Showing posts with label Rasa & Bhava. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rasa & Bhava. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

The Music of Kishori Amonkar: a divine intervention


One of the legends that has over the years engrained itself as part of Indian music culture and its rich heritage is that of Emperor Akbar and his court musician Mian Tansen. For centuries together children of almost every generation have grown up listening to stories about this great singer. Such was his command over music that his renditions of certain ragas would lit lamps or bring rain. Although it is difficult to separate the fact from fiction, these stories did make an impression on my mind as a child. Years later I came across another one and this in many ways helped me understand the subtlety as well as the magnanimity of Indian classical music. This story had three characters, Emperor Akbar, Mian Tansen and his guru Swami Haridas.

For those of who don’t know about this story; Emperor Akbar once wondered if his favorite musician Tansen can sing so well, how much better would his guru’s music be. He insisted on listening to Swami Haridas and out of no choice Tansen relented. But only on a condition that they both will travel to Swamiji’s ashram and listen to him during his riyaaz. A few days later, when both of them heard Swamiji in his riyaaz, Akbar was so enthralled that he went speechless. On the way back from the ashram, Akbar had another question for Tansen; despite the fact that I love your music, why is it so that your music is so different than your guru’s? To this he replied saying, the answer is quite simple; I perform for you, but my guru performs for no one but the divine. And that makes all the difference.

I do not own rights for this image. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to this image used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.
I suppose this is exactly what sets apart the music of Gaan Saraswati Kishori Amonkar. Throughout her life, she refused to play to the gallery and her music continued to grow more intuitive and inwards, almost like she was in a constant dialogue with the divine. And as an audience if one got a glimpse of it, it is to be treasured for the rest of the life.

I have been lucky to have met her, spoken with her and be in her presence at a few occasions if not many. For an artist of her stature, everyone who has heard her even once would have an understanding of what made her music so special. For me, her music led us into a state of fanciful imagination and reflective emotions. This brief note is about how I perceive her music purely from a standpoint of a listener.

Many of you would have attended her live concerts, and if you would recall she always insisted on performing the first rendition as per her wish. After that she would be open to accept requests, if any from listeners or organisers. I was listening to a live concert recording of hers on YouTube recently, and she’s heard talking to the audience saying although the performer before her had presented raga yaman, she would also be rendering the same raga as that is what is in her heart right now and she has to express it. Such was her sincerity that no conventions were ever important to her than to follow her heart.

As a performer she strived to get to the root of the emotion of the raga itself, to create an atmosphere through her music to touch the inner soul, the divine. Now while music is universal, the meaning of music is not. The meaning of music differs from person to person and it largely depends on the way one perceives it. Kishoritai helped bridge this gap. Her music was so finely blended with emotions, that most often her listeners were not listening to say raga yaman but to the feeling (bhava) that is raga yaman. No wonder then Tai’s mehfils have been only one of its kind, leaving the audiences spellbound for days even.

I do not own rights for this image. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to this image used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.
The mahaul she created with each of her renditions was in the making even before she would start singing. Because a bhaav is a combined effect of swar, laya, taal, raga and bandish. As a listener in the audience, I have always been in awe of her attention to detail to all the possible aesthetics accompanying the swar. For instance her baithak with the accompanying artists on stage. Her tanpuras would be placed exactly equidistant at an arm’s length, pointing precisely at the same angle from her. And the tabla, violin and harmonium players would be sitting perfectly to complete the semi circle. For all these long years, although she had performed with many accompanists this setting would never change. The stage always appeared as a complete picture, there was nothing that was out of sync; thus nothing at all to distract the listener from soaking in the pure notes of music.

I do not own rights for this image. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to this image used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.
Since her demise last week, many artists, her contemporaries and disciples among them, musicologists, renowned individuals from different fields have penned down their memories and how they interpreted the music and the personality of Kishori Amonkar. It is fascinating to see just how her music, unblemished from any forms of non-classical or popular cultural influence has touched such a wide audience transcending vocations as well as generations. It is a consolation that in the harried times of today, we had a musician like her amongst us whose renditions brought upon calm and peace. As the years will go by, we the listeners would be considered lucky as Emperor Akbar even to have lived in the times of great music.

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music - 05 of 06

Following is the flow of the fifth of six part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music:

- snippet of tere mere sapne ab ek rang hain (Guide,1965)
- A single raga can evoke diverse feelings and thus we discuss compositions where two or more bhaav are used in varying proportion
- Understanding rasa in Indian music
- How does one rasa give way to another like shringar to hasya, raudra to karuna, veera to adbhuta and bibhatsa to bhayanaka?
- How audiences experience and enjoy the dominant mood (sthayi-bhava) created by various bhava and abhinaya in a composition. This experience, which is possible only through mental perception is termed as natyarasa.
- What happens when we blend two dominant moods together in a single composition?
- To explain this in detail, we take raga nand as an example - traditionally, raga nand stimulates shaant rasa and can float into shringar as well karuna rasa. So we will listen to raga nand in three different forms with varying proportions of shringar and karuna rasa.
- snippet of tu jahan jahan rahega mera saaya (Mera Saaya,1966)

Hope you enjoy listening to the show, Bollywood Rewind: Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music (05 of 06) –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrNqVfnq8qk


I do not own rights for the songs and the visuals used in this video. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to the music or visuals used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music - 04 of 06

Bollywood Rewind is a one-hour special segment series that's played every Sunday morning between 8am to 9am on Bahrain's only Indian Radio Station - 104.2 Your FM. It discusses the influence of Indian Classical and Folk music in the vintage era of Hindi Film industry. You can tune-in to listen to the station live at http://tunein.com/radio/1042-YOUR-FM-s178828/

This segment has been extremely popular with the audiences since it started airing in August 2014 and I have been happy to be a part of this journey with the morning show hosts, Hemang and Neeti. Although Bollywood Rewind as the name suggests is broadly based on music from the Hindi Film industry; in each episode we select a topic and try to dig deep into various cultural and artistic influences that would have inspired the popular music of yesteryears in India. Although the show is in Hindi, we use a significant amount of English in our conversation for the benefit of those listeners who are not extremely comfortable in Hindi.

Last month, for the first time I posted links of an episode of Bollywood Rewind on this blog, the first three of the six-part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music. In short, rasa & bhava are the fundamental ingredients that form the true essence of music, where the performer and the audience fuse into one.

To keep it simple and easy to understand, the conversation has been essayed from the perspective of a performer vis-à-vis from the audience’s point of view and references have been used from classical music than popular music.

Following is the flow of the fourth of the six-part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music:

- snippet of madhuban mein radhika (Kohinoor, 1960)
- Explaining how some compositions express a bhava that does not match the primary rasa of the raga – like, a particular composition which is a veer-rasa-pradhan raga has the potential in its swar-sangati to evoke the veer rasa in the mind of the listener. But this cause-and-effect relationship cannot be applied every time without conditions.
- This is because a bhava is created out of aesthetics accompanying the creation of the swar and music therefore is only the combined effect of swar, laya, taal, raga and bandish. Together it creates a beautiful mahaul.
- While music is universal, yet the meaning of music is not universal. The meaning of music differs from person-to-person as it largely depends on one’s perception. Musicians usually consider their own music to be good quite simply because they understand it. If the listener is unable to understand it, he may not like it, even though it may be good. This is what I would call the ‘mental make-up. And this mental make-up plays an important role in appreciating music.
- A swar has no independent identity. It is identified always in relation to something. Standing alone, we do not know whether it is a dhaivat or a pancham. It is only with respect to a particular shadja that you can identify a dhaivat or a pancham or any other swar in the saptak.
- Similarly, when it comes to language; alphabets do not come with a pre-conceived emotion. Like A, B or C, they doesn’t mean anything. But words do. Sentences do.
- snippet of nainon mein badra chaaye(Mera Saaya, 1966)

Hope you enjoy listening to the show, Bollywood Rewind: Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music (04 of 06) –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fe0hRE3Kb_4



I do not own rights for the songs and the visuals used in this video. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to the music or visuals used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music - 03 of 06

Following is the flow of the third of the six part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music and in this link; we discuss in detail the duality factor in Indian classical music:

- snippet of baadal ghumad badh aaye (Saaz, 1997)
- explaining the duality factor in Indian classical music
- Musicologist Sharangdeva’s theory of co-relating of rhythm and rasa
- Tabulation of using the correct tempo to convey the desired emotion
- How a different rasa can be created utilizing dynamics like volume levels
- snippet of abhi na jao chhod-ke (Hum Dono, 1961)

Hope you enjoy listening to the show, Bollywood Rewind: Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music (03 of 06) –


I do not own rights for the songs and the visuals used in this video. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to the music or visuals used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music - 02 of 06

Following is the flow of the second of the six part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music:

- snippet of dekha ek khwab (Silsila, 1981)
- Nav-rasa: what are the 9 rasas? What does each rasa mean?
- Rasas other than the ones mentioned in Nav-rasa
- How does one apply a rasa to a composition?
- Musicologist Sharangdeva and his interpretation of the Rasa Theory in Sangeet-Ratnakara.
- Theory about how each note carries its own scope of emotions with it.
- How the mood or bhava of a raga is dictated by the dominant notes in it, which would impart their emotional color to the melody.
- snippet of naina barse rim jhim (Woh Kaun Thi, 1964)

Hope you enjoy listening to the show, Bollywood Rewind: Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music (02 of 06) –


I do not own rights for the songs and the visuals used in this video. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to the music or visuals used here, kindly notify me and I’ll promptly pull it down.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music - 01 of 06

Bollywood Rewind is a one-hour special segment series that's played every Sunday morning between 8am to 9am on Bahrain's only Indian Radio Station - 104.2 Your FM. It discusses the influence of Indian Classical and Folk music in the vintage era of Hindi Film industry. You can tune-in to listen to the station live at http://tunein.com/radio/1042-YOUR-FM-s178828/

This segment has been extremely popular with the audiences since it started airing in August 2014 and I have been happy to be a part of this journey with the morning show hosts, Hemang and Neeti. Although Bollywood Rewind as the name suggests is broadly based on music from the Hindi Film industry; in each episode we select a topic and try to dig deep into various cultural and artistic influences that would have inspired the popular music of yesteryears in India. Although the show is in Hindi, we use a significant amount of English in our conversation for the benefit of those listeners who are not extremely comfortable in Hindi.

This is the first time that I am posting a link to an episode of Bollywood Rewind on this blog, and I couldn’t think of any other show than the 6-part special, Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music. In short, rasa & bhava are the fundamental ingredients that form the true essence of music, where the performer and the audience fuse into one.

To keep it simple and easy to understand, the conversation has been essayed from the perspective of a performer vis-à-vis from the audience’s point of view and references have been used from classical music than popular music.

Following is the flow of the first of the six part special, Rasa & Bhava in Music:
- snippet of nazar lagi raja tore bangle par (Kala Pani, 1958)
- Introduction of the theme: what is it that sets a mood in a particular composition?
- Indian classical music is based on four pillars – sur, raga, taal and laya. But the spirit of classical music lies in the journey where the performer and the audience fuse into one; and this journey is rasa. The attainment of this purity is of utmost importance in Indian classical music.
- What is rasa?
Rasa is an ancient Indian Sanskrit word that is better experienced than read to clearly understand. It denotes a state of mind that brings about an emotional theme in a work of art. The portrayal of this emotional theme, leads us to understand bhava.
- What is bhava?
It is bhava that makes us differentiate between a sad and a happy song, or a romantic and a playful song and so on and so forth. It is the road that leads our mind into a state of imagination and sentiments producing an emotional change - rasabhava.
- What exactly makes an individual's music his own?
snippet of cham cham naachat aayi bahar (Chhaya, 1961)

Hope you enjoy listening to the show, Bollywood Rewind: Rasa & Bhava in Indian Music (01 of 06) – 


I do not own rights for the songs and the visuals used in this video. If any concerned individual or an organization has an objection to the music or visuals used here, kindly notify me and I’ill promptly pull it down.