Mahesh is one of the most sought-after performers globally and has performed
extensively in India, USA, Canada, Europe, UAE, Southeast Asia, and Australia.
From prestigious music conferences like the Sawai Gandharva Sangeet Mahotsav
(Pune), Saptak Festival (Ahmedabad) to unlikely venues like the NH7 weekender
and Stanford Jazz Festival, Mahesh is truly a global ambassador of Indian
Classical Music. He is also a popular judge on the Sur Nava Dhyas Nava TV show
on Colors Marathi channel.
Raga's From Mahesh Kale
20:49
RAAG JOG
20:57
RAAG KALAVATI
Mahesh maintains an open outlook towards music to reach out to
the new generation, while retaining the traditions. He has performed with world
percussionists including Zakir Hussain, Trilok Gurtu, and Sivamani, and
instrumentalists like Stanley Jordan, Pedro Eustache, George Brooks and Frank
Martin, in collaborative works, ably demonstrating his versatility as a composer and
singer. In an effort to spread awareness and education about Indian classical music
in the western world, Mahesh has given lecture-demonstrations and talks at various
academic institutions including Stanford University, Harvard University, IISc
Bangalore, TEDx, and the Commonwealth Club.
Mahesh Kale, is a San Francisco Bay Area-based Indian Classical
vocalist renowned for his specialization in Indian Classical (Hindustani),
Semi-Classical, Devotional music, and Natya Sangeet. Kale, after winning India’s
National Film Award as the Best Playback Singer, for classical piece in the film
Katyar Kaljat Ghusli (2016), has firmly established himself as the face of Indian
classical music of the new generation. Honed in the Gurukul system of learning from
the legendary Pandit Jitendra Abhisheki, he has an illustrious pedigree, and his
thrilling performances bear this out.
Founder of Indian Classical Music and Arts Foundation, a
non-profit organization focused on preserving, nurturing and celebrating Indian
Classical Music, Mahesh is also a teacher and an inspiration for a motivated student
body of over a hundred fifty students in the San Francisco Bay Area.