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sur
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 History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
A short introduction to Indian Music
Indian classical music is defined by two basic elements : it must follow a classical mode, the raga, and a specific rhythm or tal.
A music which follows the characteristics of this tradition is called classical - in opposition to Western classical music, where classical means belonging to a period of time (approximatively from 16th to 17th century).
This concept of classical music is, in that way, very open. A musician can "invent" new classical forms, new poetical forms, new modes, new rhythms and Indian instrument makers can produce new instruments. All Indian classical music follows this rule even if some completely different styles exists side by side. To develop precisely a raga, the musician needs the presence of a drone, whatever the music : singers are always accompanied with the tambura or the harmonium, that produce the singer's tonic and dominant (SA and PA).
Classical Indian music is mainly divided into two branches, North and South. The South Indian music is called Carnatic, in reference of the Southern State of Karnataka, and the northern branch, Hindustani, in reference of the Hindi speaking region going to North-West Frontier and to Poorab, the East.
Carnatic music is nearly totally unified and the different schools are based on the same ragas (about 300 different ragas), same solo instruments, mainly the veena, flute, violin and same rhythm instrument, the mridangam and the ghatam. The actual development of a concert has been codified recently, around 1920 by an eminent singer, Ariyakudi Ramanuja Iyer : a dozen of short pieces are enclosing a long "alapam, tanam, pallavi, or improvisation on notes, on rhythm and poem, a classical scheme you will find also in North Indian music, except for the short piece of music at the start.
On the contrary, Hindustani Music has never been really unified, many styles and genres have been developed and encouraged by a family system now called gharana.
Those numerous gharanas all over North India have developed very different styles of music, genres and instruments. The patronage of royal families (India has been a set of feudal states for all its history before 1948) has given those gharanas the "peace of mind" necessary to create, preserve and nourish an incredible amount of genres. Today those are : Dhrupad, the 15th century temple and court genre. Qawwali, a 14th century Muslim fusion with Persian music. Khyal, the 18th century most fashionable court music. Thumri, the old dance oriented music, and Ghazal, the Panjabi love song, in vogue from 19th century till now. Each one of these names covers an incredible amount of different styles, and a layman will not make any connection between the music of instrumental court Dhrupad of the Dagar and a singer of Darbhanga Temple dhrupad.
Those genres are focusing more on a poetical form : Dhrupad, on strangely complex verse with no rime, Qawwali, on Persian couplet versification etc.
Originality comes from the fact that all those musics are inseparable of the poetry they are structured on. So even strings and percussion instruments always try to reproduce vocal music and its poems : the instrument talks, its speaks with words.
Inside each genre (including Carnatic music), many ways of singing, or vanis (same roots as "voices") have been developed. In khyal, those vanis have disappeared and dozens of schools have emerged.
As we said earlier, musicians are not obliged to play a specific instrument on a style but the musicians and their family instrument makers have invented instruments suited to each style : Rudraveena, surshringar and pakhawaj for Dhrupad. Those are fantastic, tune oriented instruments that fit dhrupad's precise tuning obligations. Sitar, sarod, sarangi, vichitraveena, flute, shehenai , santoor and tabla are suited to the fast playing speed of Khyal, Thumri and Tappa.
Last edited by sur on 01 Apr 2007 11:51; edited 2 times in total
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#1 08 Dec 2006 02:12
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| Thanks for the useful Topic sur : |
| surtaal (30 April), |
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
Hindustani raga Index
A to Z
A
Adana (vocal, Dhrupad) Adana (vocal, khyal) Ahir Bhairav (vocal, Dhrupad) Ahir Bhairav (instr., khyal) Alhaiya Bilawal Anandi Asavari
B
Basant Bageshri Behag Bhairagi Bhairagi-Bhairav Bhairav (vocal , khyal) Bhairav (Instrumental, Dhrupad) Bhairav (Vocal, Dhrupad) Bhairavi Bhatiyar Bibhas Bilaskhani Todi Bilawal
C
Chalnat Champakali Charukauns Chayanat
D
Desh (ghazal) Desh (khyal) Desh (thumri)
E - F - G
Gujari Todi (Vocal, Khyal) Gujari Todi (Vocal, Dhrupad)
H
Hanskinkini Hindol
I - J
Jaijaivanti (instrumental, dhrupad) Jaijaivanti (vocal, Khyal Agra) Jaijaivanti (vocal, Khyal Jaipur) Jog
K
Kafi (thumri Agra) Kafi (thumri Benares) Kafi (vocal, khyal) Kafi (vocal, Dhrupad) Kafi Malhar Kanakangi Kedar Khamaj (thumri Benares) Komal re Durga Komal rishab Asavari
M
Malav Malkauns Maru Behag Multani Myan ki Todi
N
Nand Nandeswari Nat Bhairav Nayaki Kanhra
O - P
Pancham patmanjari piloo Purya Danashri
Q - R - S
Sahana Kanra Sarang Saraswati Sawani Barwa shankara Shudd Sarang Shudd Kalyan (Vocal, khyal) Shudd Kalyan (Vocal, Dhrupad) Shudd Lalit Sohini Suha Suha Malhar Sugrahi Malhar
T
Tilak Kamod
U-Z
Vibhas Yaman (vocal, khyal) Yaman Kalyan (dhrupad) Yaman Kalyan (ghazal)
Last edited by sur on 01 Apr 2007 11:54; edited 1 time in total
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#2 08 Dec 2006 02:19
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
|
 History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
A Glossary Of Indian Music Terms A Glossary of Indian Music Terms
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This is an alphabetical list of the more important and frequently used terms in North Indian classical music.
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Achal - Fixed
Arohi - Ascending movement a. k. a. Arohana; Aroh
Avirbhav - To make visible the original raga form
Abhoga - Closing movement in a composition
Alaap - Unmetered Raga introduction and expansion; prelude
Andolan - Undulating vibrato
Ang - Style; as in Gayaki Ang-vocal style
Alankar - Ornaments, exercises
Antar Gandhar - Shudha Gandhar
Antara - 2nd Movement in a composition with the melodic progression generally in the uttarang region of the octave and above
Antya - Ending on
Anuvadi - Assonant note
Asthai - 1st movement in a composition with the melodic progression generally in the poorvang region of the octave and below
Asthan - Region; area: as in Mandar Asthan-lower octave region
Ati - Very
Audava - Five notes; pentatonic
Avarohi - Descending movement a. k. a. Avarohana; Avaroh
Bhajan - Devotional song
Bol /s - Sound sylabel /s. as in Tabla Bols
Carnatic - South Indian
Chakra - S. I. Melakarta raga classification. There are 12 Chakras of six ragas each, giving the 72 Melas. See Mela Chart.
Chalan - A systematic raga expansion
Chautalaa - 14 Beatr Cycle
Dadra Tal - Six beat cycle
Deepchandi Tal - Fourteen beat cycle
Dhamar Tal - Fourteen beat cycle
Dhaivata - Sixth musical note (Dha)
Drut - Fast
Ek Tal - Twelve beat cycle
Gandhar - Third musical note (Ga)
Gayaki - Vocal
Geet - Popular song or composition
Ghazal - Urdu poem, vocal song style
Grama - Ancient music scales- Shadaja, Madhyama, and Gandhar Gramas
Hindustani - North Indian
Jati - Tonal classification
Jhaptal - Ten beat cycle
Jhumra Tal - Fourteen beat cycle
Kan - Grace, as in grace note
Keharwa Tal - Eight beat cycle
Komal - Flat
Kriti - Classical composition (used in S. I. music system)
Lakshan - Introduction, definitive principles, or rules
Laya - Tempo
Madhya Saptak - Middle octave region; middle pitch register
Madhya Laya - Medium Tempo
Madhyama - Fourth musical note (Ma)
Mandar - Lower octave region; low pitch register
Manjari - Collection, bouquet
Meend - Slide or glissando
Mela - S. I. Parent mode; 72 in all; See Mela chart
Mishra - Mixed
Mridangam - Barrel shaped drum used in Carnatic classical music
Nada - Sound in general; but applies more to musical sound or else it is considered noise. Nada is of two types: Ahata (struck) and Unahata (un-struck)
Nada Brahma - This universe is sound
Nataka - Drama
Nyasa - Closing note; cadence
Nishadha - Seventh musical note (Ni)
Pakar - Characteristic musical catch phrase of a raga
Panchama - Fifth Musical note (Pa)
Pandit - A learned man; scholar
Poorvang - Lower tetrachord-Sa Re Ga Ma / modified to Sa Re Ga Ma Pa
Prati - Sharp (a. k. a. Tivar)
Raga - Modal scale
Ragini - Feminine gender Modal scale
Rasa - Emotional state. In music there are nine: Shringaar (sensual), Raudra (anger), Hasya (happy), Vibhatsaya (disgust), Veera(heroic), Karuna (sympathy), Bhayanak (fear), Adabhuta (wonder), and Shanta (peace)
Rasik - Tasteful, admirer of beauty, creator of Rasa. Author Pandit S. D. Batish's poetic name
Rishabha - Second musical note (Re)
Rupak Tal - Seven beat cycle
Sanchari - Third movement in a composition encompassing all the regions of the octave; Sanchari means wandering
Sangeet - Musical science
Sampooran - Seven note; heptatonic
Samvadi - Subsonant, the second most important note in a raga
Sandhi Prakash - Sunrise or sunset time periods
Saptak - Octave (Sapt means seven. Indian music does not count repeated notes as a part of the same octave. But saptak and octave basically imply the same meaning)
Sargam - Indian solfegio; derived from the first four notes Sa, Re, Ga, Ma
Shadaja - First musical note (Sa). A. k. a. Kharaja
Shastra - Treatise
Shaudava - Six note; hexatonic
Shruti - Musical microtone; pitch; intonation
Shudha - A pure or a natural note
Swara - Musical note
Swaroop - Image
Tabla - North Indian drum set consisting of the Dagga (bass drum) and the Tabal (Treble drum)
Tal - Rhythm cycle
Tan - An improvised vocal or instrumental musical phrase
Tanpura - String instrument used for drone; Tanpura means to fill the void behind the music; to complete or assist a tan; a. k. a. Tamboora
Tar - Upper octave region; upper pitch register
Tamboora - See Tanpura; made from a gourd (Tumba)
Thaat - Parent scale, parent mode; Thaat means to tie down as in frets
Thumri - Vocal or instrumental song style
Tintal - Sixteen beat cycle
Tirobhav - Deviating or camouflaging from the original. Concealment
Tivar - Sharp
Uttarang - Upper tetrachord-Pa Dha Ni Sa / modified to Ma Pa Dha Ni Sa
Vadi - Sonant. The most important note in a raga
Vakra - Zigzag, indirect, or crooked
Varana - Embellishment, note group
Varjit - Omitted, deleted or avoided note
Vikrit - Modified
Vilambit - Slow
Vivadi - Dissonant note
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Abbreviations used A. k. a. - Also known as R. N. I. - Ragas of North India
R. S. I. - Ragas of South India
N. I - North India
S. I. - South India
RRLM - Rasik Raga Lakshan Manjari
Last edited by sur on 01 Apr 2007 11:55; edited 2 times in total
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
|
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#3 08 Dec 2006 02:24
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
|
 History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
MUSIC Karunamaya Goswami The foundations of the mainstreams of our musical culture in the 19th and 20th centuries were already laid in the eighteenth. Narottam Thakur of Rajshahi who first evolved the organised version of the rendering of Padavali Kirtan died in 1687, when the East India Company was at war with the Mughals. Raygunakar Bharatchandra, whose many poetical compositions were rendered to music, died in 1760. Bharatchandra was the true representative of the transition of music from medieval to modern age. His contemporary Kaviranjan Ramprasad Sen (1720-1781) founded Shaktapada Sangeet school which tended to compose musical lyrics on the goddess of power. By the mid 18th century, Calcutta was already developed into a modern urban centre where art and culture was thriving. Ramnidhi Gupta, the first great innovator of modern musical developments, was born in Calcutta (1741). It was under his influence that the two reigning musical trends- shaktapada and Vaishnava Padavali were popular. By 1839, when Ramnidhi Gupta died, Bengal musical culture was almost entirely free from its medieval mores. Bangla literature began in the form of a musical composition known as Charya which was a Prabandhageeti on song composed according to some ordained musical norms. It was a north Indian musical form. We get an account of Charya in sangeetratnakar, a noted musicological treatise by Shrangadev who lived in the 13th century. The sonnet-like length of the Charya lyric and its organised singing modes infused into Bangla songs a kind of classical discipline at the very early stage. Jaydeva, a Bengali poet of the second half of the 12th century modelled his songs on the Radha- Krishna love-lore which he compiled in a collection called 'Geetagovinda' which was regarded as the forerunner of Dhrupada. Looked at historically, the early background of the musical exer-cises in Bengal which have mostly flourished through poetry was shaped by the mystical Buddhist songs known as Charya songs and the songs of Geetagovinda composed by Jaydeva. They provided an all-India musical content for the Bangla songs to evolve. But the regional musical compositional approaches of Bengal were first accommodated by Baru Chandidas in his book of songs, Shrikrishnakirtan or the Songs on Shrikrishna. Here for the first time in the compositions of Baru Chandidas we notice the advent of some musical forms peculiar to Bengal and melodies typical to the region, the present Bangladesh. But soon the regional musical approach of Bengal is found to have been blended with the mains-tream of Hindustani or northern Indian musical modalities in the varied flourishing of Padauali Kirtan. Bengali art musical trend reached great height through this historic union between the high lyricism of Vaishnavite poetry and the musical excellences of Hin-dustani tradition. Bengal's achievement in the form of Vaishnavite songs has been regarded as one of its greatest contributions to the realm of Indian musical culture. It appears from Raygunakar Bharatchandra's compositions that he was well versed in classical music. He might have acquired his skill from the great classical musical tradition of the court of the King Krishnachandra Ray (1710-1783) of Navadwip, himself a meritorious composer and great patron of creative art of all forms, particularly music and dance. Bharatchandra had influenced the future courses of musical developments in Bengal in many ways. It is true that he adopted the line of Mangalgan or the Song of Bliss which was traditionally dedicated to the gods and goddesses of power. But it is also true that Bharatchandra had himself tried to liberate the poetical as well as musical compositions of Bengal from the hold of gods and goddesses and infuse a human touch into them. It is also very important about him that even in the context of long poetic works of narrative nature Bharatchandra composed a good deal of songs' which were independently lyrical. They could really be sung and appreciated independent of the narrative. These songs, as they refer to classical musical forms and melodies and well ordained rhythms, indicate his intimate access to the norms of classical music of representative and popular nature. Bharatchandra may also be regarded as a pioneer in composing songs on Radha Krishna love episode in raga musical forms outside the area of Padauali Kirtan. He had also made initial attempts to compose small lyrical songs on the Goddess of Power. From these considerations, perhaps, it will not be an exaggeration to consider Bharatchandra Ray as the forerunner of Ramprasad Sen and Ramnidhi Gupta. It is also important about this man that he tried to transcend the poetical and musical tendencies of Bengal from their medieval tone to the modernist trends towards eroticism. This erotic element, which was present in Jaydeva's Geetagouinda, was hitherto largely suppressed under the influence of multifarious Vaishnavite songs of devotional nature. But Bharatchandra's powerful portraiture of eroticism created a fresh interest in it and the sentiment was very largely explored, often tending to vulgarity in folk dramas and musical compositions of folk dramatic nature. It was particularly found to suit the taste of emerging city elite made up of mostly the rich people. As it has been already pointed out, the trend of Vaishnavite songs was on the wane at the end of the 18th century and Kaviranjan Ramprasad Sen (1720-1781) made the beginning of a golden age of Shaktapadasangeet or songs on goddesses of shakti (energy).1 Ramprasad Sen has gone down in history as a great maker of shyamasangeet or songs on goddess Kali. As far as the thematic excellence of his lyrics is concerned Ramprasad commu nicated unorthodox sense of Bhakti or devotion and a strong longing for the Mother's love. In fact, his depiction of goddess Kali as a loving Mother served as a great factor for the popularisation of his songs. There is always a distance between the worshipper and the worshipped. But Ramprasad had struck off the distance bet ween Kali whom he conceived as universal mother and the ordinary folk. The universal mother was conceptualized into an ever obliging human mother. This mother-child theme was heightened in a kind of melodic pattern known as Prasadi Sur. The melodic pattern goes after the name of Ramprasad because he had himself created it through a union between a classical melody and baul, a folk musical type of Bengal. Prasadi Sur is simple, sweet and touching. It contributed greatly in popularising the songs of Ramprasad; the pattern was keenly followed by almost all the later Bengali musi-cians down to Kazi Nazrul Islam. The matter of Prasadi Sur is really very important in the sense that here we notice the beginning of the trend of unison between classical musical patterns and the folk musical forms outside the area of Padauali Kirtan. This musical attitude continued in Bengal ever since and subsequently it led to various salutary consequences. Music directors of Bengal theatrical stage exploited this musical norm in many ways and it reached an extraordinary height under which the musical creativity of Rabindranath Tagore took shape. The highly personalized relation that Ramprasad Sen estab-lished in his shyamasangeet between the goddess Kali and her devotee was brought closer to human relationship in those songs he composed on Uma or goddess Durga. This is also a type of song first composed by Ramprasad. It was called Agamani. Its subject matter was agaman or coming of goddess Durga from the Himalyan home of her husband, Shiva, to her parents' home somewhere in the' same Himalayan range. It is a parable of the worship of the goddess Durga for three days and her departure on the fourth. Ramprasad had very efficiently represented the anxiety of Menaka, mother of Uma, also the other name of Durga for her daughter living very far from her, her joy at her coming to pay a fond visit and her agony at Durga's departure on the day of uyaya. In the agamani songs of Ramprasad Sen, a goddess who killed the demons to liberate the heaven, has been represented as a sorrowful daughter of an ever sorrowing earthly mother. In both of the trends of Shaktasangeet, namely, Shyamasangeet and Agamani, Ramprasad Sen was able to bring the theme of devotion to an intimately personal level portraying the joys and sorrows of domestic life. This made his songs popular and like the Vaishnauite songs, his songs on Kali and Durga were also sung by the great and the small alike. The trends of Shyamasangeet and Agamani as founded by Ramprasad Sen were very largely followed by the later composers in Bengal. From Kamalakanta Bhattacharya (1772-1821) to Kazi Nazrul Islam (1899-1976) Ben-gali composers in general had further enriched devotional songs. Ramnidhi Gupta, popularly known as Nidhu Babu (1741-1839) was destined to begin a new age in the history of musical culture of Bengal. Musically, the period may be called the age of Tappa and in contents, the age of humanism in Bangla songs. Tappa was a new form of Hindustani classical music introduced by a Lucknow musi-cian, Gulam Nabi, popularly known as Shori Mian, a contemporary of Nidhu Babu. Ramnidhi was taught Tappa by some teachers who learned the new art directly from Golam Nabi's school. Tappa lyric was made up of two stanzas devoting mostly to the theme of love between man and woman. This was delivered in a kind of light classical style which has been described as a product of combi-nation between Hindustani music (lighter than Kheyal) and the Punjabi folk songs, sung generally by the camel drivers. Ramnidhi was highly attracted to this new musical form of Hindustan and aspired to create its Bengali version which he did with great success. In the new form he made experiments with far reaching effect, indeed. A shift in the theme of Bangla art songs should be mentioned at the outset. From the mystic Buddhist songs, Charangeeti, to Ramprasad Seri s song on goddess Kali, Bangla songs were normally directed to achieving some spiritual ends. They were religious songs sung as part of performing religious rites. But Ramnidhi Gupta created a different trend of Bangla art songs by introducing the themes of human end, particularly of love between man and woman. It is true that pulsations of human love could be discerned in the Vaishnavite songs on Radha-Krishna episode. It has been asserted by critics that Radha-Krishna love episode served as an effective allegory to portray all the conceivable modes of human love. It was a spiritual version of the affectionate relation between earthly man and woman. But Nidhu Babu had the power and courage to come out of this trend and make physical love the theme of his Tappa. A human theme devoid of allegory and symbolism, therefore, was first delineated in Bangla songs. The age of humanism in Bangla songs and for that matter in Bangla poetry had its humble begi-nning. In this way by the end of the 18th century the musical creativity of Bengal was formed to flourish in two major trends: one was the humanist trend as it began in the love songs of Ramnidhi Gupta and the other one was spiritual or the devotional trend as it followed from Charya songs on the Vaishnavite musical composi-tions. Tappa was the musical medium of the humanist trend of Bangla songs. It also marked the beginning of the modern age in the history of musical culture of Bengal and, largely speaking, in the history of Bangla poetry. Ramnidhi Gupta liberated Bangla songs from the limitations of sectarianism and imbibed them with the secular universal humanist spirit, particularly with the spirit of love. It is in this context that he was considered as "not only the founder of tappa, the primary inspiration of modern Bangla art songs has also come from him."2 It is no exaggeration to remark that until the end of the 19th century few practitioners of music could keepthemselves free from the pervading influence of Nidhu Babu.3 It is also very important about Nidhu Babu that he connected the trend of Bangla secular song with the central stream of Hindustani classical music. Bangla songs were first composed after the model of Prahandha sangeet on medieval form of classical music and it had an all India context. But the connection between the musical compositions from Bengal and all Indian musical norms quite disturbed the Vaishnavite songs which had predominantly regional musical elements. It is also asserted by some that Hindustani classical music did not assume any significant dimension in the musical development of Bengal till the close of the 18th century. At least the modern forms of Hindustani classical music developed in centres like Delhi, Lucknow, Benares etc. were yet to shape the development of Bangla songs. Distance of Bengal from the centres of Hindustani classical music, want of Bengali composers trained in the mainstream of classical music and rise of some regional compositional forms in Bengal have been identified as the reasons for the gap between Hindustani classical music and the Bangla musical works. But an age of close relationship between modern forms of Hindustani classical music and the musical works of Bengal is found to have been established by the end of the 18th century. Various reasons are attributed to this historical situation. It was during this period that Hindustani classical musicians in a very large number began to emigrate to Bengal in search of patronage. Their employment in the ruling households in various parts of Bengal contributed to creating a classical musical environment in the country. Bengali composers and musicians, inspired by their Hindustani colleagues, began to show increasing interest in classi-cal musical forms. A golden age of communion of very far reaching results between the mainstream of Hindustani classical music and the musical achievements of Bengal had thus begun in the period from the closing years of the 18th century to the early decades of the 19th. Ramnidhi Gupta did the most important pioneering work during the initial years when the tradition of Hindustani musical norms was infused into those of Bengal. He began to compose tappa in Bengali after the Golam Nabi model of Lucknow. Here for the first time Bengali art songs began to conform to Hindustani musical norms. The tappa tradition of Bengal was also enriched by Kalidas Chattopadhyay (1750-1820) popularly known as Kali Mirza. Kalidas learned the art of tappa in Benares from someone belonging to Golam Nabi's school. So Nidhu Babu and Kali Mirza both trained in the art of Hindustani tappa founded the Bengali tappa school and thus introduced a new dimension into the musical culture of Bengal. Meanwhile Raghunath Ray (1750-1836), a contemporary of Nidhu Babu and Kali Mirza began to compose Bangla songs in imitation of Kheyal form. Kheyal is the second important school of Hindustani classical music; the first being dhrupada. The Kheyal style was modernised by Sadarang, a musician allegedly of Tansen's daughter's line. In the same period Ramshankar Bhattacharya (1761-1853) of Bisnupur, Bankura began to compose songs in Bengali conforming to dhrupada norms. This is how the tradition of composing the Bangla dhrupad began and Ramshankar founded the Bishnupur school of dhrupada which is known as the only great dhrupad gharana or dhrupad school in Bengal. Thus by the close of the 18th century and beginning of the 19th Bangla songs are seen to have been composed conforming to three out of four modes of Hindustani classical music, namely dhrupad, kheyal and tappa, the fourth being thumri. It is true that, in the process, there was some resistance in Bengal against the import of Hindustani music. But music in Bengal has always been applied to heighten the lyrical suggestivity. In spite of that, in structure and content art music traditions of Bengal assumed the characteristics of the extended forms of the Hindustani musical styles. Tappa earned a great deal of popularity as soon as it was intro-duced in Bengal. It was in high demand among the composers as well as the listeners. Its freshness in both music and lyrical content had caught popular attention immediately. Songs were not only composed in pure tappa style, the style was also applied to some other musical forms of Bengal for which they assumed a different musical dimensions. Composers like Dasharathi Ray (1806-1857), Shridhar Kathak (1816-?), GovindaAdhikari (1800-1872), Ashutosh Dev (1803-1856), Kashiprasad Ghosh (1809-1873), Radhamohan Sen and Jagannathprasad Basu Mallik of the first half of the 19th century and Manomohan Basu (1831-1912) were all reputed for their tappa compositions. Many of them tried to imitate Ramnidhi Gupta and some of them were so successful in doing so that in the absence of strict vigilance on the matter of authorship during those days some of the tappas of Nidhu Babu passed for those of some later composers. D. L. Ray, a major Bengali poet, dramatist and composer of songs, was keenly interested in tappa and composed a good number of songs in tappa style. He had also exploited a com-pound form called tap-kheyal, a mix of tappa and kheyal. Surendranath Majumdar (1865-1935), who had great influence on D. L. Ray, had an excellent command over tap-kheyal form. Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) had been greatly influenced by the tappa musical style. lie made successful experiments in dove-tailing the tappa style with his own musical innovations. It may be thus observed that for the period from Nidhu Babu to Rabindranath Tagore tappa and tappa based musical styles nourished Bangla art songs in many ways. The 19th century composers of Bangla love songs drew their inspiration principally from the tappa tradition set by Ramnidhi Gupta. Now we may turn to a popular musical form called kaui. It is a form of music executed in a kind of a competition between two singing parties, each led by a Kaui (Poet) or Kauiwalah. The compe-tition is held over a theme drawn usually from the mythological literature. The leading poet or Kaui of either of the singing parties which is scheduled to sing first throws a question for the leading poet of the other party to answer. The poet who fails to make the 'correct' answer loses the competition. The whole performance is divided into several sessions and each session is again subdivided into several musical parts. Although kaui is a form of folk music, it is highly organized and the total music is delivered in several steps each having a name of its own. Kaui stands for a musical organi-sation peculiar only to Bengal. Rajyeswar Mitra, a noted Bangla music critic believes that the tradition of Kavigaan or Kavi songs originated from Kawali, a form of Islamic devotional composition. He says: The Nawabi rule in Bengal from Murshid gulf to Alivardi brought internal peace and during this time the popular music of Bengal made a headway as against the old and static classical form. The most outstanding creation of this age was the kavi songs. It was a very lively form since it was wordy duel set in tunes. Generally an episode on the life of Shri Krishna and Gopis was the theme and one party raised an issue while the other gave _a fitting reply when the former ended. Its movements were distinctly different from the existing classical types. Movements like Chitan, Parchitan, Fuka, Melta, Mohara, Shawari etc. used in kavi were not conventional movements which were Sthayi, Antara, Sanchari and Abhog used in classical songs. The Kavi songs were akin to Qawali songs in many respects and equal importance on percussion instruments was laid in both these varieties. It appears that the idea of Kavi songs occurred from gawali songs held among the aristocrats of the ruling circles and an indigenous form was established by degrees.4 We are not much inclined to accept this theory. In spirit Kawali and kavi are, in fact, musical discourses of different natures and there is no substance in linking kavi with Kawali, for there were ample elements in Bangla songs preceding kavi to give rise to this typical musical genre. The wordy duel which has been identified as a characteristic of kavi songs existed in plenty in the Vaishnavite ballads. The wandering poets of Bengal known as Kathaks had established a tradition of impromptu rendering in rhyme of narratives glorifying gods and goddesses. These formed the bases of kavi songs because kavi elements are found in the tradition of Bangla songs long before Kawali, sung mostly in Urdu was carried into Bengal. But Rajyeswar Mitra is quite right when he says that kavi, in its organisation of musical parts or movements, speaks of original musical thought of Bengali composers. It has no relation to the structural design of dhrupada, made up of four movements, namely, Sthayi, Antara, Sanchari and Abhog and Kheyal and post- kheyal classical forms which are made up of two movements, namely, Sthayi and Antara, Xavi is presented in movements which have been called Chiten, Parchiten, Fltka, Melta, Mahra, Shawari, Khad and Antara. These exemplify the power of Bengali folk poets to execute a long musical discourse through an intricate amalgam ofmovements. A full course of kaui songs made of all the movements was called Danda Kaui. Raghunath Das (1725-1790) has been named as the founder of Danda Kaui. Gojla Gain (1704-?) is known as the founder of kaui tradition. Lalu-Nandalal, Ramji, Raghunath Das – all disciples of Gojla Gain made the primary background of kaui songs.It flourished extraordinarily by the end of the 18th century. Rasu (1735-1807), Nrisingha (1738-1807), Haru Thakur (1738-1812) , Nitai Bairagi (1751-1818), Basu (1786-1828) contributed greatly towards the flourishing of the kaui. The tradition of the kaui musical discourse grew uninterrupted till the middle of the 20th century and it was on the wane under the impact of ever flourishing city musical culture. Ramesh Shil of Chittagong and Sheikh Gumani Dewan of Murshidabad have made great contributions towards the making of present-day, kavi songs. For the history of art song, the whole of the nineteenth century makes an important era when it developed in many ways in content as well as in form. It was practically from the beginning of this century that the Bengal composers began to adopt modern stan-dard, and consequently musical works of Bengal entered into an age of strict structural discipline. The introduction of tappa by Ramnidhi Gupta, of kheyal by Raghunath Ray and of dhrupada by Ramshankar Bhattacharya created a sharp awareness among the Bengali composers about the lyrical and musical structures of songs. Dhrupada and dhrupada-based songs were made of four movements and Kheyal and tappa and kheyal-based and tappa-based songs conformed to two movements. We must not ignore the fact that the Hindustani form was an extension of central Hindustani musical discipline developed earlier in Gowaliwar, Delhi, Benares and Lucknow. Bengal did not only follow the lyrical and musical norms, the vocalists of Bengal. had also begun to learn the characteristic style of singing in each genre for which they had to undergo systematic training. A large batch of Bengali vocalists of classical background grew up soon and the number of rigorously trained singers began to multiply apace. Historically speaking, a remarkable modern musical atmosphere of Hindustani connection began to prevail in Bengal from the beginning of the 19th century and the classical musical trends of abstract nature brought forth different impacts when they were adopted into rich lyricism in Bengal. An age of extensive experimentation in music had also begun at the same time. With the kind of development that we have charted above an era of great musical preparation began in the early nineteenth century and the exercise had yielded rich dividend during the later part of the century. The important trends of musical compositions in Bengal in the 19th century may be termed as love songs, Brahma sangeet and patriotic songs. It may be mentioned here that this is not a musical grouping. It is merely a classification in terms of lyrical themes. The portrayal of love between man and woman in the early 19th century Bangla songs is very important. It marked the beginning of a gradual and important development of Bangla love songs stripped of all metaphysical symbolism. The 18th century Kavi composers made a significant breakthrough in this respect. They almost got out of the Radha-Krishna symbolism and portray the sentiment of love in human spirit although they could not dare to bring in heroes and heroines who were men and women in flesh and blood. Ramnidhi Gupta had the courage and capability to cross that border of waning metaphysical symbolism and compose songs on man-woman relationship, emphasizing particularly the sense of uiraha or separation. Historically, "the element of love was first introduced in Bangla songs through Kaui compositions and Nidhu Babu first of all stripped the Kaui spirit of other associations and himself composed songs to portray individual love."5 Tappa was his medium and he modified Golam Nabi's version to some extent to suit it to the mood of Bangla lyricism. There had been a great deal of diversification in the composition of love songs from Nidhu Babu to Rabindranath Tagore, but tappa had always been playing a pivotal role. The acquaintance of the Bengali poets with the western ideas and institutions had tremendously influenced the form of Bangla love songs. In Bangla songs we, for the first time, come across the feelings of woman's right to love. But the social impediments were great. In real life, man and woman in love can seldom unite. The name of Biharilal Chakrabarty (1835-1894) may be mentio-ned for his particular contribution to the 19th century trend of Bangla love songs. He enriched the language of lyric, intensified the spirit of romanticism and made nature a companion of individual existence. The idea of eternal feminine in a non-metaphysical context was first epitomised by him in Bangla songs. Once by way of paying respects to Biharilal Chakrabarty, Rabindianath Tagore said: "I can this much say that nowhere in modern Bangla literature the love songs have so much flourished. Nowhere other than in his compositions we get such beautiful language, intense emotion and combination of melody with words."6 The trend of love songs founded by Nidhu Babu and Biharilal Chakrabarty continued to flourish and acquire greater aesthetic dimensions. Brahma sangeet, which is associated with the Brahma move-ment, constituted an important trend in the 19th century. Brahma is a Vedic word for God. Brahma songs, therefore, mean songs about Brahma. Brahma songs were sung as a part of worship of the Brahma as prescribed in a new form of Hinduism founded by Raja Rammohan Roy which he called Brahma religion or religion of God. God as understood in Brahma religion is one, indivisible and form-less. It is in essence different from a traditional Hindu idolatrous concept. So the songs were in spirit different from the traditional Hindu devotional songs of idolatrous sentiment. Brahma songs were sung in praise of one, indivisible, formless God. Rammohan Roy was also the founder of Brahma school of songs which he himself had termed as 'Brahma songs'. Rammohan, a man of great musical talent, was a connoisseur of Hindustani classical music. and he himself learned it from Kali Mirza. He had a belief in the efficacy of songs as the medium of prayer and self-purification. He, therefore, made prayer songs an inseparable part of Brahma worship, and himself took part in such Brahma worship. Brahma songs had played a pioneering role in founding the tradition of Bangla devo-tional songs of a new spirit. A collection of songs composed by him called 'Brahma sangeet' was published in 1828. Brahma songs earned distinctive features in many ways. It may be noticed that since its inception, Brahma songs tended to practise classical musical forms. At the invitation of Rammohan Roy, Bishnu Chakrabarty (1804-1900), a pioneer dhrupada singer joined the Brahma temple as a musician. He had played an important role in shaping the musical style of Brahma songs and it was under his influence that dhrupada musical tradition was almost inseparably linked with Brahma sangeet. Apart from Rammohan Roy, some of his friends took the responsibility of composing Brahma prayer songs. The tradition of Brahma songs continued unabated. In course of time divisions had cropped up in Brahma society and break-away leaders established new sects but the trend of Brahma songs was never altered. Rather newer musical attitudes of the reformed sects contributed to enriching the main stream undergoing diversification and enlarge-ment. Keshabchandra Sen (1838-1884) came in conflict with Debendranath Tagore (1817-1905) and broke away.from the mainstream of Brahma Samaj and founded a new sect called Indian Brahma Society (1866). The composers of prayer songs of this sect paid attention to the indigenous music and followed the Padauali Kirtan style. The Society got further split-up when Shibnath Shastri (1847-1911) and Anandamohan Basu (1840-1916) differed with Keshabchandra Sen and founded their own sect known as Sadharan Brahma Samaj (1878). But the dhrupada musical style was continued in the old Brahma society under the leadership of Debendranath. The greatest development of Brahma musical tradition took place in the line of old Brahma society and the best in this respect was done by Rabindranath Tagore. The composers of Brahma songs enriched the Bengal musical genres in various ways. While adopting the ways of classical music, they, at the same time, utilized the folk musical styles as well. According to a musical commentator: "In this way within one hundred years Brahma songs turned into an ocean out of the union of musical streams of all kinds and led to the future course of Bangla art songs into an immeasurable possibility."7 By the end of the 19th century the traditional Hinduism of idolatrous spirit tried to make, through reforms, a revival of its old self. Ramkrishna Paramahansa (1836-1886) and his disciple Vivekananda (1863-1902) revived the cult of Goddess Kali and Shishir Ghosh (1840-1911) revived the Vaishnavite cult. As a re-sult, a fresh enthusiasm was created about traditional forms of Hinduism and Brahma religious movement thus put under pressure to make it more broadbased. There was a corresponding rejuve-nation of Hindu devotional songs of idolatrous spirit. Kazi Nazrul Islam (1899-1976) made the best musical response to this need. Cont......
Last edited by sur on 01 Apr 2007 11:57; edited 2 times in total
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#4 01 Apr 2007 11:29
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
MUSICKarunamaya GoswamiPatriotic songs entered its second phase during the anti-partition movement 1905-1911. It is truly said though the tradition of Bengali patriotic songs originated in the Hindu Mela, but it flourished during the anti-partition days.9 Hundreds of anthologies of songs were published not only from Calcutta, but also from far flung mofussil towns in rural Bangladesh. Rabindranath Tagore was the principal composer during this period. The anti-partition movement inspired all the important contemporary composers like Dwijendralal Ray (1863-1913), Atulprasad Sen (1871-1934), Raja-nikanta Sen (1865-1910), Mukunda Das (1878-1934), Kaliprasanna Kavyavisharad (1861-1907), Amrita Lal Basu (1853-1929), Pramathanath Roychoudhury (1872-1949), Bijaychandra Majumdar (1861-1942), Ashwinikumar Dutt (1856-1923), Sarala Debichoudhurani (1872-1945), Kaminikumar Bhattacharya and Manomohan Chakrabarty to compose songs on the anti-partition movement. Rabindranath Tagore composed most of his patriotic songs during this period including his most celebrated one: 'My golden Bengal I love you', which is now the national anthem of Bangladesh. A remarkable feature of the patriotic songs is that although composed to serve a particular occasion or need they outlived the contemporary need through their immortal poetical and musical merit. Tagore had utilized the folk musical stock of Bengal, particu-larly Baul, to compose melody for the patriotic songs of this period. Patriotic songs of Dwijendralal Ray were very popular in this period. They had a fresh musical tone acquired from western music. Their musical design of gradual rise and fall added a new charm about them and made singing in chorus attractive. D. L. Ray had also composed some parodies on patriotic sentiment. Rajanikanta Sen is found to compose some patriotic songs for the movement opposing the partition of Bengal. His illustrious song: "Accept as a blessing the coarse cloth given by mother" symbolising the popular spirit of the boycott of foreign goods, was very, widely sung during and after the movement. Atulprasad Sen composed many patriotic songs most of which earned general popularity for him. Barisal, a district town in southern Bengal; was an important place of political movements. The anti-partition movement ran very high there and inspiring patriotic songs were composed by nationalist poets of Barisal among whom included Mukunda Das (1878- 1934) and Ashwini Kumar Datta (1856-1923). As a composer of patriotic songs Mukunda Das was soon able to transcend the borders of Barisal and establish himself as a composer at national level. So intense was his power of reflecting the heroic sentiment in songs that possibly none among the Bengali composers other than Kazi Nazrul Islam could be compared with him in this respect. He was known as the wondering poet of Bengal. He moved from place to place to sing his self-composed songs and stage his patriotic plays passed as swadeshi jatra. He epitomised almost all the tendencies of Bangla patriotic songs. Like many other past and contemporary poets Mukunda Das looked upon the motherland as a goddess, preferably a goddess of power. He held high the tradition of milangaan or song of unity, particularly between the Hindus and the Muslims. The trend of Bangla patriotic songs was on the wane when the Bengal partition was annuled in 1911. Of the important composers of the trend Kaliprasanna Kavyavisharad died in 1907, Rajanikanta Sen died in 1910, D. L. Ray died in 1913 and Rabindranath Tagore and Atulprasad Sen diverted their genius to composing songs of different sentiments. Only Mukunda Das was there to compose in the old trend. Now we pass on to the third phase which is, in fact, the phase of Rabindranath Tagore. Tagore's musical life may be divided into three phases: the first phase extends from 1881 to 1900, the second phase from 1900 to 1920 and the third phase from 1921 to 1941. The first phase is called the period of preparation, the second phase is called the phase of experimentation and the third phase has been termed as the phase of composition per excellence. In the first phase of his musical life Rabindranath Tagore had mostly turned his attention to composing songs in imitation of some existing stock-songs in Hindi. In the second phase he began to create melodies of his own on the basis of Hindustani classical musical forms. It marked the beginning of Tagore style musical compositions. Most of Tagore's patriotic songs were composed in this period. He began to pay increasing attention to folk musical forms from this time onward. The third phase provided the mature Tagore compositions widely acclaimed for their characteristic Tagore style: The characteristic Tagore songs are those which he composed in the last phase on the basis of experiences and experimentation on every wide range. Rich in variety and novelty these compositions are regarded as Tagore's great contributions to the stock of Indian music.10 The mature Tagore musical style was evolved out of a combi-nation of folk melodies particularly baul with classical melodies and baul form with classical musical forms. Coming to the last phase of his creative life Rabindranath paid highest attention to heightening the lyrical suggestivity with the help of music. This was, of course, the motto of his whole career as a composer. Rabindranath Tagore has himself put his songs in four principal groups which he called Puja (worship), Swadesh (homeland), Prem (love) and Prakriti (nature).- There are two minor groups called 'variety' and 'occasional.' Tagore's 'worship' class of songs are about 650 in number. These songs were composed in Brahmasangeet tradition. He belonged to old Brahma society under the leadership of his father and the dhrupada based musical line of the society was his musical ideology which is of course true not only, of his devotio-nal songs but also of songs of other categories. The devotional songs on one indivisible God of Brahma religion were composed by hundreds of Bengali lyricists, but the best of this kind was composed by Rabindranath Tagore. His Brahma songs stand for the highest achievements in the domain of Bengali devotional songs. Allegiance to God has been communicated in a combination of lyricism and music that inspires every believing soul. So when the Brahma religious movement has gone on the wane, Tagore songs have remained lovable. They have never assumed the limitations of communal prayer songs. They reflect the spirit of universal prayer. This enables Tagore songs of devotion to withstand the test of time. Tagore had composed some three hundred songs on nature. They have been known as seasonal songs as they muse natural states in Bengal through the changing cycles of weather. Here we notice the fullest blossoming of the romantic attitude to nature pioneered in Bangla lyrical compositions by Biharilal Chakrabarty who is also said to have inspired Tagore. Tagore does not merely describe the visible changes in nature: in flowers, in plants and creepers, in wind, in river and in sky etc.; he also communicates the corresponding states of human mind. The existence of human element in Tagore songs on nature is, therefore, very deep. The relation between music and nature has always been very intimate. This took rather an organised shape in classical music where seasonal melodies have been planned and six major ragas have been exclusively left to six seasons. Civilization of man grew up in the lap of nature in early days. Pulsations in nature were quickly felt in the state of human mind. Natural festivals were parts of man's living. But people were being increasingly cut off from nature as the rural civilization was on the wane and cities as the centres of modern industrial civilization grew up and expanded. Rabindranath Tagore tried to revive that sinking relation between man and nature in his songs and in seasonal festivals that he introduced in Shantiniketan. He came to north Bengal to take charge of the estate at the age of thirty. There he passed year after year in the midst of trees, creepers, green and golden fields, shadowy villages, and roaring rivers. At the age of forty Rabindranath founded the Shantiniketan school. There he lived very close to rural environ ment. He composed sixteen songs on summer, one hundred fifteen on rain, thirty on autumn, five on late autumn, twelve on winter and ninety six songs on spring. These make the best of Bengali seasonal songs. The seasonal festivals introduced by Rabindranath Tagore and the dance sketches and songs he composed on the season-cycles are regarded as his great contributions to the musical culture of Bengal. Tagore composed over four hundred love songs. In respect of number they stand next to devotional songs. The trend of composing love songs extends from the first to the last phase of Tagore's creative life. He never failed to be inspired with the intrinsic charm of love. As in music, so in theme, a gradual development marks Tagore's composition of love songs. In love songs of the first phase of his musical life we get the feeling of a highly personalized love, a known environment of living, as if we get Rabindranath himself in love. But in, later phases the portrayal of feeling passes into a change and personalized state of mind merges into a universal urge. In the mature Tagore songs of love we feel the presence of an eternal urge that tends to make universal man crave for universal woman of his fascination and universal woman crave for universal man of her choosing. In this sense of course they become songs of spiritual impulse. Like the best of Bangla love songs Tagore songs on love are never songs of union between man and woman. They never reflect a joyous mood. They are songs of separation symbolizing rather like the Vaishnavite songs the eternal separation between the eternal masculine and the eternal feminine. Sometimes the beloved is so much spiritualised that it becomes difficult to distinguish between a love song and a song of devotional sentiment. Songs of human love were first composed by Ramnidhi Gupta. Since then throughout the 19th century innumerable love songs had been composed by hundreds of Bengali poets. But the most sublime form of it from lyrical as well as musical points of view was attained by Rabindranath. Tagore's musical ideal was dhrupada. Once he told Dhurjatiprasad Mukhopadhyay, "We have got two things in dhrupada; on the one hand we have got its vastness and depth and on the other we have got its control and symmetry."11 Depth, control and symmetry are the virtues which characterize the musical compositions of Tagore. It must be said here , that Tagore had only taken the essence of dhrupada music. He never followed its intricate ways of improvi-sations. His highest objective in musical composition was to heighten the lyrical suggestivity. He did it with a kind of missionary zeal throughout his life without submitting to natural musical temptations. The way of music, particularly when it is the way of Hindustani classical or semi-classical music, is always elusive. It mesmerizes one into the depth of countless ways of improvisations. But Tagore himself being a great admirer of Hindustani classical music could get rid of intricacies of performance and set the lyric to melody with a stern poetic motto of bringing out the message of vani or the lyrical part of the song. Rabindranath had not only followed the ideology himself, he had also founded this tradition of musical composition through more than two thousand of his songs. He had also largely followed the dhrupada structural design. It was a four stanza musical division. Prior to him musical compositions in Bengal were mostly made of two musical stanzas. But Rabindranath Tagore founded the tradition of four stanza musical composition which formed the basis of modern Indian musical exercises. In these ways Tagore had taken single-handed efforts to improve upon the 19th century trends of music and founded a sublime tradition of his own which is regarded as the most wonderful musical achievement in modern India. D. L. Ray attained a great fame by devising an encouraging musical style which was the product of a brilliant combination of Hindustani classical music and western musical pattern. He applied this neo-musical style with great success to his patriotic songs. The western way of lively gradual musical rise and fall added a new dimension to the expressiveness of his compositions. Interesting comments on this musical innovation was made by Kalidas Ray, a renowned Bengali poet and critic. He said: This kind of liveliness was not present in our music. D. L. Ray derived this liveliness from Western music and instilled it into the music of our land. He introduced in our country what is known as movement in Western music. In our musical system melody expands pretty slowly. But D. L. Ray noticed that enthusiasm and speed have great musical value. It expands the area of melody and instills liveliness in it.12 D. L. Ray achieved unprecedented success in utilizing western chorus singing style in the raga musical frame. He had done a pioneering job in the use of marching music in patriotic songs. D. L. Ray has left testimony of great strength as a composer of love songs. He made use of raga music. But he did not opt to make use of the traditional raga musical ways. He rather adopted a personal approach and worked very hard for distinctly varying musical com- positions to suit the suggestivity of varying lyrics. He exploited tappa and kheyal and a combination of tappa and kheyal known as tap-kheyal. But everywhere he has left marks of individual approach. Jyotirindranath Tagore initiated the trend of composed music and it took a shape in him before Rabindranath achieved considerable success in what may be called a creative musical approach. Dwijendralal Ray is regarded as the greatest composer of humo-rous songs in Bangla. He is, in fact, the founder of the tradition of modern Bangla humorous songs. He achieved equal success in satirical songs as well as songs of pure humour. He composed a new musical pattern for songs of humour in which western musical elements played an effective role. It is true, although unfortunate that D. L. Ray has not been offered the position in the history of music in Bengal which he deserves as a composer. Proper attention could not have been paid to him in presence of Tagore who outshone all his contemporaries. Moreover there is no institutional support for propagation and evaluation of D. L. Ray's work. But it must be recognised that he modernised the art musical approaches in Bengal and heralded Bengal's entry into world music. Rajanikanta Sen (1865-1910) occupies an important place in the history of modern Bangla art songs. He is particularly reputed for his devotional and patriotic songs. Rajanikanta Sen was born in the district of Sirajganj in Bangladesh. Guruprashad Sen, his father was a judge. He was also a poet and musician. Rajanikanta was found to be keen in singing and composing songs since his young years. But he earned the real reputation of a composer as he settled in Rajshahi as a lawyer. D. L. Ray went to Rajshahi in 1894. There he heard him singing humorous songs which inspired him to compose songs of similar sentiment. Rajanikanta was inspired with ideas of the anti-partition movement and himself took part in it. But soon misfortunes began to loom large over him. He lost his children and he himself fell ill with ailment in kidney and then with cancer. Even from deathbed Rajanikanta Sen composed some brilliant devotional songs. Today Rajanikanta is best remembered for his patriotic and devotional songs. His humorous songs have fallen out of use. In patriotic songs he portrayed the salient themes which had been adopted by Bengali poet since the Hindu Mela days. The idea of boycott of foreign goods inspired him most. His 'accept as blessing the coarse cloth given by mother' is regarded as the best Bangla composition on the swadeshi spirit of boycott. Critics feel that only one song like this motivated the people of Bengal to consume countrymade goods. This song earned him countrywide reputation. Rajanikanta Sen will long be remembered for hil; devotional songs. Songs of such touching humility have been rarely composed in Bengal. He composed melodies out of a raga background. But the singing style he evolved was simple, unintricate and devoid of superfluous improvisations. It touchingly communicates the spirit of self-surrender. The world of Rajanikanta Sen's compositions is not very big and varied. Most of his compositions do not seem to be fascinating to the present-day Bengalis, but some of his songs definitely stand for what excellence one can achieve in music. These are enough to rank him as one who enriched the musical culture of Bengal remarkably. Atulprasad Sen (1871-1934) is one of the great five makers of modern Bengali musical culture which he had enriched in many ways. His greatest contribution, perhaps, is that he integrated the styles of Hindustani light classical forms with the Bangla art musical styles. He founded the style of composing Bangla songs in thumri genre. Thumri is the sweetest and most lyrical of Hindustani classical forms. With its initiation a new chapter was found to begin in the history of musical compositions in Bengal. We have so long heard of Bangla songs composed under the influence of tappa, dhrupada and kheyal, three of the four major Hindustani musical genres. But now thumri, under whose impact Bengal stood at the doors of an age of immense possibilities of mellifluous lyricism and musical charm. Atulprasad composed music of various tendencies, but he was at his best in thumri, and the light classical nature of thumri appears to have influenced everything he did on music, because it occupied the core of his heart. Atulprasad Sen was born in Dhaka. But he had settled himself as a lawyer in Lucknow. He composed his songs there and in songs alone he communicated the deepest urge of his soul. His songs are over two hundred in number. They have been broadly divided into four groups which he called 'God,' 'Nature,' 'Man' and 'Motherland'. His way of classifying his songs shows that he was under the influence of Rabindranath Tagore in doing so. Like D. L. Ray he had long been in England and knew western music well. But Atulprasad never took interest in pursuing western musical styles in his compositions. Raga music, particularly the light classical was his principal musical source. Under the influence of Rabindranath Tagore he took interest in the folk music of Bengal and made brilliant utilization in his compositions of baui and Kirtan melodies. In some cases his blending of folk styles with light classical ways had produced wonderful charms. Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam are the two most important makers of modern musical culture of Bengal and they till satisfy a great part of the musical tastes of the Bengalis. Nazrul appeared on the musical scene of Bengal during the hey day of Tagore age, but soon he was able to establish his distinction and initiate some new trends of far reaching consequences. Kazi Nazrul Islam began to compose songs at an early age. He worked for folk musical troupes known as Leto. The songs he composed and sketches he wrote for the leto troupes have been mostly lost. We particularly know of his musical contributions since he settled in Calcutta in 1920 after his regiment was disbanded at the end of the First World War. If the musical life of Kazi Nazrul Islam is divided into several phases, then the first phase should be called the phase of patriotic songs extending over a period from 1920 to 1926. He is found to put maximum emphasis on composing patriotic songs during this period. Kazi Nazrul Islam is regarded as a great composer of Bengali patriotic songs. His immortal compositions of this genre have always been sung with fervour. Nazrul appeared on the musical scene of Bengal when a great vacuum was persisting in the trend of patriotic songs at the death of some major Bengali composers and at the departure of others including Rabindranath Tagore from this trend. Nazrul had ably filled in the vacuum and represented in his songs the fiery spirit of the contemporary anti-British struggles. Kazi Nazrul Islam's patriotic songs may be classified into several groups in regard to the subjectmatter. They are: songs on reverence for motherland, songs of freedom movement, songs on awakening the youth, songs on awakening women, songs on Muslim awakening, songs of socialist inspiration, songs on communal harmony and patriotic humorous songs. Some of the themes are traditional and some of them were freshly added by Nazrul Islam to the stock of Bangla patriotic songs. The old trends too assumed newer dimensions in Nazrul's compositions. The portrayal of heroic sentiment in songs on freedom movement for instance, took an unprecedented spirit in his compositions. The language and melodies he created for his songs were different from the earlier ones and the spirit of a rebel was perfectly communicated in his songs of rebellion. The rebel poet of Bengal started a line of rebellious songs parallel to the line of rebellious poetry. But the trend of patriotic songs of socialist inspiration was a creation of Kazi Nazrul Islam himself. The composers of patriotic songs in Bangla had long been speaking of political independence. In fact, this formed the very core of the tradition of Bengali patriotic songs. But the idea of economic independence or the idea of founding a society free from exploi-tation of the weaker sections by the strong ones was first introduced.by Nazrul into the stream of Bangla patriotic songs. He derived his inspiration for composing such songs from socialist revolution in Russia. Nazrul was a political activist and he parti-cularly composed songs of socialist inspiration as he, with some of his friends, founded political parties which were declared to be dedicated to reshaping the Indian society under socialist ideology. The Bangla version of the Communist International that Nazrul made is regarded as a great piece of composition. The trend of socialist songs flourished very greatly in Bengal under the auspices of the Indian people's Theatre Association. But the trend is found to begin in the patriotic compositions of Nazrul. Kazi Nazrul Islam composed a large number of songs on the idea of a broadbased social awakening. His inspiring songs on the awakening of youths and women must be mentioned in this respect. But his songs on awakening of Muslims demand a special mention, because this trend was also one creation of his own. Bangla patriotic songs by and large were on social awakening. But the spirit they represented till the advent of Nazrul was Hindu in nature. They stood for a broadbased awakening among the Hindus. The particular context of Muslim awakening was only added by Nazrul Islam to the stock of patriotic songs in Bengal. This had gone a long way in inspiring the Muslims of Bengal to respond to the call of freedom and social change. Kazi Nazrul Islam had also greatly enriched that section of Bengali patriotic songs, which stands for communal harmony, more particularly harmony in the relation between Hindus and Muslims. The tradition of composing such songs is as old as the tradition of Bengali patriotic songs .itself. Most of the representative composers of Bangla patriotic songs strove for such sons urging Hindus and Muslims to shun the ways of disunity and live in amity with each other and together struggle for freedom and for the good of motherland. Such songs were known as milangan or songs of unity. Rabindranath Tagore composed a beautiful miiangan as far back as 1886 which he himself sang in the second annual session of the Indian National Congress. Kazi Nazrul Islam appears to have taken the matter of urging for Hindu-Muslim amity with utmost seriousness not only in musical compositions but also in every other kind of creative enterprise. He had himself made it known in many occasions that the spirit behind combining the Hindu and the Muslim ways of culture in his creative efforts was to bring these communities closer so that they could overcome all the bitterness in their relation and live in peace and harmony. This combination, Nazrul knew, had not been artistically effective every-where, but still he did it with a missionary zeal to bring Hindu and Muslim minds closer in literature and music. Kazi Nazrul Islam had, in fact, composed some of the immortal songs in Bangla language on communal harmony. The second phase of Nazrul's life as a composer is called the Gazal phase. It began at the end of 1926 when he paid exclusive attention to compose songs in that genre. Gaza1, a kind of love song was first developed in Persia, now called Iran. In course of time Urdu gazals flourished very greatly and great Urdu poets paid attention to this form. But the attention of lyricists from Bengal could not have been drawn to this popular and expressive musical form and none before Atulprasad Sen did ever take any interest in composing some gazals. Even Atulprasad, as it has been said earlier, composed only a few gazals, not more than seven in number and he lived far away from Bengal for which this did not appear as a musical phenomenon to create a respectable impact. When Nazrul began to compose gazals in Bangla and they were being sung in Calcutta by eminent vocalists, they created an impact and music loving people of Bengal began to respond to this genre with great enthusiasm. A new era of Bengali art music was begun by Kazi Nazrul Islam. It has been called the gazal era by the critics. Nazrul composed a large number of gazals and gave shape to a musical beauty which was so long unheard of in Bengal. People of Bengal felt for the first time that they had so long been deprived of the romantic charm of a light classical music and Nazrul's compositions opened the possibilities of a new musical era in Bengal. Gazal's lively romanticism, Persian association and engaging mode of improvi-sation contributed greatly to its popularity. The third phase of Nazrul Islam's musical life is known to us as the Gramophone Company phase. It is called so because he worked with the gramophone companies in Calcutta, particularly with His Master's Voice. It began either at the end of 1928 or in the beginning of 1929 when he joined the HMV. First he joined as the lyricist and tuner and then he became the trainer and the chief trainer. The gramophone company phase marked a tremendous and varied flourishing of Nazrul's talent as a composer. He was found to compose songs on all the possible themes, in all the possible musical forms and at an incredible speed. He surprised everyone by his gift of impromptu composition. Most of his (over three thousand) songs were composed at this period. Kazi Nazrul Islam is recognised to have greatly contributed to build the golden age of gramophone records in Bengal. A kind of massive response to music was made possible in Bengal on the founding of gramophone companies and films. In his songs Nazrul had also made a massive response to satisfy the popular and diverse urge. He could give leadership to the first ever large scale production of music on a commercial basis. Modern songs, devotional songs, songs of folk tradition and raga songs are the principal sectors of Nazrul's compositions during the gramophone company phase of his musical life. The trend of composing modern song forms the most important musical phenomenon in Bengal during the post Tagore period. The principal impulse behind founding this trend was to suit the trading demands of record companies and the films. Popular appreciation and entertainment were its motto. Nazrul's distinction as a composer was that he could spontaneously respond to the popular urge and keep by and large true to artistic commitments. Modern songs were composed principally on the theme of love and Nazrul Islam composed a good number of songs of lasting artistic merit in the modernist musical trend. In fact he laid the very foundation of modern Bangla songs. Kazi Nazrul Islam was also a great composer of devotional songs. They may be broadly divided into two categories, Islamic songs and Hindu religious songs. He was the founder of the trend of Islamic songs in the art music tradition of Bengal. Islamic devotional songs had so long been composed only in the folk music level. But these could not bring musical satisfaction to the educated, modern Muslims. They required songs befitting to the urge of the new age. Nazrul was the first among the Muslim poets and composers in Bengal to give musical shapes to the devotional urge of the modern Muslim mind-and to make a solid start by composing nearly two hundred songs on various Islamic themes. This was a' distinct contribution of Nazrul towards enriching the music culture of Bengal. The trend of composing Bangla art songs following the folk music styles had also taken a beautiful shape in the compositions of Nazrul Islam. The trend was initiated by Rabindranath Tagore by the beginning of the 20th century, particularly when he composed patriotic songs during the anti-partition movement. The trend soon earned popularity and the attitude to sophisticating the folk music styles. was appreciated and adopted by the contemporary compo-sers. The record companies and film makers had also taken a favourable stance on the matter. Kazi Nazrul Islam had also enriched this musical tendency by composing a large number of songs of folk music tradition and enlarged the scope of this newly developed musical genre. Rabindranath had principally adopted the baul form. Atulprasad had also followed Tagore's suit. But Nazrul followed different Bengali folk music styles like baul, jhumur, jhapan, bhatiali and bhawaiya. The trend had thus been enlarged and diversified. Particular mention must be made to Nazrul's exploitation of jhumur, the favourite musical style of the Santhals. Its dancing rhythm and characteristic application of off-beats added a new charm to Bangla art music compositions. Some of Nazrul's experimentation in this field are looked upon as pioneering works of what was later known as modernised versions of traditional folk styles. , In Bangla raga musical compositions Nazrul achieved a great success. The process began in 'the third phase of his musical life and reached its culmination in the fourth phase, known as the radio phase which started in 1938 when Nazrul began to actively take part in programmes organised by the Calcutta Radio Station and continued the practice down to 1942 when he fell incurably ill while taking part in a children's programme in. the studio of the same radio centre. Nazrul's musical orientation basically had a classical bias and he is found-to have exploited the various forms of Hindustani classical music to compose music for almost every kind of song he wrote in Bengali. Nazrul did not take considerable interest in dhrupada. But his love for kheyal and thumri was almost endless. He applied the charms of these Hindustani forms to Bangla songs in countless ways. Nazrul had also made experimentation on raga music and created seventeen new ragas. He initiated an age of spectacular creativity in Bengal on the basis of raga music leading to wonderful consequences. Particular mention should be made to the trend of classico-modern songs of Bengal which Kazi Nazrul Islam had pioneered. The decade that began in 1930 stands historically as a period of transition between the old and the new ways of Bangla art songs. The origination of the art of modern songs and division of labour between a lyricist, a singer and a composer to produce finished song, improvements in the recording methods, introduction of Talkies and background singing, expansion of radio music progra-mmes are some of the important features of the new ways of music in Bengal. Nazrul Islam stands as a bridge between the two ages and he is the last representative of the ageold way of art music in Bengal. Mention must here be made to those who contributed greatly to enrich the musical culture of Bengal at that period of transition. As lyricists we get Hiren Basu, Hemendra Kumar Ray, Tulsi Lahiri, Anil Bhttacharya, Ajay Bhattacharya, Pranab Ray, Subodh Purakayastha, Shailen Ray, Banikumar, Sourindramohan Mukherjee, Premendra Mitra and Dhirendranath Mukherjee. As composers and music directors we get Hiren Basu, Hemendra Kumar Ray, Tulsi Lahiri, Binay Goswami, Himansu Datta, Nitai Matilal, Kamal Dasgupta, Subal Dasgupta, Krishnachandra Dey, Shailesh Dattagupta, Chitta Ray, Raichand Baral, Bishanchand Baral and Pankaj Kumar Mallik. As singers we get Angurbala, Indubala, Harimati, Kamala Jharia, Radarani, Shaila Debi, K. Mallik, Krishnachandra Dey, Kanan Debi, Juthika Ray, Shachin Deb Barman, Abbasuddin, Satya Choudury, Mrinal Kanti Ghosh, Jaganmoy Mitra, Suprabha Sarkar and Kundanlal Saigal. These lyricists, composers and singers together contributed to build up the golden age of modern Bangla songs and music of Bengali films. The background of their contributions was created by Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul- Islam. The modern musical experimentation in Calcutta had also made the background of modern songs and film music of entire India. Indian People's Theatre Association movement founded in the year 1943 in the context of an opposition to imperialism and fascism influenced the total creative pursuits of Bengal, not to speak of music alone. The cultural ideology of the communist party of India was the driving force behind the movement and the distinct trend of ganasangeet or people's song in Bengal, originated under the auspices of the People's Theatre Association. In the first bulletin of the association published in 1943 it was said: It is in this situation that the Indian People's Theatre Association has been formed to co-ordinate and strengthen all progressive tendencies that have so far manifested themselves in the nature of dramas, songs and dances. It is a movement which seeks to make our arts, the expression and the organisers of our people's struggles for freedom. economic justice and democratic culture. It stands for the defence of culture against imperialism and fascism and for enlightening the masses about the causes and solutions of problems facing them. It tries to quicken their awareness of unity and their passion for better and just world order.13 Songs were looked upon as an effective medium of organising the working people to this end. These were not the traditional patriotic songs of Bengal. They were the new songs composed by some activists of the people's theatre movement. The songs were composed on themes of social change, forming of progressive society free from exploitation and rise and victory of the working people. Binay Ray, Jyotirindra Maitra, Hemang Biswas and Salil Choudhury were the principal minds behind composing people's songs and the musical squads of Indian people's Theatre Associa-tion began to organise sessions at various places. A new section of invigorating songs was added to the tradition of Bangla patriotic songs. It had an humble beginning in the compositions of Kazi Nazrul Islam. But under the auspices of the People's Theatre Association it flourished so well that it could take the shape of a distinct trend of Bangla.songs. This was the musical context of Bengal in 1947 when the state of Pakistan came into being upon the partition of the sub-continent of India. Bengal was divided into two provinces. East Bengal with its capital in Dhaka was made the eastern province of Pakistan and West Bengal with its capital in Calcutta remained in India. In addition to the compositions of Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam the then Bangla musical context was fed principally by the enriched trend of romantic modern songs and the trend of patriotic songs including the freshly introduced people's songs. The musical developments in West Bengal during the 'post partition years are found chiefly to concentrate on the trend of romantic modern songs which was nourished by the expanding scopes of record companies, films and the radios. A 'batch of talented lyricists-and composers joined those who had been working from the thirties. Promising singers were also coming for-th. Among others Mahini Choudhury, Shyamal Gupta, Gouriprasanna Majumdar, Pulak Banerjee and Shibdas Banerjee did a wonderful job as lyricists. As composers brilliant contributions were made by Anupam Ghatak, Rabin Chatterjee, Hemanta Mukherjee, Nachiketa Ghosh, Salil Choudhury, Dilip Sacker, Sudhin Das Gupta, Prabir Majumdar, Abhijit Banerjee and Anal Chatterjee. Persons like Hiren Basu and Jnanprakash Ghosh took part in enriching the musical environment. They together built up the trend of romantic modern Bangla songs which, through ups and downs, is still continuing there. As matters stand to-day the musical culture of West Bengal appears to pass into a stage of decay and instead of concentrating on exploring the traditional way of Bangla art music, the composers are increa-singly depending on nothing more than systematic noise in the name of imitating Western music and music of Hindi films. Again the compositions of the- early decades are coming up to cater to the aesthetic taste. Tagore songs and songs of Nazrul. are found to stand the test of time. The post partition musical creativity in East Bengal (East Pakistan) had chiefly flowed into two distinct streams, namely, modern songs and patriotic songs. But mention must here be made to the tribulations Dhaka had to face to assume the role of a cultural capital when a deep vacuum had been created in the field of music at the large scale migration of Hindus from East Bengal to India as the consequence of partition. The cultivation of music in Bengal was still limited mostly to the Hindus, although some stalwarts from among the Muslims had already made their marks in this field. An account of this situation has been given in the autobiography by Abdul Ahad who was the first among the Bengali Muslims to receive training in Tagore songs in Shantiniketan in the lifetime of Rabindranath Tagore and who later earned reputation as a trainer .of Tagore songs in Calcutta. Like some other Muslim musicians he came to Dhaka from Calcutta in 1948 and joined the Dhaka Radio Station. Abdul Ahad served the causes of music in various capacities, but the most remarkable role he played was that of a composer who singularly tried to fill the vacuum in the initial years and for many more years dominated the music scene here as a composer of music for various types of songs, particularly the modern and the patriotic songs. Abdul Ahad has respectfully recalled the memory of those who took pioneering role immediately after the partition of India to fill in the musical vacuum and inspire the younger generation to rise up to the need of the age and learn and deliver music. Their expectations came true and efforts were fruitful. A generation of men of musical culture was soon found to grow and the vacuum was gradually filled in quite successfully. Mention first of all has been made of the late Abbasuddin who was also fresh from Calcutta for the inspiring role he played as a versatile singer and organiser to do everything possible to tide over the period of vacuum. Names of Bimal Ray, Laila Arjumand Banu, Afsari Khanam, Anjali-Ray, Shahjahan Hafiz, Sultan Alam, Abdul.Halim Choudhury, Sheikh Lutfar Rahman and Abdul .Latif have also been mentioned, who as singers and some of them as singers and composers rendered great services. Of the two important trends of musical composition which have been mentioned earlier, the modern musical trend .did not have the congenial atmosphere to flourish during the initial years in Dhaka for absence of patronizing institutions like the film and the record company. The only medium which extended support to the growth of this .musical genre was the, radio. It got support of films in the early sixties and that of television in the late sixties. The support in real sense by the record company could never be extended here. Primarily the Dhaka Radio Station and subsequently the radio stations in Rajshahi and Chittagong were the institutions under the umbrella of which the trend of modern songs flourished in East Bengal. Lyricists like Sikandar Abu Jafar, Azizur Rahman, Mohammad Moniruzzaman and Abu Hena Mustafa Kamal and composers like Abdul Ahad and Samar Das contributed greatly towards the growth of Bangla modern songs in East Bengal. But the more living and the more invigorating pulsations in musical culture had been felt in East Bengal or East Pakistan in the tradition of patriotic songs. Patriotic songs, it has already been said, are products of the musical and poetic response to the political urge of a people in a given frame of time. It is also the product of a protest working in the social mind overtly or covertly. The situation congenial to the growth of the trend of patriotic songs was found to exist in East Bengal as early as when Pakistan was founded and when equally at the same time the contradiction in the relation between the eastern and the western zones of Pakistan was discovered. It became clearly evident from the speeches made by Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan that the minority of the Pakistani people in West Pakistan had far reaching plans of dominating and exploiting the majority wing of East Pakistan. Theorganised movement in East Pakistan against the design of West Pakistan started as early as 1948 over the question of the status of Bangla as the state language and it reached the culmination on 21.February 1952, when some of the demonstrators laid down their lives for the sake of Bangla language. Martyrdom for Bangla language was a great milestone in the cultural and political history of East Pakistan and it marked the beginning of a great struggle by the people of East Pakistan against the colonial rule of West Pakistan which passed through several phases finally culminating in the War of Liberation in 1971, aimed at achieving independence of East Pakistan. This long political struggle had its songs to stimulate the people. As the spirit of Bengali nationalism was always found to inspire the struggling masses, some songs composed years ago by great composers like Rabindranath Tagore, Dwijendralal Ray, Atulprasad Sen and Kazi Nazrul Islam served the cause. Tagore songs, in fact, played an effective role in inspiring the spirit of Bengali nationalism and the struggle on its basis in the eastern part of Pakistan. Songs of People's Theatre pertaining to a broadbased social change on the basis of rise and victory of the working people were also sung. The members and the admirers of Indian People's Theatre Association, Calcutta continued the trend here on their coming to Dhaka or some other cities of East Bengal. Meanwhile poets and composers from all over East Bengal worked together to produce a host of patriotic songs, some of them being very remarkable, reflecting the wishes and aspirations of Bengali people contributing to the mainstream of ongoing political movements opposed to the colonial nature of Pakistani rule. As the political movements passed through stages of developments leading finally to the War of, Liberation, patriotic songs were written in an ever increasing number. The waning trend of Bangla patriotic songs was rejuvenated in East Bengal. Mention must here be made to two great patriotic songs, one composed in 1952 and the other composed in 1971. They are rather treated as landmarks in the history of patriotic songs here. One was the great song of the language movement: Amar bhaier rakte rangano ekushe February, ami ki bhulite pan? Or can I forget 21 February, tinged with the blood of my brother? The other was the great song of the liberation war: Joi Bangla, Banglar Joi, babe habe, habe nishchoi (Long Live Bangladesh and Long Live Bangladesh, Bangladesh shall Live Long). The first song reflects the spirit of the language movement and the second song stands for the spirit of the War`-of Liberation. Abdul Gaffar Choudhury and Altaf Mahmud as the lyricist and composer of melody of the first song and Gazi Mazharul Anwar and Anwar Parvez as the lyricist and composer of melody of the' second song have done splendid jobs to enrich the tradition of Bangla patriotic songs. We may here mention the names of some eminent composers and lyricists who played a vital role in building up the musical culture of Bangladesh during the period extending from 1947 to 1971. Composers like Abdul Ahad, Samar Das, Khadem Hussain Khan, Mir Kashem Khan, Abed Hussain Khan, Abu Baqr, Khan, Masihul Alam, Dhir Ali, Mansur Ali, Rabin Ghosh, Raja Hussain Khan, Sudhin Das, Khan Ataur Rahman, Subal Das, Satya Saha, Pranesh Das, Sadhan Sarkar and Khandakar Nurul Alam will always be remembered for their brilliant performances as composers of melodies and lyricists like Sikandar Abu Jafar, Farrukh Ahmad, Syed Siddiqui, Ahsan Habib, Masud Karim, Aiizur Rahman, Abdul Latif, Mohammad Moniruzzaman, Khan Ataur Rahman, Abu Hen1 Mustafa Kamal and Gazi Mazharul Anwar will be ever remembered for their inspiring compositions in the modern and patriotic music traditions of Bangladesh. - Shrikumar Bandopadhyay, Shahitya O Sanskritir nirtha Sangam, (Calcutta 1962), 3.5,5
- 2 Rajyeshwar Mitra, Banglar Geetikar O Banglar Ganer Nana Dik, (Calcutta 1973),7.
- Arun Kumar Basu, Bangla Kauyasangeet 0 Rabindra Sangeet. (Calcutta 1978). 15.
- Rajwyeshar Mitra, 'Music' in N. K. Sinha led.), The History oJ~ Bengal, (1757-1905). (University of Calcutta 1967), 543.
- Arun Kumar Basu, Bangla Kauyasangeet O Rabindra SangeeL 106.
- Rabindranath Tagore. Rabiruira Rachanauali, uol. IX. (Calcutta 1941), 432.
- Arun Kumar Basu, Bangla Kauyasangeet 0 Rabindra Sarngeet, 181.
- Gita Chattopadhyay, Swadeshi Bangia Gaan. (Delhi 1983), 7.
- Shubha Guhathakurta, Rabindra Sangeeter Dhara. (Calcutta 1959). 12.
- Rabindranath Tagore. Sangeel Chinta, (Calcutta 1966). 165.
- Kalidas Ray, 'Prak-Kathan,' in Dilip Kumar Ray (ed.), Dwyindra Kauya Sanchayan. (Calcutta 1969).
- Sudhir Pradhan, Sanskritir Pragati, (Calcutta. 1883), 199.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#5 01 Apr 2007 11:34
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
INDIAN CLASSICAL MUSICThe word music in India means 'Sangeeta', which traditionally meant performing the art of singing, playing of instruments and dancing. Indian classical music originated from Vedic chants or Sama music. This music chiefly consisted of chanting of hymns in praise of the Vedic gods. The musical structure of the chants was characterised by descending order of notes, initially two to five which later was increased to seven notes. Gradually various developments took place and this culminated in the Raga tradition. The Raga (structure of melody) and Tala (structure of rhythm) are the two major characteristics of Indian Classical music. The melody deals with the rise and fall of sounds and the latter deals with the pattern of time beats of Ragas. Tala is the pulse of Indian music. The term Tala is derived from the Sanskrit word 'Tal' which means to strike with palms. Early musicians may have employed claps or palm-strokes to mark time in dance and music which later developed into a complicated system of 108 talas of classical music. It is a time cycle that remains fixed through out a particular rendering. Tala, binds music together and offer a regularity that calms the mind. Raga is the basic scale or note-pattern of a melody formed by selecting notes from the thirteen tonal intervals, conventionally established in the octave space. The notes are selected from ascending as well as descending progressions. They are Sa, Re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, Ni in the ascending order and Sa, Ni, Dha, Pa, Ma, Ga, Re, Sa in the descending order. Frameworks, thus provided by the selected notes function as the ground-plan. Musicians can elaborate Ragas on the basis of this plan and create more tonal patterns pleasing to the ears of the listeners. Ragas in the South mostly have Sanskrit names, unlike in the North, where their names often comes from specific region or from the dialects of regions. Tala and raga varies in each composition. Sometimes Tala is more active and controls the other or vise versa. This depends on the person performing the music. Music is a universal art. The two cultures of the south and the north gave rise to the two modes of singing-Uttaradi and Dakshinadi or Hindustani and Karnatic. North Indian Music offers a variety of forms of music like the Dhruvapada, Khyal, Thumari, Tappa and Ghazal. The dhruvapada is a strictly classical and a slow form. The khyal incorporates into this rigidity, the romanticism of yet another form, the thumari. All these forms follow the same basic tenets of the raga-tala system. The thumari is used quite extensively to accompany the dance Kathak. This is because it incorporates a high degree of emotional and aesthetic content, from the bottom of the heart. The tappa is a lighter form of classical music that is brisk and replete with a variety of phrases, which makes it particularly difficult to render without a good degree of virtuosity. North Indian music has a wide range of ancient and beautiful instruments, each having a tone quite unique. Some of the more well known are the sitar, the sarod, the rudraveena, the santoor, the flute, the shehnai and the sarangi. Among the precussion instruments are the tabla and the pakhawaj. The tabla is used as an accompaniment to most music recitals. The pakhawaj has a deeper tone than the tabla. Karnatic music has a deeper understanding of 'notal' values and their inter-relations. The musician of the south adheres very firmly to the tala cycle. Karnatic music is rigid and deeply spiritual. Thus, taste for Karnatic music has to be cultivated. The dominant element of Karnatic music is the 'Kriti'; a form of composition with three parts. The Literary content of the Kritis or songs, are in the form of offerings. The three great composers known as the trinity of Karnatic music are Shyama Sastry, Thyagaraja and Muthuswamy Dikshitar. Tyagaraja is the most popular among them. The music compositions, 'Tyagaraja Gana', 'Valmikiya Kavana' and 'Agumbeya Astamaya' are said to be unique for enrapturing the human heart. The flute, the violin, the veena, the nadaswaram and the gottuvadyam are among the most well known South India instruments.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#6 08 Jul 2007 02:12
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
History of classical Indian music old as the land itselfKousik Dutta July 10, 2007 The classical music of India is one of the oldest unbroken musical traditions in the world. Its origins go back to the Vedas (ancient scripts of the Hindus). The term "Indian Classical Music" refers to two related, but distinct, traditions rooted in antiquity, both very much alive in India today. The North Indian style is known as "Hindustani", while the South Indian tradition is referred to as "Carnatic". Both systems are fundamentally similar but differ in nomenclature and performance practice. The subject of Indian classical music is rich, with its historical, cultural, aesthetic, theoretical, and performing facets. The basis for Indian music is sangeet, a combination of three art forms: Vocal music, instrumental music and dance, although these three art forms were originally derived from the single field of stagecraft. Today these three forms have differentiated into complex and highly refined individual art forms. The present system of Indian music is based upon two important pillars: Raga and Taal. Raga is the melodic form while Taal is the rhythmic. As a pervasive influence in Indian life, the music pervades the big and small events of life, from childbirth to death, religious rites and seasonal festivals. Originally, not all musical developments were reduced to writing. To keep their traditional integrity, they were imparted orally from teacher to pupil -- the Guru-Shishya tradition. In the past, there used to be a system of Gurukul Ashram where teachers imparted knowledge to deserving students. Raga,the soul of classical music The combination of several notes woven into a composition in a way which is pleasing to the ear is called a Raga. Each raga creates an atmosphere that is associated with feelings and sentiments. Any stray combination of notes cannot be called a Raga. A performer with sufficient training and knowledge alone can create the desired emotions through the combination of proper notes.
Taal, rhythmical groupings of beats There is a perfect balance in the universe. This balance is the essence of Taal -- the theory of time measurement. It has the same principle in Hindustani and Carnatic music, though the names and styles differ.
Rhythm has three aspects: Taal, Laya and Matra, the smallest unit of the Taal. Taal is a complete cycle of metrical phrases composed of a fixed number of beats. There are over 100 Taals, but only 30 are known and only about 10 to 12 are used today. The Laya is the tempo, which keeps uniformity of time span and is divided into slow (vilambit), medium (madhya) and fast (drut). Taal can be considered to be the very basis or pulse of music. The responsibility of a classical musician lies in the mode of his presentation to the listener, in his capacity to make "perfect" and "common" listeners understand and appreciate classical music. The classical musician should have zeal as a missionary in creating the true spirit and essence of classical music so that he can help in the growth of appreciative audiences. Indian musical instruments can be categorized into two main zones of India, i.e. North Indian and South Indian classical musical instruments. The most traditional form of classification of Indian musical instruments is based upon percussion (tabla, pakhawaj, mridangam etc), wind (flute, shehnai, etc), string instruments (sitar, sarod, violin, veena, sarangee, etc). Another category nowadays consists, of course, of electronic musical instruments. Music has always been an indispensable part of Indian society. With changes in society, Indian music too has undergone immense modifications over the years, but without losing its Indian piquancy. Indian influences have started to travel across the world. In the 1960s, Pandit Ravi Shankar took classical music to foreign realms and appreciative audiences. He was also the first to experiment with mixing Western music with Indian classical music forms to arrive at what is called "fusion". By its very nature, Indian classical music is melodious and allows longitudinal unanimity in its music and musical instruments. The art of music practiced in India has a special significance as it has developed from ritualistic music in association with folk music and other musical expressions of neighboring nations, developing into its own characteristic art. Matured through "thought, experience and expression", Indian classical music is unique in the world. The writer is a teacher of tabla at the Jawaharlal Nehru Indian Cultural Center in Jakarta.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#7 09 Jul 2007 18:12
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Music
Moderator

Joined: November 2006
Posts: 3966
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 Re: History Of Classical Music Sur-Aur-Taal
| | Amazing Sitar/Sarod Jugalbandi by Partho Sarathy (Sarode) and Shubhendra Rao (Sitar), top disciples of maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar, and Benares Tablaji Udai Mazumdar on Fri Nov. 3, 2000 at the home of the Sarmas, Austin, Texas. Organized by Sushanta Parikh. |
North Indian Classical Music The subject of classical Indian music is rich, with its historical, cultural, aesthetic, theoretical, and performing facets. This discussion is limited to aspects of the North Indian instrumental genres. The primary genres of musical composition in North Indian or Hindustani classical music are dhrupad and khyal. Dhrupad, the older of the two genres, is the ancestor to the more popular khyal that eclipses it today. The concept of the melody and rhythm, however; serves as the foundation for both khayal and dhrupad. Melody is captured in the concept of the raag (also pronounced raaga) and rhythmic foundation in the taal (alternatively pronounced as tala). The Raag Raag, in the Sanskrit dictionary, is defined as "the act of coloring or dyeing" (the mind in this context) and "any feeling or passion especially love, affection, sympathy, vehement desire, interest, joy, or delight". In music, these descriptions apply to the impressions of melodic sounds on both the artist(s) and listener(s). A raag consists of required and optional rules governing the melodic movements of notes within a performance. The rules of a raag can be defined by - The list of specific notes that can be used during playing of the raag
- The manner in which the notes are used, i.e. specific ways of ornamenting notes or emphasizing/de-emphasizing them
- Manner in which the scale is ascended or descended
- Optional or required musical phrases, the way in which to reveal these phrases, and/or combine them
- The octave or frequency range to emphasize
- The relative pacing between the notes
- The time of day and/or season when the raag may be performed so as to invoke the emotions of the raag for maximum impact on the mental and emotional state of the performer and listener
Observance of these rules during the performance of a raag does not aspire to be purely a technical or intellectual exercise, but also to evoke the rasa or bhava (the experience, mood, emotion, or feeling) of the raag in both the artist and the listener. A raag is best experienced rather than analyzed. Theoretically, there is no limit to the number of raags, but only a few hundred are documented, and designated by specific names. Of these, only a small percentage are usually performed in concerts. The melodic performer utilizes a raag as the foundation for improvisation. A recital explores a raag in an non-metered form and/or within the confines of a cyclical rhythmic structure, using intricate ornamentation of notes. First the raag is introduced with a note or group of notes, and then the improvisation progresses to a more melodically and rhythmically complex form. The manner in which raags originate is a fascinating subject. Many raags are polished forms of a family of regional folk melodies while others have been created through the imagination of musicians. Some of the latter are raags with their own distinct characteristics whereas other creations are a combination of one or more existing raags. The names of some established raags have changed with time and the characteristics/ definitions of raags also are not as rigid as claimed in theory. The TaaI Just as the "note" is the basis of the melodic component of music, the bol (pronounced bowl) is the foundation for taal. Bol literally means speech or syllables. The vocal bols sound very similar to bols played on the percussive instrument. The most common tabla bols are Dha, Dhi/Dhin, Ti/Tin, Ra, Ki, Ta, Na, Tin, and Te. Different schools of percussion may pronounce the same bol differently. Several bols structured in a specific manner and arranged in sub-divisions are called thekas. Each bol usually takes up one, halt or quarter of a beat (matra) in a theka. The first beat of a theka is called the sam (pronounced sum). It plays a crucial role in the improvisation structure during a recital -- since it becomes a point of convergence for both the melodic and percussive improvisation. A theka also consists of layers of accents or voids in the first beat of a sub-division. A degree of symmetry, with an elegant manner of the theka leading to the sam, is quite common in the arrangement of the bols in a theka. A theka (also referred to as tool) can theoretically contain between two and 108 beats, although in reality there is no limit. While bols have existed in the percussion repertoire for a long time, thekas are probably a recent phenomenon (perhaps only around 600 years old ) The commonly heard thekas are dadra (6 beats), roopak (7 beats), keherwa (8 beats), jhaptaal (10 beats), ektaal (12 beats), chautal (12 beats), dhamar, deepchandi, jhumra (all 14 beats but with different bols and sub-divisions), and teentaal (16 beats). Although thekas are usually standard, bols of thekas can vary slightly, depending on the musical school or individual style of the tabla player. The bols and sub divisions of the common taal-s are listed below: | Ektaal | | Dhin | Dhin | (2) | | DhaGe | TiRaKiTa (2) | | Tu | Na | (2) | | Ka | Ta | (2) | | DhaGe | TiRaKiTa | (2) | | Dhi | Na | (2) | |
| Teentaal | | Dha | Dhin | Dhin | Dha | (4) | | Dha | Dhin | Dhin | Dha | (4) | | Dha | Tin | Tin | Ta | | (4) | | Ta | Dhin | Dhin | Dha | (4) | |
| Jhaptaal | | Dhin | Na | (2) | | Dhi | Dhin | Na | (3) | | Ti | Na | (2) | | Dhi | Dhin | Na | (3) | |
| Rupak | | Tin | Tin | Na | (3) | | Dhin | Na | (2) | | Dhri | Na | (2) | |
* Bolded bols are accents (tali), italicized bols are voids (khali) The tabla player strikes the theka repeatedly at a pace set by the melodic performer, thus providing the rhythmic foundation for the melodic improvisation. A cycle of theka of 12 beats may take as long as sixty to ninety seconds in a vocal recital and half as much in an instrumental one. The percussionist may improvise or follow at certain points of the performance, but eventually must return to the sam and continue the repetition. The role of the percussionist in a vocal recital is smaller and serves to keep the rhythm. However, the drummer has leeway to create subtle improvisations while filling in the beats of the theka. Additionally, the control over the instrument adds considerably to the ambiance of a vocal performance. The role of tabla players is more significant during an instrumental recital since percussionists here are expected to complement the melodic and rhythmic performance of the instrumentalist rather than just playing plain theka as in vocal performances. The interaction between the tabla player and melodic performer can be exciting, as the percussionist imitates the rhythmic patterns created by the melodic performer, and the two artists synchronize their approach to the sam after an improvised phrase, especially a tihai (a pattern repeated three times). A Brief History of Dhrupad and Khyal Dhrupad derives from the word dhruv, which literally means fixed, and pada literally verse/text. Dhrupad refers to both a type of composition (hence the name) (in chautaal or sooltaaI) as well as a genre in North Indian classical music. The discussion here focuses on the genre. Dhrupad probably evolved from a family of musical styles called prabhand that flourished during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The bhakti (devotional) movement of the Vaishnavas and Shivites also substantially contributed to the format and composition styles of dhrupad performed in the courts of Raja Man Singh Tomar of Gwalior and other courts in Delhi, Rajasthan, Punjab, and Gujarat in the fifteenth century. The popularity of dhrupad arose when it entered the court of Emperor Akbar's court in the sixteenth century. Tansen, a legendary musician in Akbar's court, is considered to be the father of the current form of classical dhrupad and most classical performers trace their tradition to him. In his book "Sitar Technique in Nibbadh Forms", Dr. Stephen Slawek summarizes the history of the Seni gharana (Tansen's lineage): "The Seni gharana consisted of two schools: (1) descendants of Tansen's son, Bilas Khan, who were known as rababiyas (rabab players), and (2) descendants of Tansen's son-in-law, Misri Singh, who were known as binkars (bin players). The rababiyas branch gradually lost favor because of limitations inherent in the instrument. The binkar gharana, however, incorporated many of the techniques of the rababiyas and flourished. The binkars, a tightly knit family taking pride in their ancestry, were very reluctant to pass the technique of their instrument on to anyone other than blood relatives. According to most Indian scholars, the binkars began to use the sitar and surbahar (an instrument similar to kachua sitar in shape but larger) to teach music to students not belonging to their family. On surbahar, they taught anibaddh sangit (music not bound to taI) such as alap and jor-alap. On sitar, they taught compositions that were based on popular vocal genres of the time." Dhrupad itself has evolved considerably since Tansen's time. Since North Indian classical tradition is transmitted orally, the music heard today is probably different from what listeners experienced five centuries ago. Khyal is a more recent style of music that evolved from dhrupad and crystallized in the seventeenth century. Khyal, (literally meaning imagination) combines facets of dhrupad styles, techniques, and structure. A wider variety of ornamentation is used in khyal, and the improvisation takes place within the confines of a taal. The structure of a performance is less restricted and the artist has a wider latitude in structuring and improvising the performance. Due to its open nature, khyal has become far more popular than dhrupad ever was and has eclipsed its predecessor. Structure of a modern instrumental recital Indians consider the voice as the supreme medium for performing music. Therefore all instruments attempt to imitate the vocal nuances. Audiences attending an instrumental recital hear facets of both dhrupad and khyal styles since instrumentalists are expected to be proficient and perform both genres. Dhrupad approaches a performance very systematically -- taking a raag from its abstract to a more concrete form, from un-metered to metered to a cyclically-metered arrangement, from simple to complex melodic and rhythmic structures. It is marked by a lengthy and structured exploration of a raag, followed by the presentation of a short fixed composition (dhruv-pad). Austere ornamentation of notes is a characteristic of dhrupad. Emphasis is laid on resting a long time on single notes as well as slow and smooth glides between notes. The quality of a performance is judged by the artist's interpretation of a raag, the technical and aesthetic control they have over laya (rhythm), and the mastery over their performance medium. Of these, the raag interpretation is perhaps the most important. Considering that raag structures seem extremely rigid, it is quite interesting how different the same raag can sound by different artists or by the same artist at different recitals. The reasons for the variation are improvisation and the personal interpretation of the raag by the performer. Most of a North Indian classical music performance is usually improvised spontaneously, making every recital a very unique experience. A performance usually begins with the artiste selecting a raag that fits the situation (their mood, time of day/season, and audience). The raag is gradually revealed to the listener in a form of improvisation called the alap (literally introduction) - a meditative exploration of the raag. It is considered to be the ideal (and difficult) manner of presenting the raag. The artist is expected to adhere strictly to the rules of the raag in this phase. First the tonic is established and the detailed introduction of the raag begins. The melodic features of the raag are exposed in an unmetered form, elaborately and systematically, gently unveiling the beauty of the raag's scale, its definitive phrases, as well as notes and their transition. Ideally, the scale is traversed slowly starting at the tonic (note Sa), followed by exploration of the lower octave ranges, one note at a time. When the embellishment of a note or phrase has been completed, the artist returns to the tonic and emphasizes it with a characteristic pattern called the mohra. This phrase helps provide a sense of temporal variation in an otherwise free and un-metered melody. The performer then continues to unfold the raag, returning to the mohra after each phase of the exposition. The exposition continues in a gradual methodical manner until the upper tonic is reached. Usually, performers tend to spend a longer time emphasizing the approach to the upper tonic, since this usually marks the end of the alap. It is not uncommon for an artist to spend some additional time on notes higher than the tonic before ending the unmetered section and progressing to the next phase of the performance. The alap is followed by the second section, called jor (literally to join). Jor (also referred to as alap-jor), a transition from the free melodic form of the alap, injects a more purposeful rhythm by introducing a pulse. The general structure conforms to an expanding of the range of the notes with the mohra used as a transitional point. The melodic patterns and rhythm become more ornate and complex respectively as jor proceeds. The tempo is also gradually increased as the performance progresses. The jor climaxes when the exposition reaches the tonic on the higher octave. The final section is called nom-tom (transformed to a technique called jhala in the instrumental repertoire) in which the tempo escalates further and the rhythmic structure usually becomes a multiple of four. Shorter melodic phrasings are employed and more notes are compressed into a beat. The solo performance of presenting the raag in its alap form ends with nom-tom. Most of the performance is spent on the alap, jor, and nom-tom. It is unclear when and how alap became the primary part of a dhrupad recital, since the name of the genre implies a fixed composition. Generally, an instrumental performer continues with a khyal styled composition (called gat - pronounced guth) in a particular taal and repeats it several times, varying the gat slightly each time. At this point, the tabla player joins the instrumentalist and improvises for several cycles of theka, synchronizing at a sam after a tihai (a pattern repeated three times). The elaborate exploration of the raag is dispensed with, since the alap performed earlier has built the foundation. Therefore, the instrumentalist alternates between the gat and improvisation, with the latter progressing from simpler to more complex patterns, both rhythmically and melodically. The number of notes per beat also increases progressively. Usually the tempo speeds up in a quantified manner as well. The artist may then switch to a different gat, perhaps in a different taal and continue to improvise further with even more intricate and sophisticated patterns at faster speeds. The time comes when the gat is no longer played and a smooth transition to the jhala may take place, within the confines of the taal. The jhala may end with a elaborate tihai (melodic/rhythmic pattern repeated three times) after which the performance of the raag ends. The artist usually performs two or more raags in a recital. The first raag is usually in dhrupad (alap)-khyal style as described above. The next few raags are normally presented in a more elaborate khyal style. The un-metered alap is very short and is followed by a gat in a slower tempo. The raag elaboration/exposition (badhat/vistar) takes place between repetition of the gat. The vistar is followed by the antara (a pre-composed section that introduces the upper tonic), after which more rhythmically complex improvisations are presented. The performance usually climaxes with thejhala described earlier. The final pieces are performed in "lighter" genres such as bhajans (spiritual songs), thumris (romantic or sensual themes), dhuns (folk tunes), tappa, dadra, hori chaiti, or kajri The rules of the raags are not adhered to as strictly in these renderings and may even flow from one raag to another in a form called raag-malika (garland of raags) in which the listener should be able to easily identify the shifts in rasas (moods). It is worth noting that the descriptions above are general and not absolutes. One has to study music, listen to numerous recordings, and attend recitals to experience the broad spectrum of Indian classical music and thus appreciate its finer nuances. The University of Texas at Austin has an excellent collection of books, recordings, and courses available to those interested in further investigating the subject. Reproduced by kind permission of author and sitarji Amitava Sarkar and ICMCA. If you live in or near Austin and are interested in Indian Music, ICMCA is a valuable resource for you as they have many resources not least of which are a series of Indian Music concerts throughout the year. See http://www.icmca.org for details. To FAQ on Indian instruments >>> To Indian music videos and tutorials >>> To on-line Sitar tutorial pages >>> To home page >>>
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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#8 19 Dec 2008 00:27
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