

Cambridge, MA – MithasThe non-profit organization, which is known for the presentation of Hindustani and Carnatic Classical Music Concerts and the orientation of world-class musicians in the Boston area, has found their constant home at MITS Thomas Tull Konzertsaal In Cambridge, Ma.
“It is a pleasure for me to announce our new constant home in the Thomas Tull Konzerthalle in the newly built Joyce and Edward Linde building behind the Auditorium of Kresge,” said Mitha's chairman and singer Anuradha Palakurthi.

Palakurthi added that Mithas' opening concert at his new event location Vidushi Arati Ankalikar-Kartenkar, a two-time national award winner, Sangeet Natak Akademi award winners and a respected singer of Jaipur Atrauli Gharana will be seen. The concert is planned for March 22, 2025 at 6:00 p.m.
“I feel twice honored to call them my guru (arati ankalikar-artkar),” said Palakurthi. “The audience is spoiled with an extraordinary evening of Indian classical music in a state -of -the -art concert hall that is really indescribable.”
The event is organized by Mithas and supported by the Learnquest Academy of Music. Other accompanying artists are Kedar Napade (Harmonium), Suryaksha Deshpande (Tabla), Suhail Yusuf Khan (Sarangi) and Anuradha Palakurthi, which offer loud support.
The Thomas Tull Konzerthalle is located in the music building Edward and Joyce Linde IM in the Amherst Street 201 in Cambridge. Ankalikar will be the first great artist to appear in this Ultramoder concert hall, which is now the constant home of Mithas.

The entire building, including the concert hall, rehearsal rooms, classrooms and even the stainless steel boards, which form the roofing over the entrances, was designed and designed loudly with news.
“For many of us at MIT MUSIC is deeply important,” said President Sally Kornbluth with news. “This new building presents music in the heart of our campus. With musicians, the extraordinary exercise and recording areas offer the tools that they earn, and the beautiful performance hall will attract the audience both from both campus and the larger community who love live music. “

The concept of a dedicated music center on MIL has been in the works for several decades. In 2018, the institute received a cornerstone for the music building of Arts Patron Joyce Linde after the end of the theater art building in the Vassar Street and with the support of the then President L. Rafael Reif. Together with her late husband Edward H. Linde '62, the directorate of long -time supporters of the. Sanaa, an architectural company based in Tokyo, was selected for the project in April 2019.
Sanaa chose for his aesthetic beauty and expertise in acoustics. The company worked with the renowned acoustician Yasuhisa Toyota from Nagata Acoustics International and ensured that the design would provide exceptional sound quality.

The Linde music building built on the site of a former parking lot integrates seamlessly into the west campus of the MIT. The building, designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa from Sanaa, has a breathtaking but unobtrusive three-volume red brick structure, which harmonizes with nearby landmarks such as the Kresge Auditorium and the Mit-Kapelle. The 35,000 square meter area of the building offers the ideal environment for the musical expression with typical acoustic rooms such as Beatrice and Stephen Erdely Music and Culture Space, which were specially developed for the Rambax -Seegalese drum ensemble of MIT and BALINESE.

With a maximum seating capacity of 390, the Thomas Tull concert hall has adaptable features such as retractable curtains, curved wall panels and a flexible design to absorb different types of performances, from solo -acts to full jazz ensembles. The new music building also includes classrooms, rehearsal rooms and a music production system.
The Linde Music Building is in mind, among other things, for sustainability, which contains radiation-heated floors, LED lighting and a green roof. A two -story parking garage occupies the room under the building, and the outdoor area is added by “Madrigal”, a lively sculpture by Sanford Biggers, which symbolizes the power of music and tradition.
Tickets for March 22, 2025, concert with Arati Ankalikar-Kartenkar can be purchased [here].

Ankalikar, who trained with some of the best singers of India, has become a famous singer and has received national awards and recognition as one of the best singers of her generation. She also worked as a Playback singer for Bollywood and Marathi films and won the national award for the best Playback singer twice.
Through her apprenticeship, Ankalikar continues to pass on her deep understanding of Indian classical music to new generations of students and enriches the tradition of Indian music both as a performer and educator.
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