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Carnatic music is one of the most colourful, complete and
highly evolved melodic systems in the world. With over 7.2
million scales/modes (ragas) to choose from, not to mention
hundreds of rhythmic cycles (talas), there is very little
that a good Carnatic musician and composer cannot do, especially
from a melodic perspective.
A pure Carnatic music concert provides a wholesome experience.
It combines melody, rhythm, lyrics and places equal emphasis
on compositions and improvisation. A listener enjoys contrasting
speeds ranging from the fast and exciting to the slow, deep
and tranquil and gets to hear some of the world's most sizzling
melodies and sophisticated rhythms.
In recent years, top notch Carnatic artistes have also brought
to fore the versatility of the system through collaborations
with musicians and composers from several other cultures including
Western Classical, pop, blues, jazz, Chinese, African and
South American. A musician with good grounding in Carnatic
will easily be able to relate to and adapt to almost any system
in the world since several things that are being considered
experimental or innovative in parallel systems have been anticipated
and surpassed by Carnatic musicians centuries ago.
Historical persective:
The roots of Carnatic music can be traced back
to the times of the Vedas. Carnatic music also has drawn significantly
from Tamil music, at least as an ancient as its Aryan counterpart.
Thus, today's Carnatic music symbolises the essence of the
two major cultures, viz, Vedic and Tamil, encompassing the
best of Indian culture as a whole.
Some Carnatic ragas like Ahiri, Harikambhodhi, Pantuvarali
can trace their origins to over 2000 years. Hundreds of profusely
moving devotional pieces of the azhwars and nayanmars, composed
over 1200 years ago, are rendered even today. Great musicologists
expounded upon concepts like raga, tala and gamakas in treatises
like the natya shastra, believed to have been authored nearly
2000 years ago by Bharata.
Credit for making Carnatic music an organised system from
the point of view of its dissemination goes to Purandara Dasa,
1484-1564. He systematised the basic teaching and learning
and also composed hundreds of pieces. Annamacharya was another
giant composer around this period and he is said to have composed
over 15,000 pieces.
The Trinity - Tyagaraja, Muttuswami Dikshitar and Shyama Shastri
- arrived around 1760-s and dominated the music scene for
the next 80-90 years. They continue to rule the hearts and
minds of followers of Carnatic music all over the world even
today. Hailing from the same town, Tiruvarur, in South India,
they blazed 3 different trails.
Another great personality in the annals of Carnatic Music
was Oottukkadu Venkata Kavi, a great innovator and trailblazer,
said to have lived between 1700-65, (between the period of
Purandara Dasa and the Trinity). He was a complete master
of melody, rhythm and lyrics and was fluent in Sanskrit and
Tamil, employed a variety of musical forms such as the krti,
javali, tillana, and kavadichindu and showed several innovative
and dazzling structural variety within these forms.
Other notable composers include Gopalakrishna Bharati, Pallavi
Gopala Iyer, Swati Tirunal (widely acknowledged as a multi-faceted royal composer and patron of Arts), Tanjore Quartet, Subbaraya Shastri, Mysore Sadashiva
Rao, Patnam Subramaniya Iyer, Maha Vaidyanatha Shivan, Ramaswami
Shivan, Poochi Shrinivasa Iyengar, Mysore Vasudevachar and
Papanasham Shivan, to name a few.
Carnatic musicians have also, for centuries, drawn from other
cultures including Western Classical, Hindustani and Indian
folk. But remarkably, the system has retained a distinct image
and identity of its own, as it has imbibed various concepts
but without ever jeopardising its basic concepts. In other
words, the fundamentals of Carnatic music have been so all
encompassing and anticipatory that innovations or imports
can only enrich it and not modify it.
Prominent vocalists:
Modern Carnatic music owes a lot to great vocalists
such as Ariyakkudi Ramanuja Iyengar, Kanchipuram Naina Pillai,
'Tiger' Varadacharyar, Maharajapuram Vishwanatha Iyer, Musiri
Subramanya Iyer, Chembai Vaidyanatha Bhagavatar, T Brinda,
Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer, G N Balasubramaniam, Madurai Mani
Iyer, Alathur Brothers, Ramnad Krishnan, M D Ramanathan, K
V Narayanaswami, Voleti Venkateshwarulu, M S Subbulakshmi,
D K Pattammal and M L Vasantakumari.
Instrumental front:
Carnatic music has also been enriched by developments
on the instrumental front for thousands of years. Bharata,
the great musicologist mentioned numerous instruments even
2000 years ago and classified them as stringed, wind and percussion.
Among string instruments, he mentioned chitravina, which has
continued to flourish, albeit with modifications. Other ancient
instruments that are prominent today include mrdangam and
flute. Instruments that have gained popularity in more recent
times include violin, ghatam, morsing and kanjira.
Prominent Carnatic instrumentalists in the
last 100 years or so include Tirukkodikkaval Krishna Iyer,
Dwaram Venkataswami Naidu, Papa Venkataramaiya, Rajamanickam
Pillai and T Chowdaiah (violin), Rajaratnam Pillai and Karaikkuruchi
Arunachalam (nadaswaram), Dhanammal, Karaikkudi Brothers and
S Balachander (veena), Gotuvadyam Narayana Iyengar and Budalur
Krishnamurty Shastri (chitravina), Palladam Sanjeeva Rao and
T R Mahalingam (flute), Palghat Mani Iyer, Palghat Ramachandra
Iyer, Pazhani Subramaniam Pillai and Murugabhoopaty (mrdangam),
Dakshinamurty Pillai (kanjira), V Nagarajan and Harishankar.
The list is scarcely complete and it will take volumes to
enumerate the contributions of each of those mentioned. Scores
of excellent musicians and composers have taken the music
to new heights and are continuing the good work today.
For more on the subject, please read Ravikiran's
book, Appreciating
Carnatic Music.
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