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  1. Srinivas (also known as Mandolin Shrinivas) was undergoing treatment for a liver condition [32] and had undergone a liver transplant on 11 September 2014. While recovering, he died at Apollo Hospital at 9:30 AM on 19 September 2014 after experiencing complications.

  2. Sep 25, 2015 · The man who successfully gave an alien western instrument like the Mandolin a permanent place of reverence within the conservative corridors of Carnatic music was its first and last genius ever.

  3. Sep 19, 2014 · Srinivas’s first guru was Rudraraju Subbaraju, who started teaching him because he saw the potential in him. Since Subbaraju did not know how to play the mandolin, he would sing and Srinivas would play the tune on the mandolin.

  4. Oct 1, 2014 · Mr. Shrinivas (often spelled Srinivas) used his mandolin to create a personalized style within the rigorous strictures of Indian classical music, becoming a stand-alone star in the process.

  5. Oct 20, 2017 · Mandolin U Srinivas’s style was marked by innovation and a deep understanding of both Western and Carnatic music. Initially playing the acoustic mandolin, he later switched to the electric mandolin, which allowed him to effortlessly play the intricate gamakas and deergha swaras.

  6. Sep 20, 2014 · The electric mandolin player, who passed away in Chennai on Friday morning at the shockingly young age of 45, was many things: a child prodigy, a trailblazer, a serious Carnatic instrumentalist...

  7. Sep 19, 2014 · But it is courage that most plainly marks out the career Uppalapu Srinivas, the swift-fingered mandolin artist who passed away in Chennai on Friday, after a bout of illness, at the age of 45.