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Blaring out
of roadside tea stalls, on
buses, in concert halls and
public parks, music is very much
a part of India’s everyday life.
Songs are sung to convey
devotion to gods, to a beau, to
parents, to friends, in
playfulness, in sad sombre
tones, in all seriousness as
well as to tease the pretty girl
walking on the street. While
classical, folk, semi classical
and the purely devotional are
genres that anyone anywhere in
the world is familiar with, what
isn’t as commonly known is the
category of “filmi” music. And
what is even less common is the
genre of “Indipop”.
Classical music in India is
elevated to a science and this
can be gauged from the
description of it as
shastriya sangeet, or
‘scientific music’.Central
to the classical music tradition
in India is what is known as the
guru-shishya parampara,
literally the teacher-pupil
tradition. To be elevated to the
status of a guru, a musician
must have achieved the mastery
of his art. These maestros are
entitled Pandit if they are
Hindu, as in Pandit Jasraj and
Pandit Bhimsen Joshi, or Ustaad
if they are Muslim, as in Ustaad
Zakir Hussain and Ustaad Amjad
Ali Khan. It is only a recent
phenomenon that music is taught
in music schools and such
institutions. Traditionally the
knowledge was passed from father
to son, and other pupils who in
fact looked upon the guru as a
de facto father. While the
basics remain constant, there
are differences in style and
flourish that distinguish one
gharana from another; gharana
literally means ‘household’. The
major gharanas are those
of Kirana, Gwalior, Agra,
Lucknow, Jaipur and Patiala.
While the guru-shishya
paramapara is common to
the teaching of classical music
all over the country, the
tradition of gharanas
is unique to the north Indian
fom of Hindustani classical.
India
has not one but two streams of
classical music, that of the
north called “Hindustani”
and that of the south, known as
“Carnatic”.The
development of two
distinct streams is usually
attributed to the fact that
northern India absorbed the
impact of Muslim rule in its
culture, as is betrayed in the
fact that Hindustani is a
Persian word (used for those of
the land of the river Sindhu or
Indus) while South India did
not. Hindustani classical music
was greatly patronised by the
Muslim rulers of northern India,
particularly by the Mughal and
Awadhi (Lucknow) courts.
Hindustani music has
two major vocal traditions:
dhrupad, which is an austere
rendition of the chosen raga,
and khyal, which has a
great degree of embellishment
and is lighter on the ear.
Besides these there are many
lighter semi-classical vocal
forms such as bhajans,
dadra, thumri, ghazals and
quawwali. Ghazals
are Urdu love lyrics spiritual
and temporal, whereas
quawwalis, also sung in Urdu
are religious songs in the Sufi
tradition.
Carnatic music is more
obviously religious than
Hindustani. The most common
venue for a performance is a
temple, and more often than not,
the songs are dedicated to a
god. This “temple music” of the
south is easily distinguishable
from Hindustani classical even
for a casual listener. Far less
restrained than its northern
counterpart, Carnatic music is
less subtle and more elaborate
in its decorative flourishes.
Unlike Hindustani where
performers may be heavily
influenced by their gharana,
Carnatic musicians, since they
do not have a gharana
tradition, are far more
individualised as performers.
The major
contributors to the development
of Carnatic music are Thyagaraj,
the late 18th century
poet and composer, Muthuswamy
Dikshitar and Shyama Shastri.
Today's eminent musicians
include Gangubai Hangal, M
Balamuralikrishna and M S
Subbulakshmi, and the veena
virtuoso
S. Balachander.
Despite
stylistic differences both
streams are essentially similar
in philosophy and structure. Sa
re ga ma pa dha ni are the seven
swars or the seven notes
that make up the scale. The
words of a song are set to a
raga (pronounced ‘raag’),
which is a combination of
swars. Notes are combined in
different ways for every raga,
producing a melody that
represents a particular mood or
emotion. There are thousands of
ragas but only some few hundred
are regularly performed. A
particular time of day, month or
year is ascribed by tradition
for the singing (or playing) of
a certain raga. Poorva Ragas
(‘ragas of the west) are
performed between noon and
midnight whereas Uttar Ragas
(ragas of the east) are reserved
for the first half of the day.
Another important component of
music is taal or a cycle
of rhythm consisting of a fixed
number of beats. Hindustani
music has fewer ragas than
Carnatic.
A drone
instrument that provides the
pitch accompanies performances
of classical music. This is the
tanpura (or tambura).
Indian classical music
encompasses a range of musical
instruments, which may be used
as accompaniment in a vocal
performance or played solo.
Hindustani and Carnatic music
have developed distinct sets of
instruments. Commonly heard
instruments in the north are the
sitar, santoor, sarod,
sarangi (string
instruments), the tabla
and the pakhavaj (drums),
and the harmonium, shehnai
and flute (wind). In the
south, the veena is the
most commonly seen and heard
stringed instrument. Percussion
instruments like the
mridangam and the ghatam
are used in solo performances as
well as to accompany a vocal
performance.
Committed to
the revival of Indian classical
music and dance is the movement
called SPIC MACAY - The Society
for the Preservation of Indian
Classical Music, Art and Culture
Among Youth. It organises
concerts and festivals and has
met with a great degree of
success in its endeavour to
reintroduce classical music and
dance into the mass
consciousness.
Folk music
is integral to the cultural
scenario. Each state, community,
tribe and people has its own
musical tradition and repertoire
of songs. These songs are sung
during weddings, harvests, the
birth of children and other
festive occasions.
The music on
the streets, regardless of
whether it is an urban metalled
road or a village dust track, is
film music. Worth crores
of rupees, (1 crore = 10
million), the music business of
Indian films is almost as
integral to Bollywood as film
making itself. Sometimes the
sale of music rights itself
recovers for the producer more
than half the cost of
production. Unlike Hollywood
movies, where OSTs are a motley
collection of old hits and a few
new numbers, the Bollywood
(Hollywood’s Bombay counterpart)
movie maniac has access to a
wholly dedicated soundtrack of
original (and sometimes
not-so-original) compositions.
Song and dance, such an integral
part of Indian life, is an
integral part of the Indian
movie too. The songs don’t
simply play unobtrusively in the
background but take centre stage
at opportune moments in the
film.
The biggest
name in Hindi film music of
course, is Lata Mangeshkar whose
voice gave expression to a
thousand emotions from the
playful to the painful. She’s
been the singing voice of
innumerable actresses for the
last 50 years. Today’s big
phenomenon is the composer A R
Rehman, whose scores blend the
Indian with the Western. Film
music is by far the most popular
form in India, uniting the east
and the west, the north and the
south.
Taking its
cue from the popularity of film
music and from the
liberalisation of the airwaves,
Indipop or Indian popular
music enjoyed huge success
initially. Music videos on new
24-hour music channels became
the vehicles of their success,
and anybody who had even half a
voice but a nice face and a good
body became an overnight
sensation. The initial boom has
subsided somewhat now but
Punjabi pop, which with its
robust rhythm and beat was the
most successful, is still on the
scene. Just tune into MTV India,
and you’ll see what we mean!
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