15 Nov 2016
How long and how many past greats can we go on celebrating? Is not life about the present, renewal and freshness? Will art be alive only on past glory? Are we in self-contradiction when we celebrate the old greats tenaciously and also complain that the new ones are languishing but for one or two whose success is attributed to craze rather than worth?
Johannes Bronkhorst (An Indologist)
The most prominent and perhaps the only universal context
of music is that of religion, Music is used everywhere to communicate with,
glorify and/or serve the divinities within any particular culture.
Heard in an interview, Sri Semmnagudi mentioning how two
juniors wrote to him harshly about his continuing to sing – which, they
alleged, affected their career. That was not a valid complaint, he said. He is
right. It is not like cricket where just some sixteen players are selected for
the playing eleven and it constricts the chances for players. It is not as
though only a certain number of singers are allowed to sing. One may think of
mega events spread over two or three weeks and the choice is limited in scope,
but someone who is worthy will not be left out.
It is not correct to find fault with singers who draw large
crowds or the audience that flock their concerts. Art is free for choosing for
a profession or patronage. It cannot grow by some rationing, retirement or socialistic
principles.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Art is expression of an idea. The idea has to be
consistent. It has to have a theme and a structure. Take a play for instance.
It has had a structure, whether eastern or western. It has acts subdivided into
scenes. The number of acts and scenes in it differ based on the plot. Normally,
by the time we arrive at the middle, the problem and the attendant
circumstances are well delineated. It proceeds to a conclusion, happy or
tragic. In Hamlet, we have the problem of a foul play. Hamlet suspects it, by
the sudden death of his father and the hasty marriage of his mother with his
uncle. The ghost appears and confirms his suspicion, but Hamlet is not yet
sure. He devises a play- the thing where he will catch the king- to be enacted
to test the veracity of the ghost version. That is in Act III. That is the
climax and then follows the sequel leading to the tragedy. Any play has
followed a similar structure. The later day dramatists have followed the
structure as well. They did not dig into what it was before the structure.
Leaving aside art, even biologically, we have come a long way from protozoa. We
do not wish to go back to protozoa, even if it were possible. We do not go back
to tuft and punchagaccham, as these waned with the advent of the British only.
In CM itself, we do not discard the violin because it was not there before
Dikshitar.
The structure in CM is conveniently ascribed to Ariyakkudi,
but I have read that Ariyakkudi only formaised a crystallising convention.
Things were veering round to it. Like the thematic development of a play, the
format starts with warm up, climaxes with a main item, goes to a RTP if there
is time and audience interest, and then ends on lighter pieces with a mangalam
as auspicious beginning and end are part of the culture that has given birth to
CM. This was not arbitrary, but organic, something like laws of nature or
philosophy proceeding from the experience of phenomena. It is satisfying the
musical quest. The artists have been at home with it, old and new alike. The
audience savours it. It is unthinkable that all of them have been sheep. That
it was not there before is like shunning the mike, which did not catch on. It
is not the age of a thing, but its utility that concerns the musically
inclined.
From my post in rasikas.org about change in Carnatic Music:
Mind wearies of routine and looks to leap. Tradition cries
a halt and classicism looks the other way.
What we oppose normally is a wholesale change, that hammers
a thing past recognition. We do not like to see a belle turned to a hag in a
jiffy.
But, all living things change subtly over time, and when
one analyses it, the change over time is drastic, like they say some ragas have
changed. But, the change has been within the limits of classicism.
I have heard both TMK and Sanjay say that a new expression
of the art, without aberration of the grammar, is happening with all creative
artists. BMK referred to Bani in evidence of this. With all his maverick ways,
TMK has not done anything out of tune with the classical style of CM. In fact,
he is one of the authentic torch bearers of this genre of music. I was
listening to Narmada's Ecstasy (courtesy Parivadini) today. What an apt title!
She has stuck to the essence of whatever she played or sang (she sings so
melodiously). Such artists have a talent that is waiting to burst forth. The
art form is sure of its being intact with them even as they try something new
or traverse uncharted territory. They do not create something new per se but do
something new in the existing form, that has stamp of creativity. Varadarajan
talked of Sanjay as 'a creative artist'; yet, Sanjay is strictly a
traditionalist, reminding one of Somu or MDR at times. Abhishek is another
artist of such creativity.
23/12/2017
Art and Performance
Art is expression of a compelling idea through some symbolism that draws on imagination of the artist and the admirer. It is voluntary and unstoppable, not guided by an algorithm and a program. Learning is involved, but is not on all fours with a literacy drive.
Art as a means of income or as a profession is perhaps the creation of economics. Art was patronized by the aristocracy and royalty for the most part and in Carnatic music such elitist patronage seems to be crucial even now.
Art as a performance is intended perhaps to spread its appeal as much as to support the artists. Will art survive if the support system collapses? Perhaps not. The human need for art will overcome the economic hurdle. We have had poor artists who have given the most valuable treasures in art. The concern about languishing performance opportunities as an economic proposition is perhaps more about art as an industry of employment.
A rasika may be defined as a connoisseur for the purpose of the discussion here. We may call the others as listeners. They have some hang of the music, but do not know the niceties.
Now, who really supports the art constructively?
An artist who does not care for numbers will ache for a rasika. A performer will look for numbers too, but if he is more into the art than the following, he will stick to his calling and the purity of the art he has espoused.
Can we meaningfully address the concert goers whom they should listen to? Can we admonish if they favour one artist or a few artists while a majority face sparse attendance despite their art being pristine?
A rasika will become a better rasika if he keeps his ears open to a wide choice. That is true of any field, isn’t it? Russell says that one’s interests must be varied to be able to be happy. Even in studies, it helps one to understand better if he approaches a subject from different angles. I have seen how good gurus advise their disciples to listen to other patantharams and renditions while sticking to what is being taught. Over the years, a good artist imbibes the best from everywhere and evolves a style of his own. There is nothing new in that a rasika also should pursue his interest listening to several artists.
If still a few rasikas flock to some performers, they know what they are doing. It does not mean that they are narrow in their taste or that the performers in question do not deserve the patronage.
That does not rule out blind following. The listeners may plump for some superficiality as it happens even in the more popular entertainment avenues. It will be wrong to conclude however that the followers of an artist lack rasikatva or that the artists in question are not sticking to the purity of the art.
We have indeed had some who mixed film music with CM or present it like light music. That is a different issue. Not that it is a sin, but the art form is compromised and it rankles.
While the art will survive and grow without the economics associated with presentation, the performance system will suffer, but that is market economics and art does not have its own rules no matter how sacred the art, conceding that some art form is sacred.
Any criticism why people do not spread out to many concerts evenly or why they throng the halls featuring a few artists or why non-vocal music has less appeal, is valid purposelessly.
December 26, 2018 at 8:13 AM ·
An artist as an artist must create more than speak. His art will speak, or should.
An artist may also be a politician, in which case he must not mix up the two. Art will suffer if an artist contaminates art with social and political issues. Art has many ways of finding expression. Even within music there is variety, Carnatic Music being a minuscule part of it.
Art and spirituality go together. Spirituality is being present in what you are and what you are doing, it is not about a deity or worship.
3/4/14
Music is a medium of communication. It is a language by
itself and has its own grammar. It has to appeal to the heart. Classical music
has a tradition built over the years by maestros. It is evolved and bot set in
heaven. It has the quality of endurance and scope for enrichment. Endurance
part corresponds to tradition and enrichment part corresponds to innovation.
That which warps it is not innovation or enrichment.
Now, the taste for classical music is cultivated or comes
culturally (e.g. it runs in families; it has been more popular in Thanjavur
area), it is not something that one takes to like to light music.
Curiously, we have two diametrically opposite views about
bhakti, one that it enhances bhava, another that it vitiates aesthetics. There
are some who feel that it offends atheists.
I read in a book titled "Absorption" that music
is intrinsically spiritual. I feel so. When a person sings putting her soul
into it ('her' purposely), we realise our soul which otherwise lies dormant.
That is spirituality. I heard Dr. Narmada sing a song on Allah and it touched
the soul, though I am not a Muslim.
Music has to appeal to the knowledgeable as well as to an
average listener who does not care to appreciate technical points. It is not a
question of majority or minority. The carnatic public are sufficiently
discerning and endowed with an aesthetic sense, otherwise they will not be
drawn to it.
Let us listen without predisposition or precondition and
enjoy what is good. We will not go to listen to an artist's performance if it
does not satisfy us. The artist is free to choose his style and content in
order to give vent to his creative impulses.
Music is not natural. It is a human creation and a
wonderful one. You have sweet sounds like the cooing of a cuckoo, but it does
not elaborate into a raga or harmony.
There are stones that resemble the swaras when struck, but the striking
is by a human effort and a single swara produces no music. Belief that music is
a hindrance to spirituality is perhaps born of this ‘human’ origin of music,
but is certainly not valid. In music as in any earnest pursuit, one can attain
spiritual experience.
July 28, 2016 ·
All that supports life is sacred.
Music suppors life. Music is in the air which is vital for
life.
Music gives shape to the crooked, meaning to babble and
purpose to what appears random.
Music is a magnet that brings to order the scattered iron
filings of thoughts in a field of divinity. It is an elixir that tones the
muscles, purifies the blood and invigorates life. It is the unseen string that
holds together the pearls of individuals in a beautiful ornament. It lifts one
from the nagging concerns of passing strife to a union with god that is pure
bliss.
Raga and rain
A musician said that he did not believe that singing a raga
could produce rain. The answer, while reasonable, was based on wrong premise.
He quoted a scientist that belief must be based on evidence.
Another scientist has said, ‘Do not believe any experiment
unless a theory can back it up’. The spirit of science is that something must
be experienced and explainable.
If, for argument’s sake, someone does an experiment and a
raga produces rain, it is not enough. Even replicability is not enough.
Astrology fails to qualify as science on the same basis.
Even agnostics concede that lack of proof does not
invalidate belief, one should be aware of it (Cf. Somerset Maugham in Summing
Up).
We lead life not on evidence, reason and proof, but on
hope, trust and faith.
Friday, December 18, 2015
CM and Bhakthi
The question is whether CM is intertwined with bhakthi and
whether if bhakthi is removed, it will lose its flavour. Of course, we are not
going to get a clear-cut answer.
Ever since I heard that bhakthi is not required in CM, (At
the extreme, it was said that even the composers were more music-minded than
bhakthi-minded) I have been rolling it in my mind. I would like to blurt out
here my thoughts that I have been jotting since then. It is not cogently
argued.
As the annals of India suggest, religion has been imbedded
in all walks of life. There is hardly an activity which is not impregnated with
belief. Right or wrong, that is India’s flavour. Paradoxical as it may appear,
Bengalis who have supported Marxism vociferously celebrate Durga Puja with
undiminished fervor. Vivekananda said that religion is the live wire of India.
Anything that is Indian is connected with god in a direct or indirect way. I do
not know whether it is changing, but it will take a long while for the change
to percolate if it is happening.
Music has developed alongside religion. We talk of raga swarupa,
form for what may be abstract, and raga devata, something mysterious for what
is susceptible to auditory sense and magnetizing to the mind. The trinity and
those before or after them were rooted in bhakti unless they had a secret inner
self known only to the secularist.
Even in the secular song thunbam nerkaiyil, the underlying
idea of a dependence, a longing, produces a spiritual feeling akin to the pangs
felt by gopis or the innate affinity of the jiva for brahman.
Music is one of those moments of experience where we sense
a unity forgetting the ‘reality’ of life and its nagging concerns. Even as we
listen to the pranks of Krishna, the dance of Siva or the compassion of a
divine mother, we get beyond the idol and story to the wholeness of life, its verve
and charm.
Bhakthi is when there is truth in heart, says Bharathi.
Bhakthi is wisdom in action, says Rajaji. Bhakthi is consciousness of Brahman
in us , says Sankara. Bhakthi is not just a meek surrender to an unknown, but a
passionate longing for truth. It may manifest in manifold ways but music is
perhaps the most expressive as suggested by the preponderance of lyrical poetry
steeped in bhakthi.
Bhakti is mindful engagement with what one is doing. In
puja and prayer, it has for focus a deity or god. In patriotism, it has the
idea of a nation as the focus. God is the name for the driving spirit of the
universe. It is undeniable that there is such a force, but non-believers
ascribe it to nature or mechanical forces. Believers see a conscious mind behind
the universe.
Even in the music of those who are apathetic to bhakthi
(not my judgement, but the way the singers see themselves) sing with so much
passion taking great pains to adhere to what has been considered the limits of
a given raga, but letting creativity take over, that it generates that feeling
we call bhakthi, though they may not believe in it.
Hamlet sees the passionate acting of the role of one Hecuba
by an actor and he soliloquises, ‘Who is Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba?’ in
regretting that he has not acted with due conviction in the theme of revenge.
The actor is not transformed to the role he is performing, but acting requires
that he come close to it during that role play. If a composer has meaning and
if that meaning has bhakthi, the artist will be true to his job in emoting that
bhakthi while rendering it even if his belief differs. That will be honesty –
acting the role as a musician.
In the book ‘Absorption’ (about the functioning of the
mind, attention, consciousness), Johannes Bronkhorst, the author, opines,
“..the most prominent and perhaps the only universal context of music is that
of religion: music is used everywhere to communicate with, glorify and/or serve
the divinities within any particular culture.”
Bhakthi animates CM like life animates physical body as it
were.
Both religion (as different from spirituality) and music
(as different from the property of sound) in their concretised form are human
creations. If they have cohabited, even if not solemnized in marriage, there
may be no need to separate them forcefully.
Religion is like CM, requiring exposure, initiation and
interest. Neither is essential for life, but with it one feels life is
worthier. Spirituality is when one is in what one is doing. In music, we see it
when MS sings; she becomes what she sings.
The lyrics of CM are predominantly connected with religion
and CM has become associated with religion in this way.
Somehow I feel CM is saturated in bhakthi and a few
including the latest SK want to take it away from it (I read again his
interview posted in another thread as a recall). But, he does not go hammer and
tongs about it.
I simply feel that we need not be apologetic why CM is so
much into bhakthi or Brahmin-centric. We must of course share it out if there
is a demand, and even those with bhakthi would like to do it.
Whether, we talk science or vedanta, we deal with a world
of appearance and the 'reality' is elusive to our naked senses, appliances or
intellect. To think that bhakthi alone is irrational or a burden seems to be as
prejudiced as that not believing in god is a sin.
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
Unwanted music
It is by now settled that a bus or car must have an
audio(-video) system. The government buses (Volvo) also have caught on. So, we
have music form inside a bus and from outside from the cars. Once, while
boarding a bus, I asked why the fare was higher and the conductor said that the
bus had video system fitted. I told him that I would pay extra if he did not
play it. Of course, I did not expect the offer to be accepted.
In Madurai, the bank doctor was a connoisseur of Carnatic
music. I asked him whether he had a stereo system in the car. He flinched and
said, ‘That is vulgar ostentation of wealth.’ While he liked classical music,
he did not carry it with him.
Lest I am caught being an offender, I will honourably
confess that at home, I play music not only for myself but for others too. I do
not like to plug my ears god intended to be open. In fact, against my wish, my
daughter presented me a Walkman long back, but I had little use for it, as I
neither walked nor liked an intrusion in my ear.
Does a musician sing to please?
I started to hear a talk. The issue posted by the speaker
was, ‘We artists tend to become arrogant thinking we make the audience happy.
Does the artist try to make the audience happy?’ I was not patient to listen
further and turned off, but my mind turned on the issue. Whatever I write below
is not in response to the speaker’s views as I did not listen to it.
Does a singer sing to make the audience happy? He sings
because he knows to sing and the audience comes because they want to hear the
music. Certainly, neither the singer nor the audience unite to turn the other
off. Happiness is a frame of mind in which we go to a performance. I expect to
return in the same frame of my mind at least. The normal human tendency is to
seek happiness and there seems nothing amiss in it. A singer does not present
himself to tickle the audience, but to share his musical experience. There is
nothing wrong if he makes the audience happy or feels happy himself that he has
achieved it. The best I read about happiness is that you are happy when you
make others happy.
That is not to say that the musician is out to make the
audience happy. His job is to sing and in singing, the effect of happiness may
be produced. He cannot do anything else to make the audience happy. A joke here
and there is not an issue.
Does that success (making the audience happy) make an
artist arrogant? My take is that arrogance is an attitude that sticks out like
a sore thumb from some congenital disorder that has not been tamed by
upbringing, education and true humility (Paramacharya comes to mind). The
musical accomplishment is only an outlet and not the cause.
Re: Is this not to be the motto of all singers?
27 Nov 2015
I am placing here a compendium of my musings over time:
What should one sing? What is the role of audience?
Of the three forms of art, music, dance and drama, the
latter two go with a plan. I have not seen anyone send a chit to the play group
asking for their choice of play or any piece of choice to a dancer. The issue
is only in relation to music.
But, it is not about listeners’ choice, but about the
pieces that would be sung. Should a singer plan his performance as to what
ragas and numbers he will sing and should he consult his team if any piece was
new? What is playing to the gallery?
PMI narrated how ARI was practising one song for a long
time, but did not sing it in any concert. PMI asked ARI and he said, ‘I am yet
to perfect it.’ Sanjay mentions in the interview that he remembers the wordings
because of repeated practice. Of course, we have now almost every artist using
some memory aid even for old songs. To me, it appears a distraction and a notch
lower in the rendering.
PSN said that SSI used to sing a hundred times better off
the stage. Not that he held something in reserve, but thought that he should
not experiment on stage.
Is the stage one for experiment? Is the audience there to
judge the virtuosity and genius of an artist like an experts panel? Are they
not there to enjoy 2-3 hours of music that makes them feel served what they
came for?
In a concert, OST stopped after an applause for some nice
singing and explained the special thing he did and prefaced it with, ‘I do not
know how many of you understood.’ I did not, and my gut feeling is that a
majority of listeners sailed in the same boat. In a concert (MMU), a rasika
raised the point that though he attends the concerts and enjoys them, he is not
able to make out the raga, etc. Vijay Siva said that it was no issue so long he
is able to enjoy the music. If it were, there would be near empty hall.
The entire music is not extempore. Can we sit through a CM
concert if it has only alapana and swaras? I read a connoisseur write here that
a standalone alapana does not go well with his taste.
All through my academic days and official life, it has been
dinned into my head how planning is needed for effect. Art is creative, but a
singer is not a painter or a sculptor. Classical music has journeyed in a
special route and it is not something different you can do every day. That is
what purism is about. A singer, to my mind, does not produce on the stage
something he is himself experiencing for the first time, but a fresh expression
of his experience, something that may be a revelation to himself or even a
let-down. But, his purpose cannot be audience-neutral. He cannot afford to
ignore the audience once he decides to take the stage.
A relevant question is if an artist has to satisfy an
audience, which one in the audience he has to aim at. That is as much an art as
music and does come by observation and experience. That cannot come in the way
of satisfying an audience overall. Satisfying an audience is the purpose of a
performance and is not a dilution of the art.
Sudha said, ‘I will sing to an empty hall, but not lower
the standard. Maybe I will sing more number of lighter pieces where the
audience may require it.’ It is here, the singer holds her head high and does
not play to the gallery.
I will be aghast if someone said that MMI played to the
gallery because he sang what the audience wished to hear.
23/9/2011
I asked a music teacher whether, if we change the suddha
madhyamam in a notation for Sankarabharanam song, it will become Kalyani, and
he said yes.
Recently, Rama Varma was explaining that the distinction
between the two ragas is more than in madhyamam. For Sankarabharanam, the
swaras start from the previous swara whereas for Kalyani, they border on the
next swara.
The scheme of CM is more complex than explained by 12
swarasthanams and arohana and avarohana.
குடியும் பாட்டும்
19/12/2007
'குடிகாரர்கள் நல்ல சங்கீத வித்வான்களாக
இருந்திருக்கிறார்கள்' என்றேன்.
'அப்படியா' என்றார்
நண்பர்.
'அரியக்குடி, செம்மங்குடி, குன்னக்குடி
கேட்டதில்லையா' என்றேன்.
Music and Meaning
I get rebellious thoughts and an urge to express them. I do
not know what the term is for this pathological condition.
Does meaning enhance the music?
At times, I am left with the feeling that I am better off
not knowing the meaning. Even Vishnusahasranamam which is majestic and gives me
thrill while chanting sonorously or listening to the chaste rendering by MS,
loses its gloss when I turn my mind to meaning of some of the terms. I read a
comment that Vedas are pristine for the sound rather than the meaning. The
meaning looks irrelevant in today’s mindset, but the sound seems to be relevant
in my way of approaching it.
The mood of abject surrender song after song does not leave
the mind robust. It is not really true that we are suffering all the time and
helpless. We would not live if it were true. There may be unfortunate
exceptions, but life has a mixture of opposites, not one-sided imbalance. Nor
is life a hot potato that must be dropped, that we should get rid of it the
soonest. Nor is a wistful longing for a time no one is sure it existed a tonic
to shape the mind for facing the present. It is good if such a sentiment and
mood is by way of exception rather than the rule. Songs of love (even in
relation to Krishna’s amorousness and naughtiness), and even philosophical
songs like Sadasiva Brahmendra’s are more rejuvenating. Songs of confidence,
courage and valour, (Bharathi). or humour which is rare in Carnatic music, are
uplifting. But, that is, if we care for the meaning.
It looks to me that listening to music not bothering about
meaning is a pleasant experience if the music is good. That is not to deny the
experience of those that feel enriched by meaning. That happens by choice and
training, not automatically. I do admire many rasikas who know the music by its
roots, the meaning of the songs in several languages and how the meaning and
music mesh and produce a zooming effect. Possibly, sour-grapism is the cause of
my condition.
I read this after writing the above piece and bow my head
to the great lady:
“Pattammal’s reverence for sahitya was legendary. ‘The
great composers poured their hearts out in their words, so sacred that to
mispronounce is to blaspheme,’ she would say. ‘After all Tyagaraja composed Eti
janma not to show off his Varali but to pour out his bhakti.’ Her greatest ire
was reserved for those who mangled the text, which sometimes resulted in a
travesty of the meaning. She was particular that sangatis should not interrupt
the flow of words, but highlight their meaning.”
Listening to a programme, I got these ideas.
Gamakam in Carnatic music is rather erotic! It teases the
next swara. For example in Mohanam, the ‘ga’ oscillated touches ‘ma’. In
Kalyani also the gamakam takes ‘ga’ to the border of suddha madhyamam, though
Kalyani has only pratimadhyamam legitimately. In Sankarabharanam though, where
‘ma’ is the legitimate partner of ‘ga’, ‘ga’ does not go near ‘ma’ but is
straight. A virtuoso of Hindustani music commented that what is peculiar to CM
is that it goes up to not only the next swara, but even the one beyond. That is
to say, it flirts not only with the neighbour (permitted by the saying ‘love
thy neighbour’) but also neighbour’s neighbour. I am not sure if there is
scriptural sanction for it.
So, folks, carnaic music is tanatalising. Hope you are
tempted by the seductress. There are a number of talented musicians and do not
miss the fun.
My non-musical musings
I hope no musician reads as I am going to expose all my
ignorance of music here.
Carnatic music, many hold, is a source music that one who
masters it can take to any genre just like that. One musician (a once-musician
as some call him) differed and pooh-poohed the idea. The point is contested. I
feel that it is not the nature of music that imparts proficiency across genres,
but the calibre of an individual. Many struggle with CM itself. Many from other
genres also come to grip with CM with felicity. If the claim is indeed right,
we must see a rush for learning CM from all quarters. The reality is that there
is hardly any demand even from across the Vindhyas.
Bhavan’s journal (Nov 15, 2016)
Excerpts
Many researchers speculate that music and language arose
side by side, since all languages have some type of ‘song’, either tones or
intonation. Others suggest that music may have preceded language, or that music
may, indeed, have been the first language.
..song originated separately, and several times, within a
variety of species. There is song among whales and dolphins, among songbirds,
and even crickets!
..stirring quality of their (gibbons’) songs is brought out
in a Chinese poem.
These emotion-evoking gibbon calls are being studied by
scientists since it is thought that they may be linked to the evolution of
human song.
..Nigel Osborne..believes that aalaap with which an Indian
classical music performance begins, represents a very ancient form of
communication between human beings which existed even before language. .. After the aalaap, he says, the note
structure becomes slowly more sophisticated till it reaches a high level of
abstraction and design which is both intellectual and emotional. The sequence
of an Indian performance appears to trace in a nutshell, the journey of human
music from origin to culmination.
..Yehudi Menuhin also commented on the possible origin of
music in ancient India.
..Alaine Danielou wrote, ‘A skilled Indian classical
musician can lead the audience to depth
and intensity of feeling undreamt of in other musical systems’.
Arrian: ‘No nation is fonder of singing and dancing than
the Indian’.
Carnatic music and popularity
Normally people complain that there is not enough audience
for CM concerts. That is understandable. It does not attract that big an
audience even when offered free, sometimes with some refreshment also.
But, something inscrutable happens. There are some who
question when large audience shows up for a concert. One connoisseur dismisses
the very concept of popularity for a CM artiste. Tastes differ and so the idea
of popularity is meaningless. Another exhorts the audience to ration their
presence among various artistes and not swarm over just a few. More
fundamentally, the classicism of the artiste is decried. The artiste is branded
as populist and as doing things that are taboo. What is worse, the standard and
quality of the audience that attend such concerts is also adversely commented
upon.
There are in fact instances where the artistes dilute the
standards to reach a wider audience, but that cannot be applied to any artiste
just based on a mass turnout.
Good classical music can attract a large audience. It need
neither be a chance occurrence, nor a marketing success.
I think that it is a matter for celebration not
disparagement if an artiste presents a Carnatic concert to the delight of a
bursting audience. We must yearn for more such artistes.
21st Jan 2020
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SANJAY
Much erudite and aesthetic write-up has appeared on the phenomenon
called Sanjay. Yet, as a crude rasika as I imbibe his nectarine music day in
and day out, these thoughts churn in my mind as they haunt me in bed.
Does he sing with abandon? Yes, he does. But it is abandon
of a disciplined man, not of a daydreamer. Once a rasika asked MS whether she
sings ‘mei maranthu’ (forgetting the self) and she replied, ‘A rasika can
listen ‘mei maranthu’, but if a singer does it, ‘kalebaram aayidum’ (it will be
disaster). Sanjay said in an interview (a classic one – see http://arunk.freepgs.com/tmp/sanjay_interview.pdf),
‘When I sing Thodi, I sing in the full knowledge that it is Thodi.’ He is
conscious and thoughtful as to what he sings. Sri T V Gopalakrishnan, an iconic
star in CM firmament today, says that Sanjay puts his thought every minute that
he sings.
Sanjay does not invoke any god for his singing. All gods
are safe. He works hard by his own admission and as evidenced from the
spectacular result that is palpable. Nothing comes by chance. But he is ever
ready to acknowledge the teachers, inspirations and encouragements from his
peers and the audience which is always his second home. Nor does he attach to
spirituality a special place in music (see the above article). As I see it, his
music is spiritual because it is true to the grammar of the genre and moves the
rasikas to that ecstasy the gopikas found in their union with Krishna, as
imagined by bhagavatas. Spirituality pervades life in whatever we do and music
is no exception, nor unique. I take that as the import of what he says.
He is professional in every aspect. He is alive to
technology and precepts and concepts of modern management. He keeps his
interests diverse covering other forms of art and also outside the field of
art. That, I feel, must keep him fresh with new ideas. In work also, they say
that a break recharges you. I think that he should share his knowhow, deftly
customized from generally available fund of knowledge, with business managers,
esp. start-ups. It will be a great idea if IIMs make a case study and present
the findings in their institutes.
The lyrics in hiding (in thousands) are scared that Sanjay
will bring them under public gaze. He takes them out and presents them as
time-worn pieces like a craftsman takes a rough diamond, cuts and polishes and
makes them dazzle.
The ragas dance to his tune as they like his cuisine of
swaras (phrases) or cocktail of spirits (bhava). One leaves a concert thinking
that one has seen all that a raga has to offer, to be only fooled as next time
more of the raga reveals itself under the majestic command of the consummate
artiste.
Youngsters flock to his concert for the valuable experience
that leaves one freshly charged for whatever one is doing. Not only rasikas,
musicians too. Bharat Sundar, whom a rasika predicted to be the next generation
Sanjay, shows signs of his influence including the white costume! Prasanna
Venkataraman described him as role model. Venkat Nagarajan at times reminds of
Sanjay. Saketharaman mentioned him as an inspiration in an interview by Pramod
Kumar.
Sanjay is simple and affable. Look at this comment by Venu
Sundar: “When we had celebrated my dad CHITTI @ MANIKODI 100 years at BHARATHI
home @ Triplicane in 2010 Sanjay and his wife graced occasion over just an SMS!
Sanjay is gentleman to the core.”
Sanjay’s speeches, judiciously rationed, are juicy too. He
is forthright, to the point and insightful, with telling humour.
A great gift to Carnatic music.
May he live long and add more glory to music and himself.
(His music is available prolifically in youtube including
innumerable live concerts.)
January 16 at 9:09 PM ·
It was perhaps 1974.
I was at a concert of MS. Towards the end she sang a brief
alapana of madhyamavathi. I ventured to a friend, ‘Maybe she will sing
Vinayakuni.’ He demurred, ‘Will she sing it in the end?’ At that time there was
no revolutionary musician who will choose vatapi ganapathim for finale. But, I
knew that vinayakuni was addressed to Kamakshi, not Vinayaka. I had the
Kamakshi suprabhatam record where the last of the four songs is vinayakuni with
a moving neraval at anatha rakshaki. It turned out to be vinayukuni also that
day.
Criticism of Art and Literature is an art. Any work taken
for criticism must be standard. It is pointless to take up a substandard work
for criticism.
Criticism is critical appreciation, not finding fault, not
looking at a work from one’s expectation but from the effect it produces. Its
purpose is not to support or run down the creator. It is different from review
which may be banal and not worth a deep look. Criticism enhances the joy in
appreciating the creation. Shakespearean criticism is a case in point.
The entire book ‘The Story of Philosophy’ by Will Durant
can be taken to be criticism of philosophy in parts. Will Durant briefly
recapitulates the salient points of the philosopher and points out the
questions it leaves unanswered or raises afresh.
The book on Leonardo da Vinci by Walter Isaacson contains
beautiful criticism of his works. (Pl see Appendix 1 for a sample). I also have
glanced through a book on Rembrandt’s paintings. (Pl see Appendix 2).
A friend sent me a masterpiece in painting of the Mughal
times. The critical observations are on the margin.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/04/02/arts/design/shah-jahan-chitarman.html
A good critic should eschew aspects that are outside of art
and language that is bitter and satirical. One should not be eager to showcase
one’s narrative skill, but stick to the aesthetic points.
Appendix 1
“Mona Lisa:
Never in a painting have motion and emotion, the paired
touchstones of Leonardo’s art, been so intertwined. .. So the world’s most
famous smile is inherently and fundamentally elusive, and therein lies
Leonardo’s ultimate realization about human nature. His expertise was in
depicting the outer manifestation of inner emotions. But here in Mona Lisa he
shows something of more importance that we can never fully know true emotion
from outer manifestations... Her portrait is a profound expression of our human
connections, both to our inner selves and to our universe. .. And what about
all of the scholars and critics over the years who despaired that Leonardo squandered
too much time immersed in studying optics and anatomy, and the patterns of the
cosmos? The Mona Lisa answers them with a smile.”
Appendix 2
Good Samaritan by Rembrandt
Though the scene of the story is laid in Palestine it is
the sort of incident which one can imagine taking place in any country or
period of time. So it seems perfectly proper that Rembrandt, in representing
the subject, should show us an old Dutch scene. The etching illustrates that
moment when the Good Samaritan arrives at the inn, followed by the wounded
traveler mounted on his horse.
The building is a quaint piece of architecture with arched
doors and windows. That it was built with an eye to possible attacks from
thieves and outlaws, we may see from the small windows and thick walls of
masonry, which make it look like a miniature fortress.
This is a lonely spot, and inns are few and far between.
The plaster is cracking and peeling from the surface, and the whole appearance
of the place does not betoken great thrift on the part of the owners. On the
present occasion, during the working hours of the day, doors and windows are
open after the hospitable manner of an inn.
The host stands in the doorway, greeting the strangers, and
the Good Samaritan is explaining the situation to him. In the meantime the inn
servants have come forward: the hostler's boy holds the horse by the bridle,
while a man lifts off the wounded traveler.
https://www.rembrandtpaintings.com/the-good-samaritan.jsp
*
Non-musical Musings on Music
Criticism
One pervasive influence of economics is perhaps
ambidexterity – nothing is said without bringing ‘on the other hand’. Even exam
questions are framed to list ‘for’ and against’. Almost any writing is
considered incomplete if some negatives are not mentioned. The exception must
be hagiography where there is unabashed praise of the protagonist, whose flaws
are also converted to sterling qualities.
In criticism of art, which delivers aesthetic enjoyment
that is not compressible in words, the purpose cannot be a technical evaluation
of the elements that are harnessed to create something. A baby is not an
aggregate of the chemical elements and physical forces. A creation in art is
not the colours or notes or parts put together in an assembly line in a
factory. It has a liveliness and non-verbal communication, beyond semantics and
syntax. Criticism fails if it tries to describe a shoddy job needlessly
elevating it to a centre stage or confuses slips or character of certain
elements, which may not really mar the creation. Sometimes people mishear and
attribute a flaw in the rendition. In a song someone pointed out wrong swara
used by the singer, but the singer with whom I took up confirmed that he did
not err. I believe the singer. In another concert a learned listener commented
in the chat column that the singer used a phrase in Ritigowla which was not
allowed, but there was no deviation from the raga swarupa as far as I could
make out. Such fixation comes in the way of enjoying a creation.
Once a remark on the singer not knowing a raga of a tukkada
hurt the singer. If the singer has sung the piece well, what does it matter if
she did not know the raga? After all, for some of the lighter pieces, there may
be no clearly defined raga.
Once a critic who writes in print media criticized
adversely the music of Abhishek Raghuram. Smt. Gayathri Girish, who attends the
concerts of other artistes (I wish more artistes did so), refuted the points
made by the ‘knwledgeable’ critic in her blog.
Some quotes:
I read this recently:
I.Pavlov: “Artists grasp life as a single whole, totally,
completely, a living reality, without any fractionating, without any
separating; others – thinkers – just fractionate it, thereby sort of killing
it, making of it some tentative skeleton, and only then they, as it were,
reassemble its parts and attempts to revive it somehow, an endeavor in which
they fail completely.”
RaGa sisters quoted this Aesop’s fable about facing
criticism:
https://www.bartleby.com/17/1/62.html
From Sanjay’s blog:
“Here is an interesting take on criticism by the writer
Bernard Malamud in an interview given to the Paris Review in 1975.
‘I dislike particularly those critics who preach their
aesthetic or ideological doctrines at you. What’s important to them is not what
the writer has done but how it fits, or doesn’t fit, the thesis they want to
develop.’
This can also be seen in Carnatic music where the
‘knowledgeable’ are always keen to try and impose their value systems on the
musician. Sometimes the reaction to the music is so determined by the already
existing assumption that has been made on how or what should be performed.
Every generation of artists keep throwing up the odd rebel who shatter these
existing notions and make the ‘knowledgeable’ redefine their expectations. Then
the new generation of artistes will suffer from not conforming to this recently
formed set of values and so it goes on and on.”
Some points I read in Sruti are interesting.
On being prompted Apporva Krishna asked Sandeep
Ramachandran, a question: “How would you plan to spread Carnatic music among
the masses?” Sandeep replies, “I think it most important for us to be true to
music, to be proud of our art form and pursue it with vigour. The beauty of
each musician is to be committed and dedicated to the art form. This will help
in attracting recognition from all.”
(That is the best an artist can do to keep art alive and
make it reach an audience. Criticism should also endeavour to further this
thought.)
Sri V Ramnarayan writes in Sruti: “So much complexity in
terms of laya intricacies or challenging ragam tanam pallvais is on offer that
even Sangita Kalanidhis will find it difficult to offer expert comments on many
of these concerts.” He concludes, “Every rasika is a potential critic,
broadcasting to the world even as a concert is in progress. All he or she needs
is a smart phone.
Elsewhere while offering his impressions on a ‘fabulous’
concert, he writes, “ .. I did not take
any notes at the concert.”
I read Kalki telling his reporter not to take a jotting
book, but listen to the concert and write a review on what stayed in his mind.
I read that Subbudu would write his review from memory only. Russell said that
one should read a book with a view to knowing, not to criticise. Likewise, one
should attend a concert with a view to enjoying the experience, not to write a
review. A review must be a spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings’ of the
concert recollected when all the ‘sound and fury’ have ceased, like any
worthwhile music is a spontaneous flow of an aesthetic urge.
*
19 Aug 2016
Much of literary criticism is about the experience or the
ambiguities (e.g. is Hamlet mad?), not about what the author has not done or
how he could have done it better. It does point to inconsistencies and seeks to
find explanation, but the author’s decision is unalterable.
Sanjay remarked about music criticism being varied, often
not on the performance but on the ideas of the critic.
Is there a lakshana for criticism of a live performance?
Has it to be defining the performance (what it should have been) or point to
its anchor (what of it contributed to its appeal)? A poor choice of criticism
is not worth discussing. To deserve criticism, a performance must commend
itself. We can dismiss it otherwise as not worth our time at least over and
above what we have already allotted by attending it.
A performance worth a word may have often deviations from
the standard it set for itself. That happens for a variety of reasons,
including maybe even the artist’s momentary casualness. The overall appeal
discounts such lapses. The point is, should they be publicly recorded or shared
with the artist as Sri Mahadevan (Sri MKR’s father) would do, as I read?
Subbudu brought an extra ‘kick’ in his reviews. There are
those that relish it and those that treat it as rubbish. Some sort of comedy is
part of a drama (film) however flimsy. Is it required? Does it add to the value
of the art?
We have among the rasikas some very knowledgeable, balanced
and interesting critics, superior to the paid ones who get the call from the
press for whatever reason. Hope they find it worth their thought to add
substance to this discussion, raised by me as an ‘outsider’.
https://rasayanakarnatic.wordpress.com/artcriticism-and-appreciation/
*
Some observations on the ‘expert’ comments on music
performance.
1. Once, I saw a
comment that a bright young singer sang a wrong swara. I referred to the singer
who checked and confirmed that he sang correctly.
2. A rasika found
fault with the swaras sung by a good singer in the Ritigowla raga; his prayoga
was appropriate for Sriranjani, not correct in Ritigowla, it was said, but I
did not get any Sriranjani flavour.
3. A disciple of
SSI who used to accompany him found fault with Mrs. S Sowmya about a particular
sanchara and she replied quoting authorities and a clip from SSI’s own singing
to justify her usage.
4. A reviewer
tore to pieces the performance of a creative artist, and a frontline musician
wrote that she heard the concert and that there was nothing amiss in the
classicism of the singer.
5. From a FB
post: Subbudu wrote that SSI was making mistakes in ragas. According to him
Reetigaula did not admit of the D N S prayoga. Semmangudi said, “D N S prayoga
can occur in Reetigaula, but only once.’ Semmangudi then proceeded to sing a
bit of the raga with the D N S prayoga.
There are many like this. Many people who make comments do
so with inadequate knowledge, but posing to be in the know.
*
Non-musical musings on music
Art and Artist
Often we create a duality unnecessarily. I cannot imagine
art without a performer or creator. When we praise an artist, it is not his
person that we are in awe of, but his creation. It is an aberration when people
focus on the appearance or dress or ornaments of an artist. An artist comes to
our notice through her art. She sometimes becomes a fixation when she holds us
spell bound.
Is an artist greater than art?
Is a scientist greater than science?
Is a doctor greater than medical science?
Is a dramatist greater than drama?
These are rhetorical questions.
For that matter, total nonsense is greater than raul!
Knowledge accumulates at a furious pace in any field and it
is beyond a single human being’s capacity to master it.
As far as I know, no artist claims to know or have mastered
all. Even an artist who felt that Thyagaraja was wrong in composing some songs
and that meaning was incidental in his compositions (that is his view which in
all probability would have been ignored by Thyagaraja) said when asked whether
he was learning HM, ‘I have to learn a lot in CM itself.’
Some artists may perhaps feel that they are on top of the
world, but not that they are greater than the art.
*
Is an artist bigger than art?
There are no two ways about it. Art represents the combined
treasure of many artists over a long period of time and it is impossible for
any individual to have all that treasure in his possession. This idea of how an
individual has severe limitations and that humility marks accomplishment is
found in several pithy sayings:
स्वाध्यायान्-मा प्रमदः
विद्या ददाति विनयं (Kanchi Paramacharya,
Sri Ramana and Albert Einstein are real life examples that come to mind.)
Pride goes on horseback, but returns on foot.
கற்றது கைம்மண்ணளவென்று உற்ற கலைமடந்தை ஓதுகிறாள்.
Sometimes one lapses into an abstract idea of art as though
it can exist without performers, like one believes soul exists without body.
That will be a flaw. Vedas attained a textual status with Vediyars having
dwindled, and Kanchi Acharya took steps for Vedic learning and chanting to
revive. Art esp. music cannot be some documents and audios. We need performers
in a parampara as is happening thankfully.
There will appear individuals that think a world of
themselves. We have to pray like Jesus, ‘Forgive them for they know not what
they do'. We must leave them severely alone lest they get puffed up more.
*
I raised this issue before.
If in film songs, pure CM sangatis are used, why can’t they
be used in a concert? Charulatha Mani says that in several songs the phrases
used are typically CM stuff. In early years, film music was mostly in CM. some
like /maname kanamum maravate’ have passed on to CM repertoire. Why then is
there resentment for using such sangatis in concerts? If it does not dilute the
purity of CM, which is necessary to preserve the CM legacy, is it not a good
way to connect with the audience and expect more to take to CM listening?
The provocation for resurrecting the issue was this in
Sruti magazine of Feb 2020: “.. he showed enough shades of classical film songs
such as Marythamalai mamaniye, Apoorva ragam (raga Mahati) – perhaps a way to
help the audience connect with the ragas!’
Interestingly in the same issue, I read, “She (Mahati
Kannan) toudhed upon the various influences in the choreography, such as that
of a Hindi film song that inspired a thillana in raga Harini, and using Thai
music in Pavai Nonbu.”
*
The accompanists have a great role to play in a vocal
concert. They must enhance the performance. In my view, the accompanists have a
more challenging role because it is more difficult to follow another’s idea
than to pilot your own.
“To play in a supportive manner so as to embellish and
enhance the other artistes requires a very different demeanour and thought
process from playing solo. It necessitates tempering one’s own urges,
concentrating on the other artistes and going with their flow, not one’s own. “
Sri L Ramakrishnan, a sought-after violinist.
The seating position has been conceived keeping in mind the
important enhancer role to which the accompanist must face the artist to latch
on to improvisations.
When the accompanist sits next to the singer pursuant a
perverse idea, I see that they turn to see the singer. This may cause neck pain
more than the ego-pain of not facing the audience. Aesthetism, not
egalitarianism, is the guiding principle to music.
Call them co-artists or what you will, the ideas for the
concert flow from the main artist. Otherwise it will be like our legislatures.
Let there be contribution to the growth of the music, not
silly changes.
*
Pakka Vadyam
I have some silly doubts and am raising them audaciously.
Is the expression right or prejudiced?
Are all the artists on stage equal in the way the music is
conceived and presented? Is it a medley where each presents his manodharma?
I heard in grapevine that a front-ranking violinist played
differently from MMI and MMI pointed out that it was supposed to be pakka
vadyam. TMK in his music appreciation CD points out how the violinist playing a
phrase different from what he essayed is an aberration.
Is it not more challenging for the violinist to follow the
manodharma of the vocalist extemporaneously than for him to launch into his own
manodharma?
Is not some unity expected in a performance? Who decides
that unity?
If seating sorts out equality issue, will it not be
required that they sit in the centre by turns?
Do the accompanists (or co-artists) feel more at ease
because they face the audience? Does it boost their performance? Have they been
feeling deprived by the traditional seating?
Should the percussionist decide what tala the singer should
choose?
*
In a guided listening to yesteryear stalwarts, the
prominent musician who gave masterly comments on what was going on, mentioned
that they promoted music, not themselves. My mind went over it.
His uncle narrated in an interview this incident. When he
got a job offer in line with his qualification and he was in a dilemma whether
to take the job or pursue music as a career, his father advised him, ‘You must
plump for musical career either if you have a consuming passion or if that is
the only avenue to earn the livelihood. Neither is the case, so take up the
job.’ He did take up the job though his musical talent was no less. Stalwarts
like SSI and GNB discouraged their children from taking to music as a
profession because of the vagaries involved. TMK narrated an incident. A
violinist visited SSI when he heard his son singing and commended his singing
to SSI. SSI remarked, ‘You say that I sing well and you also say that my son
sings well.’ The point is that those scions did have musical ability. Sense of
insecurity in the profession stood in the way of their taking up music full
time.
Many prominent musicians of today took their own time to
take to music fully, and still some have their feet in two vocations.
We have seen how many artists suffered with chinavirus
spreading.
Idealism like ‘art for art’s sake’, ‘art is greater than
the artist’ and ‘an artist must care for the art rather than for himself’ come
after securing a strong hold on income. Rare instances will be there as
exceptions.
An artist commits no sin if he tries to promote himself
through his music which confines to classicism and aesthetic appreciation. Most
artists of the day do it one way or another and it does not vitiate the scene.
*
Palghat Sri Ram Prasad in an interview:
Palghat Sri Mani Iyer’s integrity: When he was in deathbed
and did not have normal consciousness, he told his son of the advance he has
taken for a few concerts and asked him to return it.
His talent: A luminary said of him, ‘Even if he had not
taken to mrdangam, but set up a tea shop, it would have been the best tea
shop.’
Ariyakkudi started addressing PMI in plural and PMI
requested him to continue addressing him in singular as he was 20 or so years
younger, But Ariyakkudi said, ‘எண்சாண் உடம்புக்கு சிரசே பிரதானம்.’
(For
the body that measures eight spans brain is the most important.)’
*
What is good about HM is the sruti suddham and minimal
gamaka. They revel in pure notes - in establishing that. I heard that a
musician feels great when he touches the note exactly. Palghat Raghu said the
same about the beat. A drummer's joy is getting the beat perfect. One HM singer
mentioned about the gamaka - you extend the note not only to the next svara,
but to the one after that. TMK said that the G in Nayaki goes all the way from
R to M. MBMK's music does not appeal to those who appreciate the Thanjavur bani
because there is less gamaka and also he makes one guess what raga he is
singing. Because of excessive gamakas,
CM singers seem to miss sruti as my son says that most of them blur the notes.
He can make out the notes when someone sings.
Another aspect of HM is that sahityam has a minimal role. I
feel that too many words cut into melody. I read that DKP found OVK songs not
suited to CM (I am not sure of what exactly she said.) Your and Rajagopalan's
bete'noire. SSI said 'Sahityam sollaama sollanum. Adikkaraa madiri sollak
koodaathu. People look for melody more.' I find that sensible. Even in Tamizh
songs I do not make out everything, nor do I seem to care. Only the pallavi and
neraval lines stay in mind.
*
Music miscellany
Todd M. Comb: “Why Carnatic Music? I value Carnatic Music
for the effectiveness with which it can build positive mental discipline. It
helps me to focus and organise my thoughts, and it helps to eliminate negative
mental habits.”
Shoba Narayan in The Hindu: "All music originated in
the sacred, no matter what religion. Listen to Gregorian or Mozarabic chants
with your eyes closed and they will remind you of a temple in Haridwar. Listen
to Baroque Jewish music from a Portuguese synagogue, available on YouTube, and
it will take you back to a church in Goa. Listen to Islamic Anasheeds or Sufi
music and you will feel the pull of a mosque and also that of a Buddhist
monastery. The chants and singing all sound similar. When people say that music
is universal, this is what they mean."
*
Todi
Todi is perhaps the first raga I fell in love with. Yes, I
am a polygamist in the world of ragas!
I heard Todi being sung by many singers recently. I do not
complain. Many singers, barring a few who project themselves as egalitarian,
mention Todi as their favourite raga. One prominent singer said, ‘Todi and
Bhairavi are my staple diet.’ Mrs. Shubhasree Thanikachalam asked the singers
to name their favourite ragam and embargoed Todi. Sriranjani Santhanagopalan,
while responding, began with, ‘Of course Todi would have been my choice.’ That
is to establish that I am not eccentric.
Why Todi?
Impressionistically, I got these thoughts.
It is unique to CM. You do not have an equivalent in, say,
HM. Gamakas define the raga. Priya sisters said, ‘There is no Todi without
gamakam.’ Mr. O S Thyagarajan sang the plain notes of Todi (all komal) to
demonstrate that it does not sound like Todi. Sriram Parasuram mentioned in a
lec-dem how a particular sangathi had so many ‘ga’s. He also said that it
cannot be fitted into HM without altering the grammar of HM.
‘On that note’ by Sanjay is as popular as his concerts. His
latest but one on Todi was too short an episode for so unique a raga, I thought.
But, Sanjay packs in his pithy talk pregnant messages.
His guru pointed out to him after a concert how he took
liberty at the higher octave while he did well in the lower octave in singing a
Todi krithi. ‘You did well in the lower octave but when you reached the upper
sa .., well, you are popular and you have a niche audience you have to take
care of.’ The guru said what he had to but tacitly and with finesse. Sanjay on
his part is disarmingly candid, not a regular trait of a performing artist.
Hear a Todi song – English meaning is given for the song
along the singing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLe6KWCDoB8
REVIEWS
Sanjay at Nadasurabhi
Sanjay sang with his usual team and Guruprasanna on kanjira
for Nadasurabhi.
The threatened rain held back thankfully, but the promised
music shower poured delectably.
It was start on the dot, credit to the organisers who put
music ahead of empty talk, and Sanjay who is a stickler. Time management is his
forte, whether when he is by himself (how do I know? His personality and
musical virtuosity are the pointers) or when with an audience, or about the
order, intensity, and mix of rendering.
He started with an ata tala varnam in what Mudaliar would
describe as Sanju Kambodhi. Words could not be captured by my partial ears, but
did not seem to matter. (Talam name courtesy my wife).
He then rendered a measured Kari kalabha mukham in Saveri
with a round of swaras for kari kalabha. Sa ri kari kalabha still resonates in
the ears.
Sri Parvathi Parameswara came to bles next in Sri. I had
not heard it before.
He sang alapana and krithi Kanden Kanden (but not
Seethaiyai) and the raga is at the back of my mind and when someone reveals it,
I would know.
Entha vedu Kondhu Raghava flowed in beautiful kala pramanam
not like bullet train or passenger train. It was mesmerizing with mind-boggling
variations of neraval at chintha theercchuda. Swaras were sung briefly.
Then came a majestic, moving Bhairavi. With Sanjay all
guesses are likely to go awry – ‘bulb’ as Mudaliyar characterizes the surprise.
Thaye ezhaipal was the song chosen and he did full justice to the raga and its
pathos. Neraval was at ennaatha ennamellaam.. followed by swaras and thani.
The way the percussion duo supported Sanjay was an object
lesson to anyone who wants to enhance the effect of the mood a singer wants to
create. Even some seniors can learn. The thani was a veritable treat and
engaged the audience. It came midway and that does not permit someone to leave!
Sanjay brought a lullaby-like filler Anandavalli in
Nilambari by Swathi Thirunal. Yes, Rama Varma and Amritha Venkatesh were in the
first row. The piece was a pure bliss.
That the violin accompaniment was excellent goes without
saying.
I was not lucky to be able to continue longer and left at
this as he was starting on RTP.
*
Sanjay@Bangalore Ranjani Fine Arts Feb 11, 2018
Intha paraka and Kanthimathi were ordinary by Sanjay
standards. I could not get out of my mind SSI singing Inthaparaka.
From the first note of Thodi, it was a superb event and in
fact, he was in a great mood and would have continued but for the fact that it
was a 'samsara' concert (another event to follow). In fact, a lady was trying
perhaps to signal to him to close from the side. He looked at her and sang two
more pieces, the last two that were so enthralling. Not to tease the lady more,
he sang pavamana. But the speaker did not show any hurry as he went on and on.
A little bit of anticlimax, but the audience was still in the mood of the
concert and did not bother about him, I think.
RTP in a scalar raga, I do not know what text book says
about it, but Sanjay scaled great heights and made it classical.
Atreya excelled in Tani which the other members of the team
appreciated explicitly.
In Bhimplas, Sanjay showed extra creativity and predictably
continued with the MS song, second only to MS.
Apart from a rarely heard kriti in Todi, there was no
surprise in raga or kriti. That was unpredictable!
*
Sanjay at Nadasurabhi
It was a downpour. Last year it was wet weather when Sanjay
sang and the attendance was thinner. This year it was overflowing. Sanjay
justified it.
Learned reviews must appear soon, but it is irresistible to
share the ‘high’ soottodu soodaa.
As usual, it was business on the dot. In no other concert,
I have seen such total absence of fuss with the preliminaries. There was no
call for more sharp, less volume, feedback inadequate and so on. In no concert
of Sanjay such problems are seen.
It was a new varnam (new for me) in Ahiri, a raga that is
normally heard towards the end. It was sung briskly. The last beat of Mrdangam
for the song must have been just over when one heard Swaminatha paripalaya. GNB
might have popularized it, but SS has taken it to a different world with
mesmerizing swaras.
Bilahari alapana was followed by Inthakannanadamemi. SS was
perhaps immodest. He seemed to be describing the concert.
Kalyani alapana followed. It was rather short, but the way
he swung between the lower and upper ocataves looked like a frolicsome child
going up and down the stairs enticingly. To add to the limitless Ananda, SS now
offered Kallu sakkarai with a broad smile perhaps sensing the surprise of
choice of krithi. It was left with no embellishments.
Then came thodi. Stalwarts of yesteryears used to take
these two ragas, that are quite different from each other, in succession.
‘Kadakikkan’ was the song. SS pleaded in neraval with Ambal so movingly. The
raga was dancing with each rasika like Krishna with each gopi. The essay
stopped with neraval.
Then came Dharini Telisu, another krithi on Ambal. Here the
swara sanchara was a renewed Deepavali. He forgot ban on Chinese crackers by
fanatics! The myriad ways he brought the raga in innumerable patterns was
Sanjay stuff. There was never a moment one felt it was kanakku. The raga was
delivered whole and sweet at every phrase. A fantastic thani followed. Luckily,
the auditorium was strong to withstand it. The applause at the end looked like
another thani.
A gentle Chetasri followed.
Then SS launched into Shanmukhapriya. He went from one
climax to another. The energy he put into it drained me, but not SS. Thanam was
another marvel. Predictably, it was Saravana Bhava enum thitu mandiram for
pallavi. This is Skanda sashti week. He sang RM, sahana, ?. Bageswari – HM
artists might have been put to shame the way he sang this. Trikalam (I do not
know how many times) was done. He then went on to complete the song. There was
a flash of SSI.
Somu showed up in a few places.
A Purandaradasa krithi followed and I left after that
reluctantly.
I find no one giving the well-proportioned and high quality
concert that Sanjay does. That is my problem.
*
Suryaprakash
27 Sep 2016
Rasikas.org has been a great forum in the cause of music
and one of the many forces that count in fostering a niche art. The greatest
patrons are of course the sabhas in the absence of royal patrons.
It is great that several musicians are members here and
contribute.
Thinking of patrons, Sri S.Nageswaran has been doing great
service, organising concerts in his house and throwing it open to rasikas. Such
concerts are precious as usually knowledgeable rasikas assemble for the event
and I am sure the artists cherish it. The concerts are subsequently uploaded
taking it to a wider net of ardent rasikas. This is invaluable service.
The concert of Sri Suryaprakash that kept a full-house
audience regaled in the Sobha Tulip hall with a pleasing swimming pool outside
and some table tennis in the next room, was one such occasion got up by Sri
Nageswaran. Sri Nageswaran’s family of three generations were in the audience.
Sri Suryaprakash is an unassuming artist who connects with
the fellow artists and rasikas readily and cheerfully. The concert was a
sumptuous feast.
It was nice to see Sow. Aishwarya squat in the front and
enjoy the concert visibly, keeping the beat. That reminds me of Nick’s comment
about Amritha Murali attending the concerts of other artists. As an aside, it
will be nice if senior artists attend the concerts of younger ones whenever
they get time.
What a way to spend an evening in a divine atmosphere in
terms of not only the songs that are soaked in bhakti (forget secularism,
bhakthi is a distilled contribution and aesthetic culmination in music in
Indian context), but also the involvement of rasikas all of whom have the
unifying interest in CM without any reservation.
*
BANGALURU RASIKAS MEET ON 25.06.2016
Dr. S.Nageswaran’s (SN) call for rasikas meet drew RSachi
(RS) and me to his hospitable home.
RS kept the meeting ticking pulsatingly with his fluent
contribution to almost anything under the sun, be it music, mythology, history,
spirituality, horticulture, venture capital or health.
He led the discussion by pointing out to the passion of SN
for gardening. SN took us round the spacious and convenient flat atop the
skyscraper, and showed each balcony being made into a mini Lal Bagh.
RS also mentioned how SN has been an ardent patron of CM,
having invited many artists to perform in his house (home rather), and sharing
with several of them the precious recordings to aid in their learning.
We were joined by SN's first son, Balaji, his wife and two
young daughters who have been top notch in the way they conducted themselves.
The young girls were called upon to sing. They obliged readily and beautifully.
They sang Sriranjani, Thodi, Hindolam and Mohana Kalyani. RS remarked that
their teacher must be singing for dance as many items were dance items. He was
forthright in giving them advice on improving upon their practice. He mentioned
how Ri in Mohana Kalyani should be sung, that being a jiva swara. The girls
were in for some surprise. RS quizzed them what the favourite raga of their
grandfather was. Not having read rasikas.org posts, nor expecting a quiz, they
had to be helped on with clues.
Balaji brought three what looked like some children’s toy
pipe. It was then revealed that it is called kazoo and that by vocalising
through it, a nagaswaram like effect can be worked out. Father and daughters
demonstrated it. Balaji appears to be a chip of the old block, with music
written into his DNA. RS was busy on his mobile. I thought he was recording. He
lifted his head and announced, ‘I have ordered a kazoo on Amazon’. It was
amazing. He believes that if something has to be done it has to be done
immediately, a philosophy different from what I have been used to, ‘If
something cannot wait, it is not important.’
Lunch followed. RS had to regale us even while eating. He
narrated a joke (anecdote). Hitchcock met Shaw who was a vegetarian. He
remarked, ‘You seem to suggest that Britain is under famine.’ Shaw retorted,
‘You seem to suggest its cause.’ The topicality of the joke can be appreciated
when you look at my picture.
We parted after about three hours of an interesting
meeting. As we were in the lift, RS said in admiration, ‘It is a well meshed
family. Rarely, you find three generations converging in one genre of music
seamlessly.’ That was the secret of why the meeting was special even if modest
in attendance.
*
January 19 at 9:52 PM ·
Nadasurabhi programme
Palghat Ramprasad is a musician connoisseurs of Carnatic
music must not miss. He does his grandfather (Palghat Sri Mani Iyer) and his
father proud. He has a voice that straddles the three sthayis in comfort, with
mandara sthayi being stressed in most of his essays. His manodharmam is
home-brewed, does not carry falvours from other makes. His patantharam is
solid. There is a majestic gait that is enticingly rhythmic and the percussion
accompanists are thrilled to play with added vigour.
He seems to have settled for white for concert appearance
and the team was in white or neat white. Sri Nishanth Chandran was on violin,
Sri V Krishna on mrdangam and Sri G Guruprasanna on Kanjira.
A brief sketch of chitharanjani was followed by
Nadatanumanisam. It was perhaps a statement. The concert would be soaked in
melodious nada throughout. It is unique in many ways. Perhaps it is the only
lyric in this tune. As against Thyagaraja’s favourite language and deity, thus
is in Samskrtam on Siva. His grandfather brought in medangam a nadam which won
over the performers, connoisseurs, critics and laymen. It is a definition of
music. Sound can emanate only from vibration of bodies or matter (tanu), but
once revealed it becomes a spiritual experience. Ramprasad gave a good account
of the song.
Then came ‘Deva deva kalayami’, a number which cannot but
bring SSI to mind. Ramprasad sang in his patantharam and did neraval at the
usual jataruka. The final round from mandarasthayi to tarasthayi was lilting
and progressing in a gripping way with the accompanists chorusing in. The
crescendo got a well deserved appalause from the full house of a small hall, on
a day which was distracting with a cricket match in the local stadium and
another concert in a bigger hall. The song, second in order, took about 25
minutes the passage of which was hardly noticed. I remembered Chembai singing
Vatapi for about 45 minutes as the first song.
Chandrajyothi alapana was followed by a Punrandaradasa
Krithi.
He sang ongi ulakalantha in Arabhi, not minding that
Margazhi has ended 3 days ago. It was a stately rendition with swaras in
neengaatha selvam. He sang swaras for all songs, I think, and does it with
aplomb.
Murahara nandana (Saranga or Hamir Kalyani) and Padvainee
in Salaka Bhairavi were sung in quick succession before he started on
Purvikalyani alapana in all its glory.
Only this morning I listened to Sikkil Gurucharan
explainging the distinction between Gamanasrama (melakartha ragam), Gamakakriya
and Purvikalyani, the two being janya ragas. That passed through me like x-ray
through flesh. Possibly, the raga was gamakakriya as the krithi chosen was
Meenakshi me mudam dehi of Dikshithar, who, they say breathed his last
listening to it. Devi releases the devotees from the leash of Yama
(pasamochani). Neraval, another elaborate and exquisite one, was at the regular
malayadhwaja..
The violin followed the vocal closely right through.
As is my wont, I crossed over from treasury bench to
opposition bench in the middle and staged the walkout.
The concert put energy into me carrying me back home free
from hassles.
*
January 17 at 11:04 AM ·
as though it was
getti melam.
Darbar entered royally next reminding me of Yesudas in
Sindhubhairavi film. Madurai Mani Iyer and GNB also came to mind. Swara volleys
embellished the song at characteristic brisk pace. I think that it was in sarva
laghu (I do not know what it means! Sarva kashtam). Sri Jayachandra Rao
finished it with a short and consummate thirmanam, supported by Sri Udupa.
The next raga foxed me. It looked like Aberi, but turned
out to be Kalyanavasantham. Nadaloludai, the archetypal song in the raga, was
presented beautifully. MLV and Maharajapuram Santhanam have specialised this.
Two rounds of swaras after neraval at ‘Harihara..’ ended the song.
Khamas alapana followed by Madaada regaled the audience
next.
The piece de resistance was Kanada essayed in sufficient
length to bring its nuances and repeated by violinist for almost equal length
of time. The time tested Sukhi evvaro was sung with sparkling swaras at the
pallavi. Tani followed as I proceeded home.
I liked his kalapramanam.
The songs centred around melas,21, 22, 28 thus far.
Vittal Rangan enhanced the standard of the concert several
notches above. Sri Jayachandra Rao on mrdangam was an asset too as also Sri
Giridhar Udupa on ghatam.
It seems that the white uniform is in vogue.
A senior next to me, maybe an octogenarian, asked me in
between some snacks he was munching (eatables and beverages not allowed, said a
notice on both wall panels) who his guru is. He commented, ‘He sings well.’ I
said, ‘Very well.’
Very well, there is no further yarn to spin.
*
January 13 at 9:51 PM ·
Heard a scintillating concert by Sriranjani
Santhanagopalan.
She sang familiar songs, sort of. As she delineated Thodi
to start with, e.g., Era naapai suggested itself. So also Mayamma when she gave
a detailed essay of Ahiri. But, she dished them out with a freshness that swept
you off your feet. I was looking for Kambodhi because today it is the turn of Karavaikal
pin senru. She stared the alapana at tharasthayi as though she wold sing
Sriraghuvaraprameya. Her father said in one TV show that many Kambodhi krithis
start at mandarasthayi, Sriraghuvaraprameya being different. I had to give this
clarification lest someone thinks that I know such niceties. Coming back to
Karavaikal, I am looking for the sort of lilting start Smt. MLV gives, with no
luck so far. Sriranjani's Kambodhi was heavenly and Smt. Neela mami who came
before the curtain parted was enjoying sitting just in front of her. Evari mada
was the krithi and swaras at the usual bhkataparadheena without neraval. It was
electrifying swaraprasthara. Patri Satish Kumar and Anirudh Atreya lifted the
concert to a different level. The team hit it off so well. Swaminatha
paripalaya in nattai, Varalakshmi in Anandabhairavi, Mamava karunayaa in
Shanmukhapriya were the other krithis I heard in sheer joy. I left after the
main.
*
Music
07 Oct 2018
Anything that flows will change its course. A
river for instance.
Music is a flow and will change its course over
time. It may not be possible to keep it in a fixed form.
Music is created by musicians, not by critics
and commentators. A musician’s creation will survive the critic’s comments.
Creation is blind to others and proceeds
bursting the barriers. It has the urge to manifest in some new form from the
old stuff.
What matters is whether it is chitha-ranjani!
<
Sometimes we get carried away by new-fangled
words or a new usage of a word, as it happens in language when initially we
tend to use newly learnt words rather inappositely (like this word itself,
which I picked up quite long ago).
Mind wearies of routine and looks to leap.
Tradition cries a halt and classicism looks the other way.
What we oppose normally is a wholesale change,
that hammers a thing past recognition. We do not like to see a belle turned to
a hag in a jiffy.
But, all living things change subtly over time,
and when one analyses it, the change over time is drastic, like they say some
ragas have changed. But, the change has been within the limits of classicism.
I have heard both TMK and Sanjay say that a new
expression of the art, without aberration of the grammar, is happening with all
creative artists. BMK referred to Bani in evidence of this. With all his
maverick ways, TMK has not done anything out of tune with the classical style
of CM. In fact, he is one of the authentic torch bearers of this genre of
music. I was listening to Narmada's Ecstasy (courtesy Parivadini) today. What
an apt title! She has stuck to the essence of whatever she played or sang (she
sings so melodiously). Such artists have a talent that is waiting to burst
forth. The art form is sure of its being intact with them even as they try
something new or traverse uncharted territory. They do not create something new
per se but do something new in the existing form, that has stamp of creativity.
Varadarajan talked of Sanjay as 'a creative artist'; yet, Sanjay is strictly a
traditionalist, reminding one of Somu or MDR at times. Abhishek is another
artist of such creativity.
Reinvention is a strong word, but a churning is
going on and good music is resulting.
I know I have said more than I understand, but
I could not get over my impetuosity.
*
17 Oct 2018
Reading about limitations of improvisation,
contrarian thoughts sprung in my mind.
I feel the stronger as I think further that the
artist has an urge to express an idea and his creative impulse does not care
for critics or constraints. TMK is perhaps right. An artist does not care for
the audience either. (That is different from disrespecting the audience.) It
was interesting to read in the post on TSB Sastri that janaranjakam is not
offering what the audience wants, but offering what the artist has to offer in
a way that reaches the audience.
I posted about brain and improvisation, where
it is stated: ‘It liberates musicians from inhibitions, letting them play
around with new images and combinations.’
Commenting on a lakshana for a raga,
Rangaramanuja Iyengar says, ‘Lakshya does not obey the lakshana.’
It is highly arbitrary to talk of what the
composer intended. That will be a secret to which only a creative artist will
have the clue.
It is a happy augury for C .M. that we have a
few artists who have the mettle and confidence to create and engage the
audience. So many new things would not have been possible if everyone stuck to
the beaten track.
*
10 Jan 2018
Formalism in Carnatic music
We had a very enlightening discussion on
embellishments, though in a thread that was to discuss a specific concert.
“In music, ornaments or embellishments are
musical flourishes—typically, added notes—that are not essential to carry the
overall line of the melody (or harmony), but serve instead to decorate or
"ornament" that line (or harmony), provide added interest and
variety, and give the performer the opportunity to add expressiveness to a song
or piece.” Wikipedia.
The point that was discussed at length is
whether the formal structure of a composition, which perhaps took shape in a
moment of inspiration with not just the words but the raga essay as well, can
be altered or added to. The protagonist was unyielding for some or good reason.
The other side of the argument, not necessarily antagonist, nudged to a
compromise that was not reached.
The bhava of a composition is not for
tinkering. We have heard many instances of how the music, meaning and bhava are
well aligned. For example, in Teliyaleru Rama, the successive sangathis convey
the deepening anguish of the composer in not getting the required grace to turn
his mind to unwavering devotion. In Ksheera sagara sayana, the sangathis change
for ksheerasagara, but not for sayana because Thyagaraja does not intend to
disturb the lord in sayana. Examples are aplenty.
To digress, but with a purpose, we read
delightful criticism on Shakespeare’s plays like whether Hamlet was mad or not.
(No, I am not coming to whether we are mad discussing this). I read a comment
that Shakespeare wrote for the stage, not for literary criticism. Many of the
points made by the critics may not have been even subconsciously in Shakespeare’s
mind. The same thing we see in interpreting our own epics. The exponents add
several points sometimes at divergence with what they said in an earlier
interpretation. One exponent said candidly, “All of us add ‘podi’, but those
that do standing add more ‘podi’”, having a dig at Harikatha. It is anybody’s
guess whether the author really had such ideas in his mind when he wrote.
A doubt arises in my cynical mind whether the
composers really had such ideas like what the interpreters say with conviction.
We have no reliable record of their lives, not even actual period of their life
in some case. It is all hearsay and hagiography. There is no document to
establish that they in fact had a rigid stand as to how a number must be sung
even within a given raga. The notations clealy call for splitting a word often
defacing its meaning, and that does not quite lend to the view that a unity
between word, meaning, music and bhava was achieved right through. That is not
to say that their intention was not to achieve the unity. Bharathi says that of
all composers Thyagaraja achieved that unity more and hence his compositions
are special. But, I take it that music is the first thing and the rest fall in
step.
We read many comments how music is greater than
an individual to rein in ‘fans’. Is it then possible that the great composers
would have put a premium on the formal structure of their composition above
music? If a creative addition is possible, would they have frowned? If they
would have, would they be great? We cannot turn around and say that some X is
above music. We cannot say that they have captured the best of all times.
We cannot say that for the particular song, the
structure is sacrosanct. A point may be adduced to support the view I take as
unjustified. If different sangathis were possible for the same song, the
composer would not have composed so many pieces in one raga. That is not how we
tend. Even in writing, we try to express ourselves in a variety of ways to make
it interesting. It is a spontaneous flow not predetermined mostly. Also, the
major ragas have infinite scope and a composer gets inspiration and brings out
a new dimension in a new krithi. It is also in a different mood and bhava. I am
not disputing that.
The stalwarts of previous generation have added
sangathis to the krithis of the trinity. They were all convinced of the piety
and divinity of Thyagaraja. They would not have added if they considered it a
sin, unlike the few ‘upstarts’ now who would do it for the heck of it!
Is this strict rule that for all time a line
must be sung the same way only for trinity or for all composers, or only for
vaggeyakkaras (those who have tuned their own lyrics)? How can reasonably
anyone learn the authentic version of all such compositions and adhere to it,
while still practicing music?
The point whether a new sangathi is fitting
into the song has to be judged in individual cases by a collegium of artists
(not like that on judges selection) and not by any one individual, or on the
basis of an arbitrary fiat that it is inviolable.
Change only sustains life. Anything rigid
perishes. Pliability enables viability. Art is spontaneous and unrestricted by
formalism of any type. A performance has constraints, but art has to be free
from injunctions. It is not art if it is fickle and operates as a terminator
gene. Creativity knows the contours within which it blossoms.
I have a radical view. The eagerness to be
history-conscious and cling to the past is against nature. Nature takes the
essentials and moves on. Forgetfulness is a precious gift of nature. It is
necessary to have sustained interest in life. To remember or cull out with
great labour what fades out is a crushing burden on the limited capacity of
mind for ordered thinking and creative impulse. There has been criticism in
this forum that the reading of SSP by TMK was faulty. Let that which goes go.
It will bring new life and new creativity. Classicism will survive by tradition
that renews itself rather than that which stagnates around a few pieces of a
creation of one time. We matter more than those that lived before. Art lives
through us and those that succeed us, more than by those that have gone before.
There is no merit in the point that art lives independent of its practitioners.
Where does it live?
To some at least carnatic music is music
basically and other dimensions are optional. CM is ultra-elitist and the task
today seems to be to preserve it from dilution of the musical aspect. If the
other aspects also are to be preserved like it has to be sung the same way for
a thousand years, I wonder whether such a constrained art will survive. It has
not survived even two hundred years, if the criticism is valid that the
composer's kalpita has been vitiated.
Yesudas said that Carnatic music will not die.
VVS quoted SSI saying that Carnatic music has the basic strength to survive. If
a Thyagaraja was born to put it in limelight and blaze a new trail, why may not
others in future? There is no need to feel that he is the last prophet of
Carnatic music. What Krishna said of his appearance in relation to dharma may
be extrapolated to Carnatic music also.
Let new sangathis come and stay or perish on
merit and aesthetic appeal.
*
17 Feb 2016
(I have the advantage of ignorance to raise
such issues. I posted here instead of in the lounge as it may be technical)
What is natural? In a way, everything is a
transformation of something. Nothing is created out of thin air (leaving out
god who has not registered in rasikas.org). So everything is come out of that
which existed anyway. That may be a strand of pure advaita. That will shut out
the very distinction between natural and man-made, but common understanding
does not seem to tend that way.
The very idea of sound is not invention. Sound
was there at least along with life. Music is a play of sound.
Do the swaras occur naturally? A swara is a
particular way of producing sound and seems to be man-made. Man has not made
the sound itself, but carved out a special sound by his ingenuity. Different
people in different parts of the world have done it and as it is amenable to a
scientific dissection, areas of agreement or deviation could be pinpointed. The
discovered differences in pitches were not naturally occurring as far as my
mind could grasp, but have been within the laws that nature seems to obey. We
can argue how far the swaras are natural. In any case, given the basic swaras,
how they develop into various genres of music is mind-boggling.
Raga is one of the alleys into which the swaras
have been shepherded by human mind. Is it still natural or a locus of human
fancy?
*
17 Feb 2016
I thought man by his ingenuity understood the
basics of sound and constructed in its idiom the scales and different systems
of music. It is natural in that it is in terms of the underlying science of sound,
but man-made in the sense the systems so formed are not some 'mystical'
phenomena tapped by human mind.
25 Feb 2016
Gravity was a fact long before man knew about
it. Is music similar? Sound is different, though music is a play on sound. Some
notes might have existed (cuckko's for example) outside of human creation, but
did raga, tune, harmony exist outside human mind? Were they not the products of
collective human mind over a long period? What is understanding? If someone can
sing, he knows it. He may not be aware of jargon or may not participate in
rasikas.org, but his practical knowledge of the music he creates is for real.
How can we say that understanding came later?
02 Mar 2016
I read the following in Theory of Muisc
(American) and it is interesting:
"Sounds are contained in all noises of
nature, such as the wind blowing through the trees or in the roaring of the
waterfall or of waves, but although the sound rises and falls in pitch, it is
not music, for each tone has no definite pitch, neither does it bear a
previously determined relation to the tones preceding or succeeding it. The
tones which are gathered together to constitute any musical form are selected
from a definite series whose individual tones progress in pitch by well defined
degrees. This series is called a scale. The name is derived from the Latin word
scala, a staircase, in recognition of the analogy existing between the
progressing series of tones and the ascending steps of stairs. The Germans
further express the comparison by using the name Tonleiter, a ladder of musical
sounds, and the French employ the one word, echelle, to designate both scale
and ladder.
This arranging of musical tones into a definite
series has always been done by all races possessing music. Helmholz attributes
it to a psychological reason similar to the natural feeling which has led to
the rhythmical division in poetry. In other words, it is due to that inherent
quality of rhythm whose reason lies beyond man's explanation but which is
present in everything. It is within the realm of aesthetics. A constant factor
in the problem of this science of the beautiful is to discover what it is in
things that makes them beautiful or ugly, sublime or ludicrous. The explanation
is ever receding and incomplete, universal laws of aesthetics cannot be
established, for beyond a certain point training loses its power and each man
becomes an authority unto himself, individuals having vastly different tastes.
The degrees of progression in the scale are not
the same among the various races, but have differed with the epoch, the
civilization, the tastes and the natural surroundings of the people. There are
now in existence scales so different from our own that much training and
familiarity are necessary before the beauties of their intervals can be
appreciated by an alien ear.
.....
There are three points in which all scales
agree. They are the octave, the fourth and the fifth. Scales of different
civilisations and localities may contain any number of intermediate tones, but
all agree in having established the natural relationship between the tones
which are separated by the interval to which we refer as an octave, a name
derived from the Latin word octo, meaning eight and used in this connection
because the interval has been divided by eight tones, termed the degrees of the
scale. The intervals between the other intermediate steps may be of various
magnitudes, but the octave, fourth and fifth are always recognized."
Twain was so correct when he said:
The modern day man does not have the
fascination for the rainbow, the savage had, simply because he knows how it is
made.
He has lost, as much as he has gained, by
prying into that matter
*
17 Feb 2015
In CM, what happened has been gradual change,
even ragas have changed, I read. But, change is not the same as disruption, nor
gradual change and branching into a style of one's own a revolution. What ARI
did was capturing a change in mood in a format to reflect it. He had an idea
and put it into action. But, TMK has only tried to turn it upside down. He has
not introduced something that is a change in the sense it has added to the idea
of presenting CM. He is a great singer and his music attracts listeners, but it
is the quality of his music, not the order or lack of it. People still feel, 'OK
we can stand it'. I do not think there is any welcome for it. Even his
disciples know better to stick to the format. I have not seen any aesthetics or
improvement in it. You do not start with an idea to overturn something if you
are bringing a new idea. The new idea must have some substance, some
consideration for the audience and a gentle handle to it. I find all these
missing. Change will take place continuously and without it, there will be no
life. That may not need emphasis. The point to consider is what the change is,
how it is organic and how it takes CM forward.
18 Feb 2015
A rasika must have some taste as the word
implies, but he does not decide the quality of the fare. We cannot equate a
rasika with the artist and prescribe the same yardstick to the rasika as the
artist. For example, an artist cannot prescribe that alapana is self-complete
and the rasika must enjoy it and his lack of enjoyment is due to conditioning
of mind. I can only remember how mothers used to force down castor oil in their
children’s mouth in the hope it was good (a discontinued administration). The
artist owes more to the rasika than the other way.
The concert or musical offering platform is not
a laboratory. It is not the place to go with gay abandon on one’s mind track.
The greats of yester years cared for the audience and presented well-rehearsed
items. PSN has said that SSI used to sing better outside a concert. It was not
that he held something in reserve, but as he himself said he observed a sense
of proportion and restraint.
It cannot be the argument, as some imply, that
since TMK’s music is authentic, his views on music must be all right. If he
needs a whole book to make one understand the reasonableness of his views, it
must be complicated and beyond an ordinary person. It cannot be said that no
one other than TMK has an aesthetic idea of what makes music and what
expression of it is creative.
As to conditioning of mind, I wonder why CM is
not popular if it does not require conditioning and cultivation of taste. Music
is universal, but a particular genre requires some conditioning perhaps.
Germane to the topic is Sri VKV’s query: What
is on offer? TMK himself says he is not offering any alternative (I do not and
I cannot, he said in a reply).
Even an intelligent child throws up petulant
outbursts and tantrums.
19 Feb 2015
I used to attend TMK’s concerts and follow his
programmes. I would write to him and he would invariably reply until I got
bitterly critical of his views outside music.
After hearing his concert in 2009 (it was still
called concert then), I wrote to him exuberantly:
“The format was novel. Choice of varnam as
piece de resistance was of course unexpected. Your explaining why you chose it
was apt. I was
thinking that people would flock to hear you
sing even if you sing the song backwards.
However, such deviations from the concert
format introduced by the universally acclaimed Sri Ramanuja Iyengar, which has
stood the test of time, should be one-off, I feel. This is not to criticise or
question the creativity of an artist, which will anyway transcend the commonplace
sentiments. I know that what you do is well-thought out and you present it not
just because it is manoranjakam to you, but since you have read the pulse of
the audience and make it janaranjakam.”
He explained about singing varnam in the
middle, that the full scope and content of a varnam was not explored when sung
first, when the audience was still arriving, dusting the seats and settling
down. He added, ‘I felt like doing it and did it.’ I was satisfied particularly
with the second reason.
In one reply, he said, ‘I am just trying to
sing carnatic music.’ It was touching.
In reply to a query on purists, he said, ‘I
think of myself also as a purist.’
All this is authentic. No one has questioned
his preeminence in CM singing or his pursuing his musical ideas. There has been
no bashing of his musical genius.
But, by and by he started expressing strident
views, giving scant respect for audience sensitivity, and attacking belief
systems with what I would call bigotry. He commented that ARI system was
lacking in aesthetic sense and that it stifled musical creativity and made
uncomplimentary comments about others that followed ARI format and also about
the previous generation of musicians.
The innovations that are talked about have
nothing to do with the format. The same experimentation can be done in the set
pattern as well. It is not as though his is the only contribution to the growth
of new ideas in CM.
It is his provocation that has got the response
which I feel needs to be expressed.
To my mind, a case has not been made against
the format of ARI.
Of course, each person will choose whom to
listen to.
No one is jealous of his easy access to media
or press. The idea expressed was that he uses that availability for giving his
offensive and off-the-cuff views.
The contributions form knowledgeable persons
have been rewarding in several aspects of CM in this thread. So, it is as
necessary for us to say what we feel to get the benefit of such nuggets, as it
is for any musician to get his way and say in his singing.
*
It is in the general practice to compare an
artist to a known one. It does not mean that one is aping the other or lacks
‘originality’. Where one does, it becomes obvious and fails to impress.
A number of people are reminded of KVN when RKM
sings. When Pantula Rama sings she somehow brings to mind MLV. Sanjay was asked
whether his singing is after anyone’s style and he said, ‘At times it tends to
be like MMI or MDR, but it is not intentional’. That happens. Maybe because you
admire that person so much, it gets into your system or whatever. Aishwarya
Srinivasan brings memories of MS. That is natural as her grandmother trains
her, but she is intelligent not to be a tape-recorder. To say she sings like MS
will not be to dismiss her effort and vidwat.
We have had innumerable instances in this forum
where such comparisons have been made in good taste.
Much of what passes for ‘originality’ is also
the unseen work of the brain which learns and improves by repetition,
comparison, negative feedback mechanism, etc. Without comparing with a past
event brain won’t progress.
The ALU of the central processor works on a
similar principle. While it is unintelligent and non-aesthetic, the process is
similar.
A rasika making such comparison is not out of
place.
GV has MS for her manasika guru. It may come
naturally to her (without an effort to ape) that her singing resembles MS’.
There is nothing amiss in mentioning that she reminds one of MS. It is not an
unfair comment either on MS or GV. Her brilliance will not be dimmed by a
rasika making his choice of enjoyment.
*
Eroticism
Azhwars wrote devotional pasurams steeped in
bhakthi and surrender. They took episodes from the epics and puranas,
Bhagavatham in particular, and such a huge volume of exquisite poetry was
possible.
What was their take of Krishna’s dalliance with
gopikas?
They have themselves got into nayika-bhava and
pined for union with the lord. Such poetry is copious.
They have also alluded to, if not actually used,
the Krishna-gopika pangs of love and separation.
Let me quote a sample:
Periyazhwar:
மைஆர் கண் மட ஆய்ச்சியர் மக்களை
மையன்மை
செய்து அவர் பின்போய்
கொய் ஆர் பூந்துகில் பற்றித் தனி நின்று
குற்றம்
பல பல செய்தாய்
பொய்யா உன்னைப் புறம் பல பேசுவ
புத்தகத்துக்கு
உள கேட்டேன்
ஐயா உன்னை அறிந்துகொண்டேன் உனக்கு
அஞ்சுவன்
அம்மம் தரவே.
(4) 226. You fascinate the beautiful young
cowherd girls whose dark eyes are decorated with kohl. You follow them holding
onto their soft clothes, and steal their clothes and stand alone and do many
mischievous things. You tell lies and people are gossiping about you.
Kulasekarazhwar’s ‘Ermalar Poonguzhal’
(698-718) describes the pangs of separation of Gopikas a la Gopika Githam.
Nammazhwar’s ‘Minnidai Madavar’ (3238-3248)
depicts the pining placing himself in the shoes of a gopika. ‘Mallikai kamazh
(3645-3655) is of the same mood.
In short, Azhwars accepted Krishna’s satisfying
the gopikas described in vivid detail in Srimad Bhagavatham, the original
source for Krishna katha almost.
This has rankled not only later day moralists,
but also Parikshit to whom Suka narrated the deeds of Vishnu to get him quick
salvation. Parikshit asks, “How could Krishna, the creator and protector of the
codes of moral conduct, touch the wives of other men, no doubt a contemptible
performance?” Suka said: “They are like an all-consuming fire [that is not
affected by what it consumes]. Someone not in control [of himself] must not
even think of ever doing a thing like this. The words of the authorities are
true, their acts should only occasionally be taken as an example. How can we,
who are controlled, speak in terms of right or wrong of the one who controls?
In order to show His mercy to His devotees, He with assuming a humanlike body
engages in [amorous] pastimes, hearing about which one becomes devoted to Him.
The cowherd men of Vraja who were bewildered by the power of His mâyâ, were not
jealous of Krishna. They all thought that their wives had stayed at their
side.”
That would hardly be satisfactory to a mind
based on worldly morals.
Bhagavathas take it as allegorical of the
yearning of jivas for paramatma and the final union. Such metaphor is found in
Upanishads also.
Sri Velukkdi Krishnan said in one discourse
that Krishna had not yet reached puberty at the time. That also may not satisfy
all.
In explaining a verse in Gopika Githam, Anatharama
Dikshither said, “The gopis beg Krishna to place his feet on their chest.
Krishna placed his feet on Kaliya who disgorged all poison. Likewise, the touch
of Krishna would remove all the defects in the mind.”
It is up to us to take the meaning in a healthy
way.
Brushing it aside as spurious is like ostrich
burying its head in the sand.
Gopika Gitam is wonderful erotic poetry and has
been sung all the way down and MLV has sung it in her melodious voice in
ragamalika. Rasakrida of Narayaneeyam has been sung in ragamalika by Leela.
Eroticism is in us, those of us that are
normal, and that is healthy.
काम m. kAma love [erotic, sexual]
काम m. kAma longing [erotic, sexual]
This is from Sanskrit to English dictionary,
not Tamizh.
Kamasutra is about kama in the above sense.
Rasalila was in public domain and taste, and
the propriety of it was a matter of discussion in Bhagavata itself.
What we take is up to us. My teacher said when
I was in tenth standard (16 years) that Bhagavata is meant to be read by mature
minds.
Srngara is the king of rasas (Sri RSachi may
please pardon me) and that is why bhakti uses Srngara as the way to god. It is
easy to guide the mind on its path and ensure that the mind is taken to god.
The hazard that it may land in pure lust is great, but the great sages and
poets employed it with abandon, and what we have is something practical and
artistic. What we had was not a society that was dissolute, nor one that was
puritan. We had one that was optimal.
My objective in posting this is to rebut the
point made elsewhere that Azhwars did not accept rasalila. That is simply not
true. Azhwars accepted it and turned it into glorious and unparalleled poetry
of ecstatic devotion.
We have this sense of wrong associated with
kama in its proper sense, that is not seen in ancient India. Puranas describe
kama between gods in voluptuous terms. Rasalila is fine literature on love 'in
the lower rung', an expression, I do not agree with.
We pass through stages in life and each stage
is characterised by certain activity. For example, we have played with toys as
children. It was quite appropriate. There is nothing small about it. If we are
engrossed or infatuated in any one state, it is undesirable from the point of
view of development. To appreciate what others do in their stage is wisdom.
Ramayana gives us two instances of kama that
derailed the persons - Dasaratha who had to give up his son and life as a
result of kama, and Ravana who dragged the whole race to destruction because he
abducted another's wife. The lesson is there for anyone who cares.
I am too small to interpret what Mahaperiyava
said. Such souls are there for us to steady our minds and be rooted in virtue.
Advaita is when we can free the mind of all
duality, when even bhakti must cease as glorification of a different being. It
is an ideal and almost impossible. It is the truth paramount, but the world of
duality is what we are keen to grapple with. We cannot analyse kama etc. from
advaitic state.
*
On Sanjay
Hard work and discipline. He has been
consistently stressing these at every available turn.
He plans and prepares for his performance.
Manodharma is not all extempore for any artist. That one has worked it out does
not detract from the creativity associated in it. It is like someone writing out
his own speech. The ideas are one’s own but it is cut and polished for a crisp
presentation.
That does not rule out new ideas on the spot.
He has identified his flair and worked on
converting it into his forte. There was hesitancy for plunging wholesale, but
there was no doubt where his heart was.
He is professional. He is entirely focused on
the 2-3 hrs of performance. He is on music, he keeps tab on his accompanists
and the audience alertly. He does not take his mind away at any time in the
performance. His stage decorum is impeccable, the white uniform being the least
significant of it. There is no frivolousness, small talk and giggling, etc. He
ascertains all necessary information like how far he can sing beforehand and
keeps to the timing, start as well as finish. I have attended many of his
concerts and only once it was delayed, that was thanks to someone who went on
talking to an indifferent audience.
His energy level stays put to the end. I do not
notice any thoyvu. It is for the connoisseurs to judge sruthi suddham.
He has a knack of introducing variation of
composer, raga, etc.
His pronunciation esp. in Tamizh is enviable.
(Telugu, kannada I do not know). Samskritham passes muster, may not be as great
as DKP, MS.
While his respect of the audience is general,
he does not particularly oblige individual requests, probably because it does
not fit into his structuring. But, more often than not the audience feels
satisfied as though their requests were taken up.
He has been candid. He has acknowledged his
sources of inspiration, his gurus, and admitted how he had to work hard on some
areas.
He does not present anything unless he has
mastered it, the musical nuance as well as the lyrical details. It is
definitely a plus point when one does not have to divert attention to some
paper or gadget for lyrics.
Definitely, he has done marketing. Even now he
is on facebook, twitter, sharing his schedule and reviews and interviews.
He is not 24 hrs on music. Efficiency goes down
when you are on one topic all the time. He spends time on cricket, board games
and reading. Perhaps he is the best read of the contemporary musicians barring
one. He has listened extensively and read copiously on music. These add to his
strength in music.
In a word he is a total man, one who knows what
he knows.
(hagiography? maybe but critics will do well to
pinpoint what I have said wrong).
*
Vimarsanams
26 Oct 2017 13:56
As a sleepy rasika, I want to make some
audacious points about vimarsanams:
Some people seem to be waiting for some lapse
on the part of the artist to comment upon. Such lapses must occur in all
concerts. If a concert is engaging overall, such lapses even when noticed do
not detract from its total appeal.
Some seem to attend a concert with an
examiner's eye or like a panel member to rate the performer.
Some people go to the extent of suggesting what
pieces must be sung and in what order and at what length.
Some criticism seems to be on what the artist
has not done!
Some points I read in Sruti are interesting.
On being prompted Apporva Krishna asked Sandeep
Ramachandran, a question: “How would you plan to spread Carnatic music among
the masses?” Sandeep replies, “I think it most important for us to be true to
music, to be proud of our art form and pursue it with vigour. The beauty of
each musician is to be committed and dedicated to the art form. This will help
in attracting recognition from all.”
That is the best an artist can do to keep art
alive and make it reach an audience. Criticism should also endeavor to further
this thought. While negatives need be brought to the attention of the
performer, it must be done in a way as to encourage, not to show one’s
technical competence. A snub of a comment may get readership, but may be
disservice to the art. Kanchi Acharya has said, “If you speak harshly nobody
will listen to you even if you mean well. Your speech must be beneficial and,
at the same time, capable of bringing happiness to the man to whom it is
addressed. This is truthfulness.”
Sri V Ramnarayan writes in Sruti: “So much
complexity in terms of laya intricacies or challenging ragam-tanam-pallvis is
on offer that even Sangita Kalanidhis will find it difficult to offer expert
comments on many of these concerts.” He concludes, “Every rasika is a potential
critic, broadcasting to the world even as a concert is in progress. All he or
she needs is a smart phone.”
Elsewhere while offering his impressions on a
‘fabulous’ concert, he writes, “ .. I did not take any notes at the concert.”
I read that Subbudu would write his review from
memory only. It is a different matter whether Subbudu’s style is a good model,
but perhaps only ‘spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings’ of the concert
recollected when all the ‘sound and fury’ have ceased, should be the butt of
the review. If only the negatives remain in the mind, it may not be worth
writing on.
It is nice to read some reviews in rasikas.org.
They are instructive and make some nice points that make a lay listener advance
his appreciation of music.
06 Mar 2020
I read this recently:
I.Pavlov: “Artists grasp life as a single
whole, totally, completely, a living reality, without any fractionating,
without any separating; others – thinkers – just fractionate it, thereby sort
of killing it, making of it some tentative skeleton, and only then they, as it
were, reassemble its parts and attempts to revive it somehow, an endeavor in
which they fail completely.”
RaGa sisters quoted this Aesop’s fable about
facing criticism:
https://www.bartleby.com/17/1/62.html
From Sanjay’s blog:
“Here is an interesting take on criticism by
the writer Bernard Malamud in an interview given to the Paris Review in 1975.
‘I dislike particularly those critics who
preach their aesthetic or ideological doctrines at you. What’s important to
them is not what the writer has done but how it fits, or doesn’t fit, the
thesis they want to develop.’
This can also be seen in Carnatic music where
the ‘knowledgeable’ are always keen to try and impose their value systems on
the musician. Sometimes the reaction to the music is so determined by the
already existing assumption that has been made on how or what should be
performed. Every generation of artists keep throwing up the odd rebel who
shatter these existing notions and make the ‘knowledgeable’ redefine their
expectations. Then the new generation of artistes will suffer from not
conforming to this recently formed set of values and so it goes on and on.”
A performance to me is a total experience. I do
not enjoy if it is not. The hallmark for this is MS, but an MS comes once in an
epoch. But, luckily there are many who do provide some approximation that is
heartening.
The deportment of the singer and his empathy
with the audience is an integral part of the experience. When I take the
interest to attend an event, I do not mortgage my self-respect for some
expertise of the singer, which no doubt is the prime mover.
I understand it is my limitation, and having
known it, I shall choose performance where I get that authentic experience
where the singer is not just in love with his vidwat and foray, but includes
the audience in his music.
01 Aug 2015
Music is priceless, but for a profession it has
to be priced. When priced, it becomes a commodity and is a topic of economics,
not aesthetics or art. The price is determined like any other commodity on
demand, supply, scarcity, marketing, etc. To believe or demand that it should
not be so, would defy logic.
A rasika is concerned with the aesthetic art
and his willingness to pay a price for it when it is in the market. He is a
consumer and his authority on the price is no better than on any other
commodity.
The desire of the consumer for a low price
competes with the desire of the artist to get a high price. So far, it is no
different from any other commodity. But, CM is a commodity that is in demand in
what may be called a closed market, expanding if it does in a limited way. We
see that at least in Bengaluru, there is sparse attendance even for free
concerts of quality performers, barring a handful. That necessitates raising
funds through sponsors, grants, etc. The organisers play a very useful role
including the Chennai sabhas esp. during the season, which also came under
attack.
I wonder what meaningful role rasikas.org can
play in stimulating the market or influencing the price. Of course, the topic
is interesting just as I find Upanishads interesting though it has no role in
the mundane life that I lead and which I like.
In the discussion, I find contradictions; while
a good price is recommended for the artists, those who can and want to pay
(NRIs) are in for a banter. The overseas organisers and rasikas who would pay
become suckers. The artists who can demand a good price also earn choice
epithets.
As far as I see, the organisers, artists,
rasikas are normal human beings like us and behave as we do. They have created
market and I am able to enjoy music and also add to the confused noises.
Reviews
Nadasurabhi 2nd Nov 2018
Visakha Hari’s discourse was a new leaf in that
it was not based on mythology, but on the musical genius of the trinity. Even
so, several incidents she described with utmost conviction and bhakti called up
the reserves of faith. She gave it a gloss of realism with her bhava and
alacrity, a total engagement with herself, her team and the audience. I was in
two minds whether to go for a concert or harikatha and I sort of drifted
involuntarily to her discourse and felt rewarded.
She wanted to reverse the normal order followed
since if she started on Thayagaraja she might not cover the other two. She
started on Syama Sastri. She gave an outline of his biography, how his
ancestors moved from Andhra, were upasakas of Kamakshi and archakas of Bangaru
Kamakshi, how they moved the idol of Kamakshi to Kanchi, Tiruvarur and
Thanjavur to save it from iconoclasts.
There was no legacy of music in Syama Sastri’s
family, but Syama Sastri learnt music only for four months during the
chaturmasyam of a sanyasi of Andhra origin and later used to learn by listening
to Pachhimirium Adiyappa who would call him fondly as Kamakshi.
She sang Amba Kamakshi mentioning how in the
charanam the various stanzas begin with successive swaras starting with
shadjam. It was absorbing. She also sang Sankari samkuru.
She narrated about the contest with a north
Indian who was proud and emerged victorious in all contests so far. The pundits
of Thanjavur requested Sayama Sastri to accept his challenge. Syama Sastri
instantly sang Devi brova in Chintamani to seek the grace of Kamakshi. During
the narrative, she sang a simhanandanam tala pallavi that included Jayarama,
being the name of her guru. The percussion team (H S Sudhindra and Sukanya
Ramgopal) gave one small tani in the talam which was nice.
While mentioning about her guru, she recalled
that his forefather Rama Iyer used to sing with a lemon on his head (he was
quite in his wits, she quipped) with the challenge that during the entire
concert the lemon should not fall. My mind took a tour on its own. I thought
that if some of the present day vidwans tried it, it might be like end as the
bowling of Hall and Griffith in no time!
She referred to gayaka lakshnas, one should not
shake the head, should not close the eyes, etc. while singing. I do not
remember hearing that one should not part the lips! I am curious to know
whether such criteria can indeed be complied with.
I decided to listen to her talk on the other
two later as she is due to repeat it early next month.
The violin from Vittal Rangan was soothing.
*
Nadasurabhi 3rd Nov 2018
Day 3 featured Malladi Brothers known for their
traditional and chaste singing taking after their guru Nedunurigaru. The
concert started slightly late by 15-20 minutes.
It was announced that recording was not to be
done. The modification was interesting. If recording was done, quality must be
ensured.
They started with varnam ‘karunimpa’ (ragam?).
I am still in the Ariyakkudi hangover, and starting with varnam seems to flag
off a concert aptly.
Darbar was outlined with tiger-tight pidis
without any overlap, brief, but beautiful. Naradaguruswami arrived. A round of
swaras embellished the rendition. Continuing from the previous day’s theme of
‘musical genius of the trinity’ as it were, Sriram Prasad explained the
greatness of the kriti. Thyagaraja has invoked Narada in four kritis, he said.
Mukhari alapana was gripping. Enthani ne of
Thyagaraja came alive. The fortune of Sabari was envied longingly. Nishant
Chandran’s violin accompaniment was extra sweet. The percussionists (Tumkur B
Ravishankar and S N Narayanamurty – ghatam) knew luckily that it was a vocal
concert and let the voices be heard clearly. Neraval and swaras in the charanam
– kanulara – gave it consummation.
A sloka was sung in Mohanam from
Lakshminarasimha karavalambam. Understandably, Narasimha agacha was the
Dikshithar krithi choen. The ugram of Narasimha was brought forth vividly. In
Narayaneeyam also Bhattadri has chosen the words aptly befitting the ugram.
That is a poetic delicacy seen in great poets like Kamban. But I was wondering
why Dikshithar chose Mohanam for ugram. Then, why did critics find fault with
SSI for setting ‘ghora Tataka’? It seems that he omitted to sing Mohanam after
that! The brothers brought out the prasa-rich charanam of Dikshithar with
aplomb.
A pleasing dhanyasi alapana by Ravikumar was
followed by another Thyagaraja Kriti Ramabhirama with neraval and
svaraprasthara. There was a thani after this. I thought it was longish. The
rasika next to me read my mind and commented, ’20 minutes’. That would pale
into insignificance before someone like Sri Rajarao.
The brothers then sang a filler Sarvanabhava in
Shanmukhapriya. It seemed to serve no purpose. Then they launched into RTP in
Nattaikurinji, a pallavi on Krishna to herald Deepavali as announced by the
elder brother.
*
Nadasurabhi 4th Nov 2018
The last day saw Sanjay at his artistry.
Sanjay’s concert was Sanjay’s concert (
copyright: Kalidasa and Kamban).
It was in a pleasing tempo. Though Deepavali
was just a couple of days away, Sanjay seemed to respect by and large SC order
to avoid crackers. Venkatesh occasionally reminded that SC has exempted places
other than Delhi.
‘It is ten seconds past six and over to
Sanjay,’ concluded Sri Suresh after brief formalities.
Guruprasanna meshed into the well set
Sanjay-Varadarajan-Venkatesh team. The men in white started the proceedings
before one could do a chittikkai. It was a breathless affair from then on.
Sanjay would pass from Sourashtram to Kedaram to Suddhasaveri (Devakriya
rather) to Kiravani seamlessly as if it was a machine affair. He had grand
inspiration from the veteran musician Smt. Neela mami, enjoying and
encouraging, and his own beloved Aarthi Sanjay sitting in trance as the
recording was in progress.
The varnam in kuntalavarali (parakela?) set the
ball rolling.
Suryamurte followed. What a lovely and
leisurely rendition! It symboilsed the setting sun as Sanjay landed in ‘namostu
te’. It went well with the cool evening and the fading light outside ironically
as it were.
Then started alapana in Kedaram. Sanjay treated
Kedaram with all care, putting it in a cradle and gently pushing the cradle up
and down. Varadarajan followed with his sweet essay. Would it be Rama nipai?
No. Sakala bhuvana nayaka (Sivan). I heard for the first time. It is on
Chidambaram. Sanjay seems to include one song on Chidambaram in his concerts.
He sang swaras.
It was over to Suddhasaveri. Perhaps the
suddhasaveri he sang years ago in Kalarasana(?) is the best. This one too vied
for honours. Would it be Dharini? No. Dikshithar again. Srivadukanatham. New
for me. Neraval at Sakthi sahitha.
Kiravani came torrentially next. Kaligiyunte?
Yes, it was. Swaras at the usual charanam. The swara patterns were mesmerizing.
There was plenty of fun with the team putting their act together with visible
relish. Venkatesh let Kanjira have a lion’s share in percussion. A delectable
tani followed. It was controlled compared to the one in Gayana Samaja.
He sang two melodious pieces next Jaladhini (?)
and Managula .. Govinda (Abhogi).
RTP in Harikambodhi with Sivan’s handsome
tribute to Bharathi (NCV’s heavenly voice reverberating at the back of the mind)
‘Bhakthiyudan ni thodukkum pAmAlaikku iNai undo Subramania Bharathi’.
Ragamalika and the song concluded the number.
He started Etthanai Koti inbam vaitthAy iRaivA.
Yes, that is how it was. I missed from there.
Sanjay’s alapanas set me thinking: if he were a
mountaineer, he would not be satisfied even with Everest.
The experience of a concert of high standard
cannot be captured in words. Adi Sankara begins Anandalahari saying, ‘Bhavani,
neither the four-headed Brahma, nor the five-headed Siva, nor the six-headed
Subrahmanya, nor the thousand-headed Adisesha, can describe your glory. How can
I?” I am not comparing myself with Sankara (which will be preposterous) nor
Sanjay with Bhavani. That is simply to say that I am unequal to convey the
grandeur of the concert.
Song list (courtesy Sri Krishnan Kandadai)
1. Varnam in kuntalavarali
2. Sooryamurthe namostute in sowrashtram (D)
3. Sakala bhuvana nayaka – Kedaram (Sivan)
4. Sree vattuka natha in suddha saaveri (D)
5. Kalikiyunte in keervani (T)
6. Jaladhi (?)
7. Managula(?) in abhogi
8. RTP - harikambodhi
Raga maalikai covering ranjani, dhanyasi,
kadhanakudoohalam and kanakangi
9. Ethanai Kodi inbam vaithai engal iraiva by
bharathiyar in desh.
10. Jaavali in khamas
11. Viruttam - poorani manonmani , mohanam, saaveri,
abheri , behaag followed by karpagambikai nee allavo
12. Ashtapathi in sindhubhairavi
Mangalam
*
Sachi_R » 06 Nov 2018 07:04
K
V
C
कर्ण
वाक्
चक्षु
रसिकोत्तमः
*
Bangalore Gayana Samaja 28/10/2018
A beautiful concert by Sanjay with S
Varadarajan, Neyveli B Venkatesh and Rajasekar (Morsing)
‘I too’ went for the above concert. I enjoyed
it forgetting the fog that has enveloped Carnatic Music scene. Here is a
professional musician, to whom music is the profession and the audience the
masters. He never takes the audience for granted, nor the music he has to
offer. There are great musicians, some may be even better, but in structuring a
concert with sense of proportion and variety of songs and ragas and composers,
he is matchless. As the organizer said, he is punctual, polite and humble.
There have been talented rasikas in the
audience, including two who have come down from Chennai just for this one
event. Sanjay did not disappoint them. The bhairavi alone would have paid for
their trip. We can expect quality reviews from them (Anuradha Kannan and K P
Jayan). I am just giving some cranky comments here.
After a varnam (I am not familiar with), Kumaraswaminam
followed in lovely Ahiri. Alapana of begada was next. Sanjay had a teasing
start. He cajoled begada, as it were, and made every phrase a gem. Not
satisfied with gentle pushes and shoves, he went on higher gear and searched
where all begada was hiding and made it jump out. After the visibly vigorous
effort Sanjay is identified with (something that I enjoy with his music, but
which is off-putting to traditionalists), he assumed, as it were, the role of
begada. Begada pleaded for being shown more delicacy. He obliged and landed it
smoothly maybe a little underground. Varadarajan was his usual excellent self
and begada by now knew what treatment to expect. A Swathi thirunal krithi gave
shape to begada.
The main was bhairavi. What bhairavi it was! Bhairavi
was watching begada and being as much well acquainted with Sanjay, she danced
to the tune of Sanjay like Balasarswathi. Sanjay kept going higher and higher
with that fountain of energy he comes with and Varadarajan followed him like a
shadow. It was a grand affair. Koluvai was the song taken (previously he sang
evarito in manavathi, he announced the raga name) and it was a surprise being a
second Thyagaraja krithi. What a song it is! I have not heard Sanjay sing it
before. It was done with gusto, with Venkatesh adding a sprightly gait and the
hall with about 700 listeners was set afire. Neraval was in manasu ranjilla.
Tani started. The person next to me remarked,
‘too loud’ and left for a break. That was a nice way to excuse oneself during
tani, I thought. The mrdangist however made sure that the beat was audible
outside the auditorium and that the rasika did not miss it in the coffee stall
which was as crowded as the auditorium. The audience liked it going by the well
punctuated applause. It was of course electrifying tani but for the decibel.
What next? A filler before RTP was obligatory.
There was no prtimadhyama song, no viruttam, no Tamizh song. Sanjay took care
of all this in one go. After manaada with Sanjay aada, Ananda kootthadinaar
flowed. Andandam and koothu, it was.
Arabhi RTP. Rajivaaksha baaro radha ramana. A
clever Kannada song I thought, with just baaro, but Sanjay had one to follow in
full Kannada. A bolt from the blue. I have not heard it before and likely it
was BGS release as a trailer before Deepavali.
Waiting now for 4th November.
Post by rajeshnat » 29 Oct 2018 08:39
How,long was,concert exclusive,of speech .
Thank u kvc u are turning out to be such a great and unique,writer.
Sachi_R » 30 Oct 2018 14:21
Sri KVC,
Whaaa....
"Begada underground.
Bhairavi dancing to Sanjay's command like
Balasaraswati."
"Canteen as crowded as the concert
hall".
Sir, you're filling the Carnatic void. I too
congratulate you.
Sivaramakrishnan » 03 Nov 2018 21:50
kvc,
This is THE review of the year because you've
taken the event to the non-attendees in the most convincing manner. Nothing
unbelievable for a rasika who is familiar with Sanjay's approach and recital.
arasi » 04 Nov 2018 01:28
Agreed.
KVC,
Now, I'm pulling your leg. It was anything but
improper...?? You called the review you posted after yours 'proper'--to me, it
was yet another good review.
After this weekend, may we expect another
double header?
Not far, yet too far at present for me...
*
Sri Rama Lalitha Kala Mandira 06 Jan 2018 22:04
Sowmya gave a brief talk prefatory to the
concert. She was happy to open 2018 with this concert on the Thyagaraja
aradhana day dedicating it to her guru Dr. S Ramanathan whose centenary year
celebration is in progress. She planned to sing krithis popularised by him.
She started with ninne bhajana in Nattai.
Next came Teliyaleru Rama in Dhenuka. She
explained that Dr SR would take up this song to explain how the sangathis for
this song convey the mood of pleading with Rama in successively higher tone of
the plea.
Then she made alapana of Yadukula kambodhi and
sang Chelimini from Prahlada Bhakti Vijayam. She said that the opera depicts
Prahladas bhakti to Rama (who is the same as Vishnu for Thyagaraja) and that in
the opera neither the protagonist (Narasimha) or the antagonist (Hiranyakasipu)
figure. She embelliehed it with swaras.
Varanarada in Vijayasri followed with neraval
at prakatambuka and interesting swara patterns.
Kanukonu sowkhyamu in Nayaki continued with her
leisurely sowkhyam.
She sang one more number straight –
sudhamadhurya in Sindhuramakriya.
She started on alapana of Shanmukhapriya
mentioning that she covered rare ragas so far, but would now take up a familiar
raga, but a rare krithi. Vaddanevaru she embarked upon.
She confined herself within what her voice
would essay and what the raga would allow. Her voice was alright, relieved from
the strain that was in evidence in MU concert that was telecast. The percussion
duo let the voice be heard. They decisively played thirmanam for every piece,
as a warm up to the tani that must have succeeded Vaddane varu.
Jun 2022
Tamizh film music started with pure classical stuff and went to borrow from many genres and evolve. Somehow there are highbrows who frown at any mixing from film music in a classical concert. CM has very limited audience and film music offers scope to extend the coverage a weebit. Why should that be taboo?
Of course bringing in film music as part of a concert will dilute CM and is not to be encouraged. Some like Kunnakkudi did so, but that was not a good menu for a diehard rasika of pure CM. That need not be and should not be the trend.
There are some pure classical sangatis built into film songs and what harm can come when those sangatis are used in a CM concert?
We havd had G S Mani, a doyen, and Charulatha Mani present performances comparing aesthetically CM tunes and film tunes engagingly.
Shubhasree Thanikachalam has introduced several innovative themes marrying the two.
Sanjay’s notations is a popular step in this trend.
The latest performance of Ranjani and Gayathri with numbers drawn from film songs, but in pure Carnatic grammar, has been a bold experiement.
Music is the gainer when the artists exude creative juices and buttress classicism with reaching out.
Whither Carnatic Music (CM)
Art is a leisure time pursuit. It is in the upper echelons of hierarchy of needs. It flourishes in periods of prosperity and shrivels when there is decline. Music may be slightly different as people like to sing their woes too! But, one would not pay for listening when he is hard up. The artist must earn his livelihood elsewhere and art will go to sleep until it is boom time again. Chinavirus has been a spoilsport as several musicians saw their earnings dwindle, if not disappear.
Art is sacred and is greater than any one artist but has no existence independent of the artists.
The last 50-100 years saw a great period in the field of CM. CM always depended on royal or rich patrons, rather than gate collections. Sponsors filled the vacuum created with the exit of royal persons. NRIs have been a great back-up for the music and musicians.
The sabha culture of Madras has been salutary. There are complaints about the methods of the sabhas, but they have been instrumental in keeping CM viable.
Will CM survive? VVS quoted SSI saying that it would. KJ is as sure. Many other artists feel as secure. There is an explosion of youngsters fit for lucrative employment elsewhere taking to CM with zest and mastery. The audience strength though remains more or less static.
We must reckon that the survival of homo sapiens itself is not assured. I do not think that CM is more sacred than life itself. Instead of looking for its longevity, we must care for its standard when the going is good and enjoy, not bothering about times we can know nothing about.
How does an artist feel?
“What about her role as a performing artiste? ‘Being a performer is a result. But the art itself? You engage because it makes you happy. The only aspiration, then, is to be better than you were the previous day,’ observes Krithika.”
In a musical composition, music takes centre stage. We cannot quarrel on this. The sahithya and meaning are subservient. But, it is incorrect to argue that sahithya and meaning are unimportant. That a word is split unmindful of meaning, to accommodate the Tala, does not imply that the composer did not care for the meaning. The composers have tried to tune the lyric in harmony with the meaning as illustrated by many prominent singers. It is just not possible to stick to it always.
That said, I am not at ease with the argument that sahitya must take precedence. I have heard all singers sing manasulonimar malunu because the sangathi is so set by Thyagaraja. There are umpteen instances where such a split occurs. Sticking to the word construction is a fit lesson in learning the text as in a curriculum, not for a musical setting. Music is a language by itself and a chaste singer drives home this language.
SBI took over erstwhile regional banks under a separate Act and they became the subsidiaries of SBI (now merged with it). They were being referred to as subsidiary banks and it was felt that it meant a sunsidiary status to them and they were called associate banks. The word subsidiary is legal as defined in Company Law, I think. Any entity where the majority shares are held by another, is a subsdiairy of the other entiry. Unfortunately words have different meanings and this has led to the wounded feeling. I do not know how far the change in name changed attitude as well.
In Carnatic Music concerts, the violinist and mrdangist and any other (non-singer) in the team were called pakka vadyam (accompanists). Some felt that it was indignity to them and started calling them co-artists. This is cosmetic and means very little to music itself or the role of the non-singing artists. The vocalist calls the shots and others have to fire in unison. Otherwise it will not be a concert. I do not know whether the change has pepped up the accompanists, sorry, co-artists, to perform better.
Another recent innovation, non-musical of course, is the direction which the violinist faces, the mrdangist straight and singer askance, or the audience. In my mind inured to the traditional seating, this change makes no sense. The violinist and mrdangist (the main percussionist) must take cue from the vocalist for better coordination. I see that violinist, even if seated parallel to the singer, often turns to the singer while playing. He may perhaps acquire neck pain in the bargain.
Music is better off without such inconsequential egalitarian pursuits.
It is a crime to mix up social issues and music.
We must give up the obsession that CM is special and it must be taught to everyone. All music is great and one must choose as one prefers.
CM cannot be taught to all. One must have an ear for music. Any Guru tests a candidate to decide whether he is music-worthy. (Miss Bhargavi Venkataraman mentions how Mr. TMK tested her before teaching her). One cannot learn CM through Konar notes. One must master the seven notes with their variations, which is not a joke. A majority of people, even among Brahmins, have no liking for CM.
The idea to include music in curriculum is a good one. I would add yoga. The two will instil discipline of mind and body at a young age. It can be any music.
I totally agree on the need to eradicate caste differences. Music has nothing to do with it. It is simply not true that non-Brahmins were excluded from it.
It is ridiculous to say that EVR brought about a revolution to eradicate casteism or that he opened our eyes or made us think. All he did was to stir up Brahmin-phobia because he was insulted somewhere. Caste feelngs run deep among non-Brahmins more than among Brahmins. Jayamohan says how Dalits trust Brahmins rather than non-Brahmins. Politics has worsened the caste equations, not Brahmins. There have been great souls that worked without fanfare to put an end to caste system. Ramanuja tried to unify people under one god, but unfortunately it ended up with another subcaste being created. Bharathi fought against it. There have been great many far greater and more sincere than these attention-seeking and self-serving medicocrity. There is a sad fixation that to be secular one must be anti-Hindu, and that to end caste system, Brahmins must give up their anushtanams. It is a different issue that they have given up even without the threat from these worthies.
I have no problem with atheism. But, the Dravidian parties and TMK indulge in hatred and foul language. It is not atheism, but rowdyism. Brahmin hatred is nothing new. Brahmins were vulnerable to rakshasas and mlecchas through ages.
TMK is undoubtedly a maestro. But, his perversity has deflected his attention to rebel senselessly. A concert must have unity and gentle flow. (We use expressions like working in concert, metaphorically). By rejecting the idea of concert, TMK has slipped from his top ranking. He is struggling as his facial contortions suggest. He is trying to rehabilitate himself by manipulating the SK award using his robust clout. As a lay rasila I am unable to patiently sit through his histrionics to savour the occasional aha moments, unlike in the distant past when it was a taila dhara and I lapped it avidly.
*
24 Dec 2016
Brahminism has been the whipping boy for long. Brahminism has been hijacked to mean hypocrisy, exclusivity, conceit, etc. But, that cannot be its import any more than corruption can be the meaning of democracy.
Brahminism stands for integrity, purity, discipline, ardour (tapas), search for truth (Brahman). (Do not get me wrong, I do not claim that Brahmins possess these traits.)
Carnatic Music needs these attributes.
There are several in the music field who have many of these attributes, both so-called Brahmins and others.
There is nothing to feel ashamed here or guilty.
As to whom to teach, it has to be taught to one with flair and curiosity.
In several discussions and articles, I have seen that a guru tests the student before agreeing to teach him irrespective of what his background is. Even in other fields, even for nursery, some sort of test is given. Gita makes it clear that vidya has to be imparted to the one with interest. Where it is primary or secondary education or literacy and numeracy drive, it is somewhat different, but in art it cannot be universal.
Any propaganda about casteism in Carnatic music is political or done for ‘vimbu’. Let music be left alone and let social cleansing take place to do away with casteism, without tainting music.
Apl 11, 2005
I tuned in to DD North East. A young girl was singing. It was dulcet. I do not know what she sang, but her music reached deep within me.
I tuned in to DD Bharti. Kallucharan Mahapatra (at 60?) was dancing. I used to think appeal to dancing came from youth and beauty and the feminine grace. I had to rethink. I did not follow the significance of the abhinaya, but that he had a divine touch, that his dance derived its perfection from a single-minded application of a superhuman yearning came through transparently.
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