Showing posts with label Ragas in Movie Songs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ragas in Movie Songs. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 January 2009

ILaiyaraaja-The Sculptor-Part V

Each Moment is a Surprise,
Each Moment A Dream,
Each Moment is A Pleasure,
Is It Possible To Express?’

‘KaNamthorum ViyappugaL Puthiya Thondrum,
KaNamthorum Vevveru KanvugaL Thondrum,
KaNamthorum Navanavamai KaLippugal Thondrum,
Karudhidavum Sollidavum Ellitho?’

கணந்தோறும் வியப்புகள் புதிய தோன்றும்;
கணந்தோறும் வெவ்வேறு கனவுகள் தோன்றும்;
கணந்தோறும் நவநவமாய் களிப்புகள் தோன்றும்;
கருதிடவும் சொல்லிடவும் எளிதோ?

This is the description of the evening sky by Subramania Bharati in ‘Paanchaali Sabatham’.

A close look at this song suggests many things.
The passing of time.. the uncertainty of life.. the beauty of life.. the beauty of a moment.

Let us take ‘moment’.It is amazing to know how different things happen in a moment..and how it changes the entire perspective.

Very recently, we saw in the Olympics how a split second could make a huge difference.In the final analysis, it is the fraction of a second that separated the winners and the vanquished.

In Cricket, the duration of a shot is hardly a second but the way it is executed can change the course of a match itself.

In Music and Dance, timing is as important as oxygen is to all living things.

Carnatic music lays lot of emphasis on the tala and Kaalapramaanam.
Similarly, in Classical Dance, a small slip in Tala is enough to disturb the entire composition.

If we take life itself, a very small event that happens in a moment is enough to change everything.

Life, Games,Music and Dance cannot be separated and there is a clear link between these.

In the previous four posts, we saw the history of Dance and Music in Tamizh society and Literature.

Starting from Tolkappiyam, many texts like Pancha Marabu, Kooththa Nool, Bharata Senapathiyam have defined the grammar of classical dance.

‘Silappathikaaram’ gives a perfect description about Classical Dance and Music.


‘MaNimekalai’- considered to be an offshoot of ‘Silappathikaaram’ since MaNimekalai was the the daughter of Madhavi and Kovalan- also talks a lot about the dance.

Written by ‘Seeththalai Saaththanaar’, the text mentions about Tala Aruthi,the eleven different forms of dance-as already mentioned in detail in ‘Silappathikaaram’-the two forms of ‘Kooththu’ and the existence of a grammar book on ‘Bharatam’.

In another major text, ‘Seevaka ChintamaNi’, the chief protagonist, Seevakan himself is a dancer.

In Bhakti Literature,texts like Thevaram and Tirumanthiram talk a lot about the dance of Siva.

Some verses in the ‘Naalayira Divya Prabhandam’ describe the dance of Krishna.

‘Thiruppugazh’ written by AruNaGirinathar has lot of verses that use the dance syllables.In one of the verses, ‘Athala Sethanaar aada’, he makes all the gods in the heaven dance.

These are some of the glimpses from literature.

If we look at the different periods, during the sangam period, all art forms were their best.

After this, there was a lull as the Tamizh land was ruled by strangers called ‘KaLappiRars’.In fact, this period is supposed to be a dark period in the history.

The Pallavas took over and this period was the Golden Period.All major art forms flourished.The dance sculptures at Maamallapuram still exist and tell us the aesthetic sense of the Pallavas.

After this was the Chozha period and the Bruhadeeswara temple at Thanjavore depicts 81 karanaas out of the 108 Karanaas.The Nataraja temple at Chidambaram and the Saarangapaani temple at KumbakoNam have all the 108 karanaas depicted.

This shows the passion and the dedication of our ancestors and how deeply they were involved in fine arts.It also shows that fine arts was an intrinsic part of their lives.

Folk dance forms like Karagaattam, Oyilaattam, Mayilaattam also flourished. Unlike what some of the purists think, these forms are not appendages of Classical forms and have their own beauty.

Let us now see the composition from ‘ULiyin Osai’ where the folk forms have been described.

It is ‘Alai Ellam’.

The composition has a folk flavour and is a mélange of different ragas and changing rhythmic patterns..

As the master himself renders ‘Alai ellam’ with evocative grandeur, we see the beautiful sea and the fertile land. We see the waves in ‘KaadugaLil..’ and as we hear ‘Pattuk Kodi’, we are plunged into the sea of music.
The different facets of Tisram decorate the sea.

Until now,it is Sudhha Saveri whose structure is sa ri2 ma1 pa dha2 Sa/Sa dha pa ma1 ri2 sa.

The Raga now changes to Pahaadi as the prelude starts beautifully.

Pahaadi’s structure is sa Ri2 Ga3 Pa Dha2 Pa Dha2 Sa in the Arohanam and Sa Ni3 Dha2 Pa Ga3 Ma1 Ga2 Ri2 Sa Ni3 sa. Other alien swaras peep in now and then and that adds to the beauty of the Raga.At times, because of its structure, it can easily be mistaken as Mohanam with alien Swaras or even Shankarabharanam.

The Pallavi now starts vibrantly.

The rhythmic pattern in Tisram is again a treat.

In the first interlude, the Flute plays with tenderness infusing joy.

It is a view of the sea and land at the same time from a mountain as the Charanam gives shades of Shankarabharanam, Maand and Pahaadi.

It gives a serene feeling!

The second interlude and the Charanam weave beautiful patterns as we hear the Kummi.It is the intermingling of depth and appeal.

It is a sudden ebullient swirl as we hear the percussion in the music that follows.The rhythm changes.The raga changes to Karaharapriya and Natabhairavi and is sprinkled with Manji, another raga that has contours of folk.

It is rendered with gusto.

It is a cascading profusion sung and played with electrifying vim and vigour.

The Rhythmic pattern changes.

The Ragas change.

But each and every moment is a surprise;each and every moment a dream;each and every moment a pleasure.

And this is what is his music all about!

It makes even the waves dance!!

அவரது இசையில் அலையெல்லாம் நடனமாடும்!

With this, the series on the history of Classical dance and music in Tamizh literature and soceity comes to an end.

Though I had read lot of things before, I must acknowledge the information provided by Prof.Raghuraman in the book titled 'Tamizhar Natana Varalaaru' !

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Saturday, 27 December 2008

ILaiyaraaja-The Sculptor-Part IV

In Mathematics, there is something called Duality. It is nothing but translating one concept into other concept by means of an involution operation.

It is a very interesting concept and I feel it has lot of relevance to the Human life and Nature.

Most of the things we see in this world come in pairs.Let us take the organs in the human body.. Eyes, ears, hands, legs, nostrils.. In fact, the nostrils play a very major role in keeping us mentally and therefore physically fit.

These pairs perform coordinated actions.
We also have pairs that are contrasting by nature.
Black/White, Potential Energy/Kinetic Energy, Head/Tail, Positive/Negative.

In Chinese philosophy, there is something called the Yin/Yang theory-two opposing and at the same time complementary aspects of one phenomenon.

In Quantum Mechanics, we have the wave-particle duality according to which matter and energy exhibit both wave like and particle like properties.

In a similar vein, I feel Dance and Music always complement each other. There are people who say ‘Dance cannot exist without music;but Music can exist without Dance’.
On the face of it, it may appear to be true.

But in reality music is as much dependent on dance as dance is on music. Is dance just body movements? Is it just facial expressions? Is it just jumping around or moving around?

No..It is much beyond all these.

It is a form of expression.

Let us look at Music.Is Music just singing (or playing an instrument)?Is it just Raga/Tala or scales? Is it just juggling of notes?

Music is also a form of expression. The artiste expresses himself/herself rhythmically. Can this not be called as dance? Don’t we say the Swaras danced when that artiste sang?

I am reminded of a Lecture/Demonstration at the Music Academy more than 20 years back when a very famous classical dancer said this:

‘I see Music. I hear Dance’.

Might sound too far fetched and exaggerated.But it is true.

The dancer is a great scholar who has done lot research on dance and folk music and I am sure this statement came straight from her heart.

Music and Dance complement each other.

And that is the reason ILango AdigaL paid importance to music as well while talking about dance.

In the previous posts, we saw how Silappathikaaram covered the various aspects of dance and how ILango AdigaL defined not only the structure of classical dance but also the qualities of musicians and the stage dimensions.

Today, let us see what he has spoken about Music.
In just one verse, he gives the names of the seven swaras as per Tamizh PaN.

குரலே, துத்தம், கைக்கிளை, உழையே
இளியே, விளரி, தாரம் என்றிவை
எழுவகை இசைக்கும் எய்தும் பெயரே
சவ்வும் ரிவ்வும் கவ்வும் மவ்வும்
பவ்வும் தவ்வும் நிவ்வும் என்றிவை
ஏழும் அவற்றின் எழுத்தே ஆகும்

Sa-Kural; Ri-Thuththam;Ga-KaikkiLai;Ma-Uzhai;Pa-ILi;Dha-ViLari;Ni-Tharam.

In another verse, he says PaNs(Ragams) are obtained by arranging the 12 Kovais(swaras) in a specified structure in the ascending and descending scale.

But more than all these, what leaves one wonder struck is his definition of Gruha Bedam-tonic shift. He calls this as 'Kural Thiribu'.

He says 'if the Thuththam(ri) of Mohanam is the base, it would give Madhyamavathi, if the KaikkiLai(ga)is the base it would give Hindolam, the ILi(pa) would give Sudhha Saveri and the ViLari(dha) Sudhha Dhanyasi'.

Is it not amazing that somebody in the Tamizh land defined all these as early as the 5th century?

And 16 centuries later, somebody again from the same land has been giving us some masterpieces. He too like ILango AdigaL is a perfectionist and at the same time innovative.

Duality?

Let us see the next composition from ULiyin Osai today.

It is ‘Kallai Irunthen Silaiyaai En Vadiththai..’

The composition is based on Sudhdha Dhanyasi.

A very interesting Ragam derived from Karaharapriya and its structure is
Sa ga2 ma1 pa ni2 Sa/Sa ni2 pa ma1 ga2 sa.

The composition starts in a very subtle way. We feel the mellowness and the force as we hear the humming. The long flute undulates while the string is infused with melody.

The Pallavi is zestful and tranquil.

As usual, the Laya pattern is interesting.The 8 beat cycle is divided into 2 parts of 4 beats each:Ta – Dhi Mi Ta Ka Dhi Mi with stress on the first ‘Mi’ giving a very special wavy effect.

It is verve and vitality personified.

The first interlude has a simple and ornate structure. It is just the Flute and the Veena mainly but has a quintessential flavour. The Flute has innate grace flamboyance while the Veena is gentle, and powerful. The percussion instrument‘s reply to the Veena is dexterous.

The Charanam is rich and serene. It is pregnant with weighty phrases and is very flexible. It is rock steady and traverses up and down. The Flute piece that is interspersed between the two lines glides smoothly and is tenacious.

The second interlude shows us a gorgeous landscape.

As we hear the Veena and the percussion, followed by the violins and the piano, we see the wide green valleys and the deep ravines.

We see the sun play hide and seek between the hills and the Rain from the Sky.

We see the gushing torrents and the steady slow stream.

It is warm and cold.
It is uncanny and easily comprehensible.
It is Sun and the Moon.

Stone and a sculpture.

And is this not duality?

அவரது இசை கல்லை சிலை ஆக்கும்;சிலையை மனிதனாக்கும்;மனிதனை தெய்வீக நிலைக்கு அழைத்துச் செல்லும்.

His music turns a stone into a sculpture; turns a sculpture into a human; makes the human reach divine state..

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Friday, 28 November 2008

ILaiyaraaja-Nation's Pride!

‘Our True Nationality is mankind’ said H.G.Wells.

‘Patriotism is when love of your own people comes first; nationalism, when hate for people other than your own comes first’ said Charles de Gaulle.

What is this ‘nationalism’ and ‘patriotism’ all about?

In this modern fast paced world, do we really care for the nation?Do we really care for the mankind?Do we care for anything at all??

Let us first see what the Nation means to most of us.Though we have a tendency to criticize and at times even abuse our nation, we all stand united whenever there is a crisis..and whenever there is Cricket match!

Sounds strange?

Yes..But most of the facts are strange..

Is it not a fact that most of us have prayed-and continue to pray- (even if we are non-believers) whenever there is an interesting match involving India?

And when the Team wins, don’t we celebrate it in a big way?
We hardly look at the caste or religion of these national heroes.What matters is they are Indians and that they play for our country!

They are the pride of our Nation!

In a similar vein, whenever there is a national calamity, our hearts bleed. We are concerned about our people-our own people, our own brothers and sisters!

The last 48 hours have been traumatic for all of us and we wish that the ordeal comes to an end very soon.

As Subramaniya Bharati said,

‘There are many castes and divisions here.Though we fight among ourselves, are we not brothers born to the same Mother ?’

ஆயிரம் உண்டிங்கு ஜாதி எனில்
அன்னியர் வந்திங்கு புகல் என்ன நீதி?ஓர்
தாயின் வயிற்றில் பிறந்தோர் நம்முள்
சண்டை செய்தாலும் சகோதரர் அன்றோ!

He also sang,

‘We all belong to the same creed. We are all part of the same clan…We are all citizens of India!’

எல்லோரும் ஓர் குலம்; எல்லோரும் ஓர் இனம்.
எல்லோரும் இந்திய மக்கள்!

At a time when the entire nation is looking at Mumbai and praying for the welfare of all the people in the city, it is also imperative that we do not let our emotions take control of heads.

Be a patriot but not a ‘nationalist’.

Condemn terrorism and not a particular religion just because the terrorists owe allegiance to that religion.

Vow not to fall a pray to the machinations of our great political leaders and ‘cultural nationalists’ who enjoy giving colour to everything (because their eyes are already jaundiced).

Let us spread Love and not hatred.

Let us realise that terrorism and terrorist sleep within us and it just takes a moment of madness for these to wake up, assume gigantic proportions and become a Monster.

That brings me to the subject that is very close to everybody’s hearts.

Music!

It is the unifying force..It is the omnipotent force..

It calms our nerves..It makes us think positive..

It makes us mellow..It makes us love others..

Many musicians have made our country proud.

The Gentleman from a remotest village in Tamizh Nadu has been giving music that mellows us; that melts us ; that makes forget ourselves ; that makes us love others.

Musicians across the globe have poured encomiums on him. People in the world have saluted him. He was the first Asian to compose a symphony for the Royal Philharmonic. The world famous Budapest Orchestra played for him.

Paul Mauriot, a very famous composer from France remarked ‘This is something different and wonderful’ after listening to ‘How to Name it’.

Alexander, another famous conductor of a Symphony Orchestra was enthralled when he listened to ‘Etho Mogam’(Kozhi Koovuthu) and said ‘This is not Indian Music.This is International Music’.

Is he not our national pride?

The song for today is also based on a Raga that literally means the Nation.
It is Raag Desh.

It is a Hindustani raga and is capable of melting anybody(including the terrorists).

Interestingly, Bankim Chand Chatterjee’s Vande Maataram is also set in Raag Desh!

Desh’s structure is
Sa ri2 ma1 pa ni3 Sa/Sa ni2 dha2 pa ma1 ga3 ri2 ga3 ni3 sa.

Like most of the Hindustani Raags, it uses alien swara(ni3) in this case.In Carnatic music parlance, such ragas are called as Bhashanga Ragas.

The main prayogas(called as ‘pakad’) in the Raga are ‘ri ma pa’ ‘ni dha pa’ ‘ma ga ri’ ‘ga sa’.

In the Hindustani system, we also have Vaadi and Samvaadi swaras-the sonant-consonant pair of notes.While the Vaadi swar is the most important note, the Samvaadi is the second most important and significant note.

In Desh, the Vaadi swar is ‘ri’ and the Samvaadi, ‘pa’.

Let us have a look at the composition.

It is ‘Vizhiyil Pudu Kavithai Padiththen’ from ‘Theerthakaraiyinile’(1987).

The Satin like softness of the Desh is personified by the Shehnai and we close our eyes involuntarily.The gentle breeze kisses us as we listen to the strings, and violins.

The very short piece in the flute says it all!

Again a word or two about Laya Raja.

I have been talking about his sense of Tala(rhythm) time and again in this Blog.What makes his compositions unique and great is this.It follows a structure even when there is no percussion instrument.

This prelude is no exception!

The five-beat khanta pattern adds to the beauty of the composition.

The Pallavi has a sense of freshness-typical of the Raag- and at the same time is very vibrant.

The tenderness continues in the first interlude as the chorus sings.The Flute plays with precision while the string emerges subtly but powerfully.

The CharaNam shows us the endearing features of the raga as the sangatis flow.The structure is also interesting as it becomes a kind of question and answer session between the male and the female voices(Samvaadi and Vaadi?).

The chorus embellishes the CharaNam.

The second interlude also follows an excellent pattern.

The Chitra Veena plays the same swaras as the one rendered by the chorus in the first interlude. The Tabla replies exquisitely.The Flute dazzles ,the bass guitar smiles and the strings sparkle.

It is intensively detailed and effectively punctuated with the beautiful swaras.

We see a clear natural stream.

We see the iridescent hues of the Raga.

Musically Musical!

Niches of quietude!!

Desh- a beautiful serene raga..our Nation.
ILaiyaraaja-the brilliant refined musician.. our pride!

விரலில் புது கீதம் படைப்பார்.
செவியிரண்டில் அமுதம் இசைப்பார்.

He gives us new music that flows like nectar.