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Introduction to the Music of
India
Published by the Centre of Indian Arts, London during the Sanskritik
7th Festival of Arts of India under the artistic direction of Birendra
Shankar (extracted)
Once a King asked a sage how to make
sculptures of the Gods. The sage said, "Someone who does not know the
laws of painting could never understand the laws of sculpture. Someone
who has no knowledge of the principles of instrumental music cannot know
the laws of dancing. Someone who does not understand the art of vocal
music cannot understand the principles of instrumental music."
It is
through the medium of the arts that people of different nations and
backgrounds are able to communicate and understand each other better.
The West is becoming more familiar with Indian music - it is no longer
merely an exotic expression of the East, but is reaching an ever growing
and more knowledgeable and appreciative audience.
HISTORY
The music
of India and its history are too complex to be described briefly.
Nevertheless a brief introduction will help those who are new to Indian
music; they will no doubt be more influenced by what they hear than by
what they read but a foreknowledge of certain theoretical points may
assist their appreciation.
HERITAGE
Indian
music has a very long, unbroken tradition - the accumulated heritage of
centuries. The origin can be traced back to Vedic days - nearly two
thousand years. The culture of India today is an outcome of the
interaction and interweaving of races and cultures, both indigenous and
foreign; and it is the study of the contribution of these various races
and tribes that gives us the picture of the evolution of Indian music.
The Negrito, the Mongoloid, the Dravidian, and the Aryan, have all
contributed to the complexity of Indian culture.
North
Indian music is popularly known as Hindustani music and South Indian as
Carnatic; their origin is the same, only the approach and style are
different. When and how the two main schools crytallized would be an
interesting study but the earliest treatises of Indian music do not make
any distinction between Northern and Southern schools.
INFLUENCES
One of the
strongest and most significant influences has perhaps been that of Islam
(and of Persian music); a few centuries of Muslim invasion and rule
brought in its wake a changed perspective in the style of Northern
Indian music, rather than in its structure. Not being part of the
religious ritual it was necessarily fostered outside the places of
worship; hence an element of physical pleasure, particularly of the
courtier, became predominant.
It is
interesting to note the influence of Indian music on sculpture and
particularly painting. Painters have portrayed the theme of the Raga and
they have named their paintings after the Ragas and Raginis. Both
paintings and sculpture concentrate on creating contained, volume-filled
forms. Great care is taken to keep the basis simple. The moving line and
contained space complement each other, giving each other meaning. This
is exactly analogous to the character of Indian musical melody, which
moves in smooth united motions, including within its curves definite
units of musical form.
STRUCTURE
The
tradition of Indian music should be understood in the context of Indian
life and thought. The theory and practice of Indian music are the
logical result of a consistent development, a distinctive process, which
plays an integral part in Indian history and culture. One should not
listen to Indian music and judge it in terms of Western music or any
other musical form. It would be like judging Beethoven or Brahms in
terms of Raga (the basis of Indian melody) and Tala (the basis of Indian
rhythm). Ideally, the western listener is requested to forget
counterpoint, harmony, and mixed tone colors and to relax into the
rhythmic and melodic patterns of a great cultural heritage.
Each
melodic structure of Raga has something akin to a distinct personality
subject to a prevailing mood. Early Indian writers on music carried this
idea further and endowed the Ragas with the status of minor divinities,
with names derived from various sources, often indicating the origin or
associations of the individual Ragas. In theoretical works on music each
Raga was described in a short verse formula, which enabled the artiest
to visualize its essential personality during meditation prior to the
performance. This borrowing of the meditational technique used in Hindu
worship enabled the musician to enter into the mood of a particular Raga
and thus perform is successfully.
TECHNICAL
ASPECT
Raga is
neither a scale, nor a mode. It is, however, a scientific, precise,
subtle, and aesthetic melodic form with its own peculiar ascending and
descending movement which consists of either a full octave, or a series
of six or five notes. An omission of a jarring or dissonant note, or an
emphasis on a particular note, or the slide from one note to another,
and the use of microtones along with other subtleties, distinguish one
Raga from the other. There are 72 'melas', or parent scales, on which
Ragas are based.
Raga has
its own principal mood such as tranquility, devotion, eroticism,
loneliness, pathos, heroism, etc. In Indian music there is above all an
awareness between man and nature, each acting and reacting on the other,
and hence each Raga is associated, according to its mood, with a
particular time of the day, night or a season. Improvisation is an
essential feature of Indian music, depending upon the imagination and
the creativity of an artist; a great artist can communicate and instill
in his listener the mood of the Raga.
'Tala' is
the second important factor in Indian music. These are rhythmic cycles
ranging from 3 to 108 beats. The division in a Tala and the stress on
the first beat, called 'Sum', are the most important features of these
cycles. Talas having the same number of beats may have a stress on
different beats, e.g. a bar of 10 beats may be divided as: 2-3-2-3, or
3-3-4, or 3-4-3. Within the framework of the fixed beats the drummer can
improvise to the same extent as the principal artists after going their
separate ways, come back together with an accent or stress on the first
beat. Thus, the 'Sum' becomes the most important beat of emphasis
throughout a recital of Indian music, since this urge for unity and its
fulfillment are the most rewarding experience. |