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Anoushka Shankar honoured at Ivors Classical Awards for breaking musical boundaries and inspiring global composers

Anoushka Shankar was celebrated at London’s Ivors Classical Awards for her sitar work and daring musical collaborations.

Anoushka Shankar

Sitarist Anoushka Shankar honoured for breaking classical music boundaries at Ivors

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Highlights:

  • Composer and sitarist recognised for pushing boundaries in music
  • Award given at the Ivors Classical Awards in London last night
  • Joins list of past innovators including Talvin Singh and Anna Meredith
  • Anne Dudley and Debbie Wiseman also celebrated for lifetime work
  • BBC Radio 3 to broadcast the show on 15 November

Sitarist and composer Anoushka Shankar won the Innovation Award at this year’s Ivors Classical Awards in London. The artist was recognised for how she keeps stretching what classical and Indian music can sound like. It is not her first award, but it might be one of the most personal.

Anoushka Shankar Sitarist Anoushka Shankar honoured for breaking classical music boundaries at Ivors Getty Images



Why the Ivor Novello Award hit different

This one is not just about talent. It is about influence. The Innovation Award goes to artists who shake things up and make other musicians think differently. The Ivors Academy called Shankar’s work “boundary-pushing.” Few have blended Indian classical with jazz, electronica and orchestral textures the way she has.

Anoushka Shankar Anoushka Shankar attends The Ivors Classical Awards at BFI Southbank Getty Images


A life built around sound

Anoushka Shankar, born to Ravi Shankar and Sukanya Rajan, grew up between Delhi and London. She learned the sitar from her father and hit the stage early. By 18, she had already played major venues and become the youngest person to receive the British House of Commons Shield.

Her career has spanned continents, including working with Sting, Herbie Hancock, Patti Smith, Jacob Collier and her half-sister Norah Jones. She has also broken plenty of records: first Indian woman nominated for a Grammy and first Indian artist to perform at the ceremony itself.


Inside last night’s ceremony

The Ivors Classical Awards took over BFI Southbank with a crowd of composers, musicians and BBC Radio 3 regulars. At the same ceremony, composer Anne Dudley became a Fellow of The Ivors Academy and Debbie Wiseman received the first award for Outstanding Contribution to Screen Composition.

Other winners included Anna Clyne, Helen Grime, Jonathan Dove, and first-time awardees like Anibal Vidal and Nneka Cummins. BBC Radio 3’s Tom McKinney and Kate Molleson hosted, with guests from music and film. The ceremony will be broadcast this Saturday on The New Music Show.

Anne Dudley, Debbie Wiseman and Anoushka Shankar Anne Dudley, Debbie Wiseman and Anoushka Shankar attend The Ivors Classical Awards at BFI Southbank Getty Images


What comes next for Anoushka

Shankar is currently touring and working on new music. She has spoken often about identity and belonging, and how those ideas feed her sound. “Music is the only place I feel whole,” she once said.

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