She started by saying, there will be two set of students singing a few compositions.
Part I
Out came 4 very young girls. All dressed in pattu pavadai's etc. Proud parents with camcorders in front of me. The girls were under 10 I think. The youngest and smallest one started the sloka Gajananam in Hamsadhwani. And then the other 3 joined in. Then came a suprise. They sang Vanajaksha - varnam in Behag. Nicely done. They finished off with Shobane a krithi by Thygaraja Swami.
Part II
Six girls slightly older than the previous ones, all dressed in saris. They were accompanied by Sri Shiva Ganesh on violin and Sri Bhavani Shankar on Mridangam. They started of with the Gayathri Manthra, a raga I could not identify, sounded somewhat a close raga to Revagupti. There was a 30 seconds alapana of Sri raga by the violinist. The girls then sang a part of the Melaragamalika magnum opus by Sri Ramasamy Sivan - Pranathathihara Prabho Murare. They sang the first 6 ragas. It was nice and a crisp rendetion. Next came a 20 second brilliant Kapi alapana by the violinist. I thought Enna Thavam as usual but it was a krithi called Govindam Bhaje which had "Vasudeva" mudra. Can anyone confirm that this is akrithi of Mysore vasudevacharya? The violinist played what I thought was Panthuvarali only to finish it off with Bahar in the end. The penny dropped. As expected, Maharajapuram's Thillnana on Kanchi Swami in Basant Bahar was rendered.
General observations - I am suprised by the song choices for students who were very young. However they did a nice job of it which Smt Manorama Prasad can be proud off. They got a wee bit awkward in the upper octaves, both groups. This lot took about an hour.
Part III - 45 minutes
Smt Manorama Prasad - Vocal
Sri Shiva Ganesh - Violin
Sri Bhavani Shankar - Mridangam
1. Ranjani Mala with a brief alapana of all 4 Ranjani's.
2. Sambo Mahadeva - Panthuvarali
Nice alapana, neraval @ Paramadaya. Ragamalika swaram in Karakarapriya [violin reply was excellent], Mohanam [outstanding and very pleasing], Kiravani, Hamsadhwani [again the singer and violinist excelled], Durga and Kalyanavasantham
3. Thani about 6 minutes from was very engaging
4. Thillana - Sindhu Bhairavi
5. Mangalam
Venue - The *magnificient* Concert Room in St George's Hall, Liverpool. Huge ceilings and beautiful decorations. Victorian building example at it's best. The sound system was not up to the mark, but that was explained by the organisers. This was the first Indian music concert in St George's Hall and the sound engineers weren't aware of the needs

Overall I am happy bunny to have listened to some quality music live after a few years. I am off to watch the Manchester United v Everton game now

Thukadas
South Indian Mama one moaned about the quality of coffee during the interval in chaste Tamil. Very amusing. As R K Narayan once said "Don't ask a South Indian whether he wants white or black coffee ... for us it's always BROWN"

Few wayward tourist walked in and out. St George's Hall is huge and part of it is open as a tourist attraction. Which was very disconcerting. So did the girls who sang before, all dressed in jeans and high heals which made that annoying "tok tok" noise as they went in and out. Just proved my theory, these lot are just not interested. I expected all of them to be seated and listen with care to what their Guru was singing ... maybe that's too much to ask these days!!