Anoushka Shankar · Breathing Under Water

Breathing Under Water

2 min readLast updated November 2026 Sign in to track progress
Table of contents

Dynamics

  • Generally quiet
  • Very little dynamic range
  • Entry of voice → increases richness, likely perceived as louder

Rhythm, Tempo & Metre

  • 120 bpm (quite fast), rit. at the end
  • Pulse: present but sounds fluid
  • Metre:
    • Mainly 4/4
    • Bar 37 → 2/4 → generates rhythmic interest
  • Rhythmic features:
    • Lots of complexity → triplets, dotted rhythms, varied note values
    • Contrast with strings → mainly playing minims
  • Overall effect: feels free & complex

Texture

  • Melody-dominated homophony
    • But strings add counter-melodic interest
  • Bar 1: Monophonic opening
  • Vocals adds new layer, richer &a more complex texture

Structure

Its an extended introductory song(Alap) to Sea Dreamer
4 sections, all melodic material comes from Sea Dreamer, elaborated & developed

  • Section 1 (bars 1–36):
    • Bars 1–8 → Verse material (from Sea Dreamer, though not really a verse)
    • Bars 9–17 → Chorus material (from Sea Dreamer)
    • Bars 18–36 → Sitar solo
  • Section 2 (bars 36–53):
    • Repeat of Section 1
  • Section 3 (bars 53–68):
    • Same as Section 1 but octave lower (mandra saptak)
  • Section 4 (bars 69–end):
    • Coda

Melody

  • Elaborations of Sea Dreamer melodies
  • Despite ornamentation:
    • Melody is conjunct
    • Range = generally higher tessitura → makes it stand out vs strings
  • Vocals :
    • Use of microtones
    • Quite conjunct
  • Strings:
    • Some melodic interest (mostly minims)
    • Gently rising & falling motion
  • Sitar:
    • Ornamentation(Alankara) :
      • Kan - grace note
      • Meen - Slide/glissando
      • Gamak - Trill

Instrumentation

  • Indian instruments:
    • Sitar (briefly Sitar 2 at bar 73)
    • Female voice
    • Tabla
  • Western instruments:
    • Strings (Bollywood-style)
    • Woodwind
    • Horns
    • Flute
    • Cello
  • Ornamentation also relates to instrumentation choices

Tonality

  • Tonal centre is ambiguous
    • Could be D♭ major or B♭ minor
    • Final cadence ends in D♭ major
  • Bar 18 modulation:
    • From D♭ major/B♭ minor → E major or C♯ minor
    • Ambiguity: there are no clear E major or C♯ minor chords
    • Likely A Lydian (due to presence of A chords)
  • Tonality remains uncertain throughout

Harmony

  • Wide mixture of chord types:
    • F minor chord → G♭sus2
    • Extended chords, added notes
    • B♭sus2add4 (bar 38) → cluster chord
    • Slash chords
    • Triads & inverted triads
  • Ending cadence: Plagal (distinctly Western, stands out to listener)