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Music of India

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Music of India Introduction to Indian Music Tradition dates back over 3000 years, making it one of the oldest in the world Developed two distinct traditions Karnatak ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Music of India


1
Music of India
2
Introduction to Indian Music
  • Tradition dates back over 3000 years, making it
    one of the oldest in the world
  • Developed two distinct traditions
  • Karnatak in the south
  • Hindustani in the north (which includes Pakistan)
  • Hindustani music has Persian and Islamic
    influences
  • Musicians used to have aristocratic patrons until
    1947 when India became an independent democracy

3
Performers
  • Consider music to be spiritual
  • Texts often have religious meanings
  • Indian musicians treat their gurus as
    representatives of the divine
  • Special ceremony occurs when guru accepts a pupil
  • Passed down orally and by imitate
  • Simple notation exists- Only to give skeleton,
    performer must ornament and elaborate on his or
    her own

4
Improvisation
  • Governed by the melodic and rhythmic systems
    which limit the choice of tones, ornaments, and
    rhythms
  • Musicians study for years to master basic rules
  • Generally performed by a drummer and a soloist-
    lasting from a few minutes to several hours
  • Instrumentalists and vocalists improvise

5
Elements of Indian Music
  • Based on vocal music- pitch range is limited to
    less than four octaves
  • Melody is highly embellished
  • Often microtonal
  • Slides between pitches provide graceful
    transitions between notes
  • Melodies accompanied by a drone and a drummer
    that keeps the rhythmic structure

6
Raga
  • Raga is a pattern of notes that creates the
    melodic framework
  • Defined by the number of notes and the interval
    pattern
  • Each has an ascending and descending form,
    characteristic phrases and tonal emphases
  • Ragas associated with moods, gods, seasons,
    festivals, times of day, etc..
  • Musicians may limited themselves to a few dozen
    raga
  • 300 discovered in Hindustani music

7
Tala
  • Tala- a repeated cycle of beats
  • Range in length from 3 to 100 beats
  • Common is six to sixteen
  • Cycle subdivided into groups- with accents on the
    first beat of each group
  • Ex. Jhaptal- 2-3-2-3
  • Ex. Shutal- 4-2-4
  • Beats can be sub-divided as in western music
  • First note of the raga is usually on the first
    beat
  • Drummers spend years mastering the tala and their
    variations

8
Instruments
  • Associated with gods or goddesses
  • Flute associated with Krishna
  • Vinu is associated with Saravati, goddess of
    wisdom
  • Instruments have become as popular as the voice
    in northern India
  • Large variety of instruments

9
Sitar
  • Most popular chordophone in India
  • 19 to 23 moveable frets
  • Seven strings- Five for melody, two for drones
  • 13 sympathetic strings that lie under the frets
  • Used by Ravi Shankar

10
Vina
  • Plucked string instrument
  • Popular in southern India
  • Four strings for melodic playing
  • Three strings at the side of the fingerboard for
    drones and rhythmic effects

11
Sarod
  • Northern India plucked string- used with a
    plectrum (pick) of ivory or coconut shell
  • Six main strings- four for melodies, two for
    drones
  • 11 to 16 sympathetic strings

12
Mridangam
  • Two headed drum
  • Played with open palm of fingers
  • One drumhead tuned to the tonic, other functions
    as a bass

13
Tabla
  • Northern Indian equivalent to mridangam
  • Right hand tuned to tonic, left is a bass drum

14
Tambura
  • Plucked string instrument with four strings that
    plucked in succession
  • Main drone instrument
  • No frets- only open strings are played

15
Listening Maru-Bihag by Ravi Shankar
  • Sitar accompanied by tabla and tambura
  • Raga is demonstrated in the introduction
  • Tala is ten beats in a 2-3-2-3 pattern
  • Begins with an introductory section with the
    sitar and tambura only
  • Sitar plays in free rhthym
  • Entrance of the tabla marks second section
  • Shankar presents the gat- short repeated,
    composed phrase
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