What determines the aesthetic
sense of an individual?
First of all, what is aesthetics? Anything concerning beauty and its appreciation?
What is beauty then? Without getting into that old
cliché about ‘beauty’ and the ‘beholder’, let me ask myself if the concept of beauty is subjective. Or
should it be like the case of the goose
and the gander?
Despite the danger of being branded as ‘subjective’, I feel there are certain
things considered to be pleasing and beautiful and the more refined one is, the
more he/she is able to appreciate it. That ‘refinement’ is what is called as ‘developing good tastes’.
Now the question asked in the beginning can be
interpreted in two different ways-
1.
How does one have aesthetic sense?
2.
How do we know the person has that aesthetic sense?
Answer to (1.) is
‘a lot of factors’ and this includes
genetics, upbringing, environment, exposure..
(2.
)
can be answered in many ways too. ‘when
the expression of a person genuinely suggests he/she is appreciative of the
music being played/the artwork displayed/the poem read out..’ the person
has aesthetic sense. In fact, even
the way a person leads the life suggests
a lot about the person’s aesthetics.
It then goes without saying that an artiste or a poet has
that sense of aesthetics. Or does it?
Since this is a slightly debatable issue, let us move on and see one very important aspect which is relevant to
this post.
Though all artistes/poets
are believed to be endowed with the sense of aesthetics, only in some cases do we see that sense permeate common
men/women like us. So much so that even people without that ‘a’ word are able to appreciate their
works. This also ends up in making the unaesthetic, aesthetic. Of course, the lucky ones who already have the aesthetic
sense because of the factors mentioned in the answer to (1.), fine
tune their sense while experiencing
the works of such geniuses.
Without a doubt, Kamban
was one such genius.
I keep quoting his verses
time and again because I am enamoured of his poetic sensibilities and brilliance. In my write-up on ‘Devathai
oru Devathai’ posted on the 22nd
of March, 2015 here, I quoted a verse which talks about the women of Mythila being enthralled at the sight of Rama as he goes around the
city, post- the breaking of Shiva Dhanush. The verse I am quoting today is also from the same chapter but is different in the sense that it describes the
condition of a particular lady (not
Sita, by the way) while the previous one described about the state of women in general.
A woman with a dense and wavy hair walks like a beautiful creeper with her jewellery on the waist and the ankle bells making a musical sound. Alas! She had to be carried away by her friends.
Reason?
Let us first look at the original:
அலம்பு பாரக் குழலி ஒர் ஆயிழை
சிலம்பும் மேகலையும் ஒலி செய்திட
நலம் பெய் கொம்பின் நடந்து வந்து எய்தினாள்
புலம்பு சேடியர் கைமிசைப் போயினாள்.
சிலம்பும் மேகலையும் ஒலி செய்திட
நலம் பெய் கொம்பின் நடந்து வந்து எய்தினாள்
புலம்பு சேடியர் கைமிசைப் போயினாள்.
The first three lines
are devoted to describing the beauty of the lady. She walks with an
uncontrollable excitement. The ‘sound’ from her ornaments shows this to
us. But the moment she looks at Rama, she is spellbound. Unable to bear
His beauty and unable to come to terms with her emotions, she
faints and is carried by her friends.
Note the subtle and obvious
contrasts. ‘எய்தினாள்’/ போயினாள்’(reached/went
away).
‘Dense and heavy’ in the first line; ‘was carried away lightly’ in the last line. ‘Made noise’
in the second line; ‘went without a trace’ in the last line.
Aesthetics
combined with Brilliance.
Kamban- Sollin Selvan.
I
am sure by now some of you have guessed where I am coming to. If Kamban
was ‘Sollin Selvan’, ILaiyaraaja is ‘ Isiayin Selvan’.
His sense of aesthetics is apparent in the way the orchestration is done while
his brilliance is seen in the way he uses a raga
and a taaLa.
As
I keep repeating, the greatness of a composer does not lie just in the
use of a particular raga or a taaLa
but in the way these are used.
Today’s song for discussion
is a classic example.
‘Maan KaNden Maan KaNden’ from ‘Raja Rishi’(1985) is based on Vasanta
and follows the Tisram pattern. But
anybody with some knowledge in classical music can do this. Are Vasanta
and Tisram alone enough to make the
composition sound nice?
How to use the swaras of the raga, where
to give the essence of the raga, where to bring in akaaram, how to make
instruments sound great, how to use tisram,
where to use the percussion, how to divide the maatras and how to make the percussion sound the syllables…
All
these determine how good the song will be and here is where that ‘a’ sense which I described
in the beginning comes into picture.
Let
us look into the composition and try and see how he has answered all
those ‘how’ s.
The
beginning itself presents and image of profundity with the chorus
singing the ‘akaaram’ beguilingly backed by the piano keys and the
guitar. Two different sets of swaras
and yet the same ragam. In fact, in a
split second, one sees the clear sketch of Vasanta on the canvas. The
sharp flute continues the embellishment of Vasanta with the bass
guitar moving along with it. The percussion joins only as the flute
enters and plays in tisram. The
frisky keys take us to the Pallavi even as the flute
welcomes it.
The
Pallavi - in the honey-soaked voices of Yesudass and VaNi
Jayaram- is a classical flow of expression with the upper Sa dominating the first two lines
and the ‘ma’ and ‘ga’- swaras that give the raga its life- appearing in the last two
lines. But what makes it more aesthetic is the taaLa pattern. As mentioned earlier, the composition follows the 3-beat
cycle tisram. This ‘3’ is subdivided into 6
syllables-ta ka dhi mi ta ka- and the
percussion sounds the first 5 syllables -with a kaarvai for the last syllable- for every alternate
tisram. This pattern does add a beautiful shade to the entire composition
though it appears only whenever the pallavi is rendered.
There
are different patterns in the interlude too which we shall see as we
move on.
The
first interlude starts with the violin playing with an expression
of spontaneity. We feel the compassion too as the group of violins
respond to the solo violin. The percussion joins only after 8 tisrams. Now, the percussion
sounds ‘ta’
while the rhythm guitar-which acts as percussion- sounds ‘ka dhi mi ta ka’ as
the violin moves intricately with intense emotional luxuriousness
drawing four lines in Vasanta. The lilting flute responds after
the first and the third lines. The guitar and the keys
take over briefly and playing with poise without the percussion, lead us
to the first charaNam.
The
CharaNams show how creative inspiration can get translated into
expression.
The
first part of the two lines sees the repetition of the swara ‘ma’ while the following two
lines have the ‘podi sangatis’. If the
transition from the ‘sa’(mid-octave) to ‘Sa’(upper
octave) in the beginning of the last two lines and the akaaram at the end descending from the
upper ‘Ma’
to the ‘Sa’
covering the ‘Ga’ and ‘Ri’
in between, show us the beautiful mind, the arohaNam(sa ma ga ma dha ni Sa)
appearing after the avarohaNam(sa ni dha ma ga ri) in the akaaram,
show the musical mind.
And
what can one say about the chorus backing the vocals in the first two
lines with the ‘akaaram’, the flute playing briefly after the next
two lines and the keys backing the last two lines?
This
is what is called as aesthetically brilliant!
The
second interlude starts with the ‘akaaram’
in the male voice with only the rhythm guitar as the percussion.
Bubbling with emotional ripples, the piano keys responds to this ‘akaaram’
charting its own melody in Vasanta. After 16 tisrams, the guitar and the keys take over and move with great
solicitude. What follows is a plenitude of graceful sanchaaras with chorus singing a ‘tillana’
with the keys joining in the last four phrases with infectious
passion.
Enthralled
by the beauty, we too fall like the lady in Mithila, but into the
hands of musical angels..
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