TheAsian Music Circle (sometimes abbreviated to AMC) was an organisation founded inLondon, England, in 1946, that promotedIndian and other Asian styles of music, dance and culture in the West. The AMC is credited with having facilitated the assimilation of theIndian subcontinent's artistic traditions into mainstream British culture. Founded by Indian writer and former political activist Ayana Angadi and his English wife,Patricia Fell-Clarke, a painter and later a novelist, the organisation was run from their family home in the north London suburb ofFinchley. The Asian Music Circle was the subject of a BBC Radio 4 programmeMr and Mrs Angadi broadcast on 13 January 2026.[1]
In the 1950s, withYehudi Menuhin as its president, the AMC organised the first Western performances byIndian classical musiciansRavi Shankar andAli Akbar Khan, as well asVilayat Khan's debut concerts in Britain. During the following decade, the Angadis introducedGeorge Harrison ofthe Beatles to Shankar, initiating an association that saw Indian music reach its peak in international popularity over 1966–68. The Music Circle had its own London-based musicians, some of whom played on Harrison's Indian-style compositions for the Beatles, including "Within You Without You" from the albumSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
The AMC is recognised as having introducedyoga into Britain, through the Angadis' hosting of classes by visitingguruB.K.S. Iyengar. The organisation had ceased operation by 1970, when Ayana and Patricia Angadi separated.
Asian Music Circle co-founder Ayana Deva Angadi came to London fromBombay, India, in 1924,[2] to gain the qualifications necessary for a top position in theIndian Civil Service, under what was thenBritish imperial rule.[3] Instead, he embracedTrotskyist political philosophy and became an outspoken critic of British imperialism. During the 1930s and 1940s, Angadi wrote journal articles (often as Raj Hansa) and gave public and school lectures throughout the UK;[4] having joined theLabour Party, he discovered that his views were too extreme for the party's more moderate sensibilities.[3] Angadi's 1942 treatiseJapan's Kampf impressed Britain'swartimeMinistry of Information, but following the war, the authorities suspected him of being an agent forSoviet Russia'sCominform bureau.[4]
Late in 1939, Angadi met Patricia Fell-Clarke at a social event held at London'sDorchester Hotel.[5] The daughter of a wealthy English industrialist,[2] Patricia had similarly rejected societal norms, finding her identity as a portrait painter.[6] Despite strong objections from her family and peers,[6][7] the couple were married on May 1 1943.[5] Patricia would draw inspiration from this disapproval during her later career as a successful novelist, beginning with 1985'sThe Governess.[6]
The Angadis lived on the top floor of the Fell-Clarke family residence, in the north London suburb ofHampstead, before Patricia's inheritance allowed them to purchase their own home,[6] a large house at 116 Fitzalan Road,Finchley.[8][9] She and her husband founded the Asian Music Circle (AMC) in 1946,[4] with the aim of promoting Asian arts and culture in Britain.[6] With the Fitzalan Road property as their headquarters,[10][11] the couple went on to organise music recitals, dance performances and cultural lectures throughout the West.[12]
Visiting performers often stayed with the family, which had grown to include four children by 1949.[6] The third of these wasDarien Angadi,[13] later a choral soloist[14] and an actor inShakespearean productions byTrevor Nunn,Jonathan Miller andHerbert Wise.[15] In his bookAzaadi!: Stories and Histories of the Indian Subcontinent After Independence, author and journalist Reginald Massey writes that all the Angadi children were "brilliant and beautiful", with the youngest, Chandrika (or Clare), becoming the first Asian model to appear inVogue magazine.[16]

The Asian Music Circle's activities increased during the 1950s, such that some sources give 1953[17] or the mid-decade period as the date of its founding.[7][18] Patricia was appointed chairperson of the Hampstead Artists Council in 1953, and among her portrait subjects were Labour MPFenner Brockway and the American classical violinistYehudi Menuhin.[6] Another notable connection wasBenjamin Britten, the English classical composer, who served as the AMC's vice-president.[7] That same year, the AMC announced that its mission was to "[foster] the appreciation and study of the Music and Dances of all Asian countries, thereby creating greater understanding of Asian peoples and cultures".[19]

Also in 1953, Menuhin became the Music Circle's president, having made a visit to India, early the previous year, that had inspired him to enlighten Western listeners to the country's musical and cultural heritage.[20][21] In his 2006 bookThe Dawn of Indian Music in the West, author Peter Lavezzoli writes of the violinist's role in the AMC: "Menuhin was the ideal candidate for its leadership. In light of his relentless work schedule, he set about achieving his aim with remarkable speed."[12] Britten also made a tour of India, in 1956,[22] and began incorporating Indian and other Asian influences in his composing.[23] In June 1958, the AMC presented an Indian music and dance program as a part of theAldeburgh Festival,[22] an annual event co-founded by Britten in the late 1940s.[24]
Following Menuhin's second Indian tour, in 1954, he invitedyoga teacherB.K.S. Iyengar to Europe.[25] According to Massey, the popularity of yoga in the UK originates from the day that the Angadis hosted a demonstration by Iyengar at their north London home, attended by some of their friends.[26] Massey also credits the Asian Music Circle, and specifically Ayana Angadi, with "making the arts of thesubcontinent a part of British cultural life".[27] TheOpen University'sMaking Britain project has similarly written of the AMC's achievements: "This organization introduced Indian music, dance and yoga to the British public, paving the way for musicians such asRavi Shankar andAli Akbar Khan."[4]
In 1955, through his role as AMC president, Menuhin gained funding from theFord Foundation andJohn D. Rockefeller's Asia Society to stage the Living Arts of India Festival, in New York.[28] His original choice for the festival's featured musical performer was Ravi Shankar, after Menuhin had attended a private concert by thesitar virtuoso while in Delhi, in February 1952.[29] Shankar was forced to turn down the opportunity, in an effort to save his failing marriage toAnnapurna Devi, and instead recommended his brother-in-law, mastersarod player Ali Akbar Khan.[30][31]

The Living Arts festival, held in April 1955, marked both the first formal recital of Indian classical music in America, when Khan played at theMuseum of Modern Art (MoMA),[32] and the first appearance on US television by Indian classical artists, after Khan and his accompanists, as well asBharat Natyam dancerShanta Rao, performed on the arts and sciences showOmnibus.[33] While in New York, Khan recordedMusic of India: Morning and Evening Ragas (1955), the debut album release for Indian classical music.[33][34] In addition to concerts at the MoMA – Khan's first outside India – Menuhin and the Asian Music Circle arranged other recitals for what amounted to a short US tour.[35]
Menuhin subsequently organised for Khan to play in London later that year, atSt Pancras Town Hall.[32] The AMC then brought Ravi Shankar to Britain,[26] where thesitarist made his Western concert debut in October 1956 with a performance at London'sFriends House.[36] After Shankar's 1956 visit, arrangements for his annual UK concert tours were shared between the Music Circle and promoter John Coast.[37] The AMC also brought sitaristVilayat Khan to the UK for the first time,[26][38] a musician considered to be the era's leading exponent of sitar, together with Shankar.[39][40]
The Music Circle maintained a list of London-based Indian musicians, who were available to visiting Indian artists, as backing players. In addition, these musicians performed locally themselves, as a group, and the Angadis offered their services for film and recording work.[7] One such musician wasKeshav Sathe, atabla player from Bombay who was with the AMC over 1957–59 before going on to accompany sitaristBhaskar Chandavarkar,[41] a student of Shankar's.[42]

On one of B.K.S. Iyengar's visits to London in the early 1960s, he began holding instruction classes at the Fitzalan Road house, with future author and yoga practitioner Silva Mehta in attendance.[43] The date for when these evening classes continued in Iyengar's absence, 18 July 1961, has been cited as the birth ofIyengar Yoga.[43]
Among activities by the Angadis' pool of local musicians,George Martin, a staff producer withEMI-ownedParlophone Records, employed members of the AMC on a recording by comedianPeter Sellers in the early 1960s.[18][44] EMI continued to use Ayana Angadi as a consultant of sorts on matters relating to Indian music.[45]
In 1962, Martin began working with a new Parlophone signing,the Beatles,[46] whose second feature film,Help! (1965), reflected the West's increased interest in Indian culture.[47][48][49] While discussing the extent of this influence by the middle of that decade, author Ray Newman quotes from the bookThe New London Spy byHunter Davies,[50] who wrote: "Indian restaurants, Indian food, Indian shops, Indian cinemas, Indian concerts, Indian plays, yoga, gurus and contemplation are now all so much part of the London scene that when a grey Bentley drew into aSwiss Cottage petrol station recently and a 6 ft. 6 in. Sikh stepped out wearing a purple turban, green raw silk coat, white jodhpurs, gold slippers and an oriental dagger with a gem-studded hilt, the Irish attendant did not bother to take more than a passing glance."[51]
South Asian dance also achieved lasting popularity and influence in the UK for the first time. British audiences had been introduced to the discipline byUday Shankar's troupe during the 1920s, but South Asian dancers had struggled for recognition over the ensuing decades.[52] According to cultural historianNaseem Khan, a "new story" began in 1966 when the Asian Music Circle presented the country's first formal Indian dances classes.[53] The enduring success of these classes rested on the Angadis' decision to bring over, from South India, two instructors who had studied Bharat Natyam in the authenticguru–kula tradition. The instructors – a married couple named Krishna Rao and Chandrabhaga Devi – went on to form a dance company with their students and tour throughout Britain, Ireland and Belgium.[53]

In October 1965, Martin was producing a session for the Beatles song "Norwegian Wood",[54] which featuredGeorge Harrison playing sitar, an instrument that the guitarist had never before used on a recording.[55] When Harrison broke a string during the session, Martin suggested that the band contact Angadi to get a replacement.[56]Ringo Starr then telephoned the Fitzalan Road house and made the request.[11][57] According to the Angadis' eldest son,[16] Shankara, the whole family delivered the new string to EMI'sAbbey Road Studios and watched the recording being made.[57]
Keen to progress on the instrument, Harrison received tuition from one of the Music Circle's sitar players.[18][58] Harrison then became a regular visitor to Fitzalan Road,[8] attending recitals held there with his wife,Pattie Boyd.[6][59] Harrison and Boyd also had their portrait painted by Patricia during this time.[6] The proximity to the Angadis and their network furthered Harrison's interest in Indian music and culture, which he immediately absorbed into the Beatles' work.[60]
When recording his first Indian-styled composition for the Beatles, "Love You To", in April 1966,[61] Harrison used a tabla player, Anil Bhagwat, at the recommendation of Patricia Angadi.[62] Other AMC musicians appeared on the recording, playingtambura and sitar.[63] Bhagwat, who was funding his university education through his musical activities, received £35 for the session[64] and later described it as "one of the most exciting times of my life".[65] In the pop milieu, the song marked the first example of an artist capturing a non-Western musical form authentically, in its structure and arrangement,[66] and of Asian music being adapted without parody.[67] Bhagwat received a credit on the band'sRevolver album sleeve, a rare acknowledgement for an outside musician on a Beatles release.[68][69]
While also crediting the AMC with introducing Shankar, Ali Akbar Khan and other leading Indian classical musicians to British audiences, Massey writes of Ayana Angadi having a "seminal" influence on Western culture, due to his role in introducing George Harrison to Ravi Shankar.[26] The meeting occurred on 1 June 1966[70] when the Angadi family hosted a dinner to honour Shankar, who was in the UK for a series of performances that would include his historic duet with Menuhin at theBath Musical Festival.[71] Although not invited,Paul McCartney also attended the dinner,[72] since he was eager to meet the sitarist.[73] Shankar agreed to accept Harrison as his sitar student, so beginning an association that, music criticKen Hunt writes, "brought Indian music real global attention".[74]
Harrison's friendship with the sitarist – already the best-known Indian classical musician internationally – increased Shankar's standing to that of a rock star[75] and initiated Indian music's peak in popularity in the West, during the second half of the 1960s.[76] The meeting at Fitzalan Road is covered inAjoy Bose's 2021 documentaryThe Beatles and India, in which Shankara Angadi describes McCartney as seeming out of his depth, but not Harrison, who Boyd says must have known Shankar "in a past life".[77] In his review of the film forUncut,Pete Paphides terms this initial meeting at the AMC a "momentous encounter", given the cultural impact of the Beatles' association with India.[77]
The Asian Music Circle's cause also profited from Harrison's involvement and the heightened interest in Indian culture during this period.[78] His visits to Fitzalan Road ended in late 1966, however. Speaking to Newman, Shankara recalled: "My father was a difficult character, in some ways. He was chaotic, and never really pulled anything off he set out to do. He probably asked George for money, and that was the end of that relationship."[79]
In March 1967, Harrison again consulted the Music Circle to find suitable musicians for one of his recordings.[80] The song, "Within You Without You", features AMC members on instruments such asdilruba and tabla,[81] and appeared on the Beatles' seminal albumSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.[82] Aside from the Western string orchestration arranged andoverdubbed by Martin,[83] and Beatles assistantNeil Aspinall playing one of the tambura parts,[84] Harrison and the Indian players were the only musicians on the track.[80][85] None of the Music Circle personnel were credited by name,[84] a situation that Lavezzoli finds regrettable, given the quality of the tabla and dilruba playing.[80] Research undertaken by theUniversity of Liverpool's Department of Music has since identified the four musicians as Anna Joshi, Amrit Gajjar (both dilruba), Buddhadev Kansara (tambura) and Natwar Soni (tabla).[86][87]
Talking to Hunter Davies, Harrison bemoaned how, although the AMC's musicians played "much better than any Western musicians could do",[88] the fact that they had daytime jobs and only played music part-time was reflected in their abilities in some cases.[73] Harrison's next recordings in the genre were for the soundtrack toJoe Massot's filmWonderwall, part of which was issued as his first solo album,Wonderwall Music (1968).[89] Harrison started the sessions in November 1967, again at Abbey Road, with an unnamed tabla player among the line-up of contributors.[90] Looking for greater authenticity, he then travelled to Bombay in January 1968[91] and recorded atHis Master's Voice's studios with musicians includingShivkumar Sharma,Aashish Khan andHariprasad Chaurasia.[92]
By 1970 the Asian Music Circle had ceased operating, as the Angadis separated. That year, Angadi returned to India, and Patricia moved to a house in Hampstead'sFlask Walk.[93]
In December 1992, George Harrison became the first recipient of theBillboard Century Award,[94] partly through the former Beatle's "critical role in laying the groundwork for the modern concept ofworld music" with his Indian-influenced songs, and for his having "advanced society's comprehension of the spiritual and altruistic power of popular music".[95] In an interview coinciding with the award, Harrison said the AMC's work had continued through the larger and more professionally organisedAsian Music Circuit.[96]