, NMKRV College, Jayanagar. While admission is free, seating would be on a first come basis, especially as all the artistes who would be enthralling the audiences with their music are very popular. The week long festival will culminate with a dance recital on 14th February 2009.

The program schedule is as given below:

Spring music festival from 7th February 2009 to 14 February 2009, daily at 5.45 PM at Mangala Auditorium, Jayanagar

  • Ranjani and Gayathri – Nalina Mohan – C. Cheluvaraj – Sukanya Ramgopal
    Date : 7th February 2009
  • Sanjay Subramanyam – Nagai Muralidharan – Naiveli Venkatesh – Trichy K. Murali
    Date : 8th February 2009
  • Neela Ramgopal – V.V. Ravi – Naiveli Narayanan – Dr. S. Karthick
    Date : 9th February 2009
  • M.S. Sheela – Mysore V. Srikanth – H.S. Sudhindra – B.S. Purushothaman
    Date : 10th February 2009
  • P. Unnikrishnan – H.K. Venkatram – Arjun Kumar – Giridhar Udupa
    Date : 11th February 2009
  • Rudrapatnam Brothers – Akkarai Subbalakshmi – Mannargudi A. Eswaran – M.A. Krishna Murthy
    Date : 12th February 2009
  • Bombay Jayashri Ramnath – Embar S. Kannan – Poongalam Subramanyam – K.V. Gopalakrishnan
    Date : 13th February 2009
  • Bharatanatyam and Kathak recital by Nirupama Rajendra and Rajendra
    Date : 14th February 2009

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Bag checks and bias: How gated communities can rethink security practices in cities

A study in gated communities in Bengaluru, Chennai and Mumbai flags frisking of domestic workers and brings up questions of dignity and privacy.

Across megacities, workers in gated communities are subjected to checks at entry and exit points. Often excessive and intrusive, these include bag searches, confiscation of items without a gate pass, and, in some cases, pat-downs of workers — practices justified as deterrents against theft. During an anonymous survey, we spoke to 20–30 residents and domestic workers across Bengaluru, and a few communities in Chennai and Mumbai. Respondents across these cities reported “visual cues” of suspicious behaviour that corresponded with these searches. While respondents in the surveys reported no pat-downs in their communities, some employers and domestic workers informally flagged pat-downs…

Similar Story

Road to freedom: How this Chennai shelter empowers women with disabilities

A purpose-built, fully accessible space is helping women reclaim dignity, pursue education and sport, and advocate for systemic change.

When fifty-one-year-old Matilda Fonceca first wheeled herself through the gates of the Better World Shelter for women with disabilities in Chennai, she was not looking for transformation. She simply wanted a safe place to stay. The locomotor disability that has shaped her life since childhood has never stopped her from pursuing independence, yet it has often dictated how society has treated her. Much of her youth was spent moving between NGOs, where she learned early that institutions might make space for her, but rarely with her needs in mind. Before arriving here, Matilda lived an ordinary urban life, working night…