The performance was indeed brilliant with Shashank showcasing some of his signature technical prowess with high incredibly high speed play, dual octave blowing and use of multiple flutes to capture the entire gamut of sthayi.
HOWEVER, leaving the concert, I felt there was still something to be desired - something indescribable that was lacking. We went home and listened to yet another Mali recording to discover what it was. It turns out that the inconspicuous bamboo flute is in fact a magic paintbrush in disguise. It's highest form is not determined by one's skill at individual strokes of the brush, or the ability to get an exacting shade on the palette, but rather one's ability to weave a never before seen magic spell into a portrait of the goddess kalyani

In terms of musicality then, the only saving grace was that saranga which was brought out beautifully for a good TWENTY minutes.
Not ONE trace of hamir kalyani anywhere. Enough Said.
A note on the violinist, Nishant Chandran. I thought he was brilliant. Accompanying the flute is NOT easy, because of 3 reasons.
a) The speed at which they can play because there is very little physical movement required even for the most dazzling passages. The same can't be said of violin and definitely not veena.
b) Their ability to jump octave in an instant leaves you jumping across strings to catch up. Unless you are MSG, very tough to pull off at high speed without sounding like crap!
c) The 'thu thu thu' blowing technique for lack of a better name allows them to break up a sequence of notes into perfectly individual swaras, a similar treatment on the violin, cutting bow, is lets put it this way - HARD!
This coupled with a player like shashank who probably has the fastest hands in the business had me hanging on the edge of my seat each time he would turn to Nishant and expect him to play a similar immensely fast swara passage. But he played it back really well! Some of his replies in fact caught me by surprise - and it's been a while since that has happened. The last time I heard a REALLY amazing violin accompaniment in a live concert was from B.V. Raghavendra Rao TWO YEARS ago.. (But I have been away from the mylapore circles for a few years. Sigh..) My laya knowledge is just about 0 so I can't comment on the Mridangam player.
Anyhow here's the list.
Sri Shashank Subramaniam - Venu
Sri Nishant Chandran - Violin
Sri Anand Ananthakrishnan - Mridangam
Varnam - Hamsadhwani - Adi
Neevadane Gana - Saranga - Kanda Chapu
Nadaloludai - Kalyana Vasantham - Rupakam
Vara ragalaye - Cenchu Kamboji - Adi
RTP - Kalyani with Ragamalika swarams in abheri + one raga that I couldn't identify because he was playing pure flat notes. and worse coming back to kalyani at completely random times.
On request:
Chinanchiru kiliye - Ragamalika
Bhavayami - Yamuna Kalyani - Adi
Vaishnava Janatho - Khamaj???
Bhogindra Sayinam - Kuntalavarali - Adi
NO MANGALAM - Shashank believes that there are many other beautiful ragas to end the concert on...