Hirak Chowdhury, Rabindranath Tagore | id

Hideo Shiraki (白木秀雄; born 1 January 1933 in Tokyo; died 31 August 1972) was a Japanese jazz drummer and bandleader, best known for his work in the 1950s and 1960s. Famed earlier on for hard bop, he later explored world jazz. Shiraki emerged in the new Japanese jazz scene of the 1950s that grew out of the influence of the US occupying forces.[1] He studied percussion at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts and, during this period, played with Masashi Nagao's Blue Coats. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, his quintet was popular in Japan and was associated with...
Lili Hirakawa was born in 1975, south Japan. She almost spent a time for studying art until she was 20. After she left the school in 1998, she moved to London for no greater (or lesser) purpose than clubbing. After leaving the U.K., she continued to travel the world to encounter new people, new scenes, and new sounds (and to go to more parties). She now lives in Tokyo. “Making music is like drawing a picture,” Lili says. “When I make a song, it’s like sketching the scene I see in my mind’s eye at that moment and then adding...
Rabindranath Tagore (Bangla: রবীন্দ্রনাথ ঠাকুর; 7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941), also known by the sobriquet Gurudev, was a Bengali poet, Brahmo Samaj philosopher, visual artist, playwright, novelist, and composer whose works reshaped Bengali literature and music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A cultural icon of Bengal and India, he became Asia's first Nobel laureate when he won the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature. .
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