Title: South Asia
1South Asia
- India (North South)
- Bangladesh
2South Asia Map
3Background Preparation
- 1.4 billion people
- Ethnic, linguistic, and religious diversity
- Strong British colonial influence
Indias famed Taj Mahal
4India
- Site 1 Hindustani Raga
- Site 2 Bhajan Devotional Song
- Site 3 Carnatic Classical Song (Kriti)
5Arrival North India
- Major Cities
- Mumbai (Bombay), New Delhi, Lucknow
- Independent from British in 1947
- Mahatma Gandhi (1869 - 1948)
- Worlds Largest Democracy
- Caste System
- Disparity of wealth
- Religious pluralism
Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)
6Site 1 Hindustani Raga
- First Impressions
- Dreamy aura
- Boing drums
- Aural Analysis
- Melody Sarod
- Rhythm Tabla
- Drone Tambura
7Tambura
- Fretless plucked lute
- Four strings
- Pillar pitch tuning
- Aural incense
- Played by shishyaor vocalist
8Sarod
- Fretless plucked lute
- 3 sets of strings
- Melodic
- Drone (Jhala)
- Sympathetic
- Calfskinresonator face
9Sympathetic Strings (on Sitar)
Passing beneath the metal curved frets, the s
ympathetic strings vibrate involuntarily duri
ng performance.
10Raga Performance
- Tuning system - 22 pitches
- Raga (or rag) - atmosphere
- Mode Framework forimprovisation and
composition
- Scale, ornamentations, melodic patterns,
hierarchy of pitches, etc.
- Rasa (mood), time of day, magic
11Raga Melodic Form
- Alap
- Free rhythm, all improvised
- Ascending melodic range
- Increasing rhythmic density
- Jor - Jhala
- Gat
- Metered composition with improvisation
- Drum enters
- Similar rising range and increasing density
12Tabla
- Pair of hand drums
- Smaller drum - tabla
- Tuned to central pitch
- Larger drum - baya
- Bols - drum language
- Theka - rhythmic patterns
13Tala
- Rhythmic cycle
- Drummer and Audience Keep the tal
- Drummer stretches the beat with improvisation
A sixteen beat cycle called tintal
14Cultural Considerations
- Oral Tradition
- Guru - Shishya
- Rasa Mood as it relates to the arts
- Ragamala
- Star artists
- Ravi Shankar
- Flexible Time
15Site 2 Bhajan Devotional Song
- First Impressions
- Congregational worship
- Aural Analysis
- Harmonium
- Tabla, kartal
- Antiphonal vocals
- Duple meter
A harmonium
16Cultural Considerations
- Devotional Hindu songs
- Sai Baba Temples
Sri Sai Baba (d. 1918)
Worshippers at aSai Baba temple
17Arrival South India
- Major cities
- Hyderabad, Bangalore, Madras
- Carnatic culturemore ancient and pure
- Predominantly Hindu
A snake charmer plays the punjii
18Site 3 Carnatic Classical Song
Note the sruti box to the vocalists left.
- First Impressions
- Aural incense
- Melismatic vocalist with imitating fiddle
- Aural Analysis
- Melody Vocal
- Imitation Violin
- Rhythm Mridangam
- Drone Sruti Box
19Carnatic Instruments
20Kriti
- Hindu devotional poetry set to music
- Composed skeletal melody
- Increased ornamentation
- Raga and Tala systems more complex
- Some 36,000 possible raga
- 175 variations of tala
21Cultural Considerations
- Sri Tyagaraja(1767 - 1847)
- Devotee of Hindu god, Rama
- Prolific composer
- Aradhana Festivals
A portrait of Sri Tyagaraja
22Bangladesh
23Arrival Bangladesh
- Formerly eastern Pakistan
- Became independent in 1971
- Predominantly Muslim
- Frequent Flooding
- Most of country near sea level
24Site 4 Baul Song
- First Impressions
- Jingly sleigh-bell
- Assertive vocal
- Bouncing melody instrument
- Aural Analysis
- Gopiyantro (Ektara)
- Ghunur
A Baul musician plays a gopiyantro
25Cultural Considerations
- Bauls constitute a cultural group
- Itinerant musicians
- Non-mainstream spirituality
- Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)
- Indias most famous poet
Rabindranath Tagor (1861-1941)