
Thanks in advance
Thanks - that program works well on my Dell Axim!Try this one for PocketPC, I am using it. I find it very simple and easy to use. Only thing that you cant do with this is sankeerna nadai.
you can download the same from http://www.seguemd.com/pockettune/
(Freeware)
Yes, but I as a beginner mridangam student do not have the facility of someone else putting talam for me everytime I practise. How do I practice theermanams? How do I practise chatusra gati to tisra gati changeover and know that my speed change was correct? If it is all in my mind then my mind will stretch to accomodate anything.param wrote:The only problem you will have in future is that you will never be comfortable with a human talam but would always want a mechanized talam. To speed up or to slow down is merely a human trait. If the talam is used for any interesting the talam speeds up and if it is of less interest, the talam slows down. Just like when you find a cricket match interesting you stay wide awake and keep cheering but when no runs are scored, no wickets fall, etc., you tend to either change the channel or put the TV off and do something else.
I am trying to reconcile the info from the Hari Shankar thread on the duration of a nadai count... Based on what you state above, does it imply then that the avarthanam duration of a thala does not change when you switch nadai from one avarthanam to another? In the discussion at the Hari Shankar thread, we are going by the data that the duration of the sub-beat does not change when you switch nadai which implies that the duration of the outer beat changes and hence the duration of the whole avarthanam changes when you switch nadais.vigneshbal wrote:it is for u to calculate/practice/adjust the speed in such a way that you would be able to fit in 5/7/9 aksharas with in the single beat
Reminds me of the bit I read in Readers Digest Long Long ago.I should "practise, practise, practise"
I can see this being wrong if you have to switch naDais within a song. But if an entire song is to be in khaNDa naDai Adi tala, why is it wrong? There is no rule that if you sing one song in catSra naDai Adi with 1 akshara spacing of say 1 second, and then you follow the next song in khanDA naDai Adi, your akshara spacing must be 1.25s apart. You are allowed to set the tempo for a song as you please. So while the technique may seem say rather rudimentary and even contrived to people with advanced laya sense, it is pretty effective IMHO.the concept of putting kanda chapu talam 8 times and calling it as kanda nadai is highly unacceptable, although it is in practise by many vidwans, i dont think it is correct,
Did you mean to say 'mAthrA' spacing? ( I am trying to get squared away on terminology ).arunk wrote:I can see this being wrong if you have to switch naDais within a song. But if an entire song is to be in khaNDa naDai Adi tala, why is it wrong? There is no rule that if you sing one song in catSra naDai Adi with 1 akshara spacing of say 1 second, and then you follow the next song in khanDA naDai Adi, your akshara spacing must be 1.25s apart. You are allowed to set the tempo for a song as you please. So while the technique may seem say rather rudimentary and even contrived to people with advanced laya sense, it is pretty effective IMHO.the concept of putting kanda chapu talam 8 times and calling it as kanda nadai is highly unacceptable, although it is in practise by many vidwans, i dont think it is correct,
Arun
What drove home the point for me is, the "real" nadai change is indeed a change in thalam since nadai/gathi is not just a 'describing' property of a thalam, it is a 'defining' property. There are indeed 35*5=175 thalams in the 'suladi saptha' system. You change the nadai, you change the thalam. The akshara kAlam changes, so it is real.In the second part it seems as though you are switching thalams and not nadais.
Arun, I do not know which 'discussion' you have in mind since there are a few ideas floating around in this thread. In any case, you have pretty much covered all the bases, terminology and characterization differences notwithstanding. Till now, the idea of a real nadai change in a composition was not brought about and the MLV clip shows that. This is the first for me as well.This is not what we have been discussing
Arun, see if you can explain the musical difference given the following view point. kAlam change and this 'illusion' gathi change are all part of the same spectrum whereas what MLV does is not... I agree when you switch from one mathra count to another it "feels" different. It definitely does. May be that is what you mean by musical difference. But that difference is no different from halving or doubling. So, in a pallavi, whether they change kAlam or change to these odd numbered mAthrai count, they are doing the same 'kind' of thing.arunk wrote:>This kind of change is no different from a general speed change like halving or doubling.
Mathematically yes. But musically - not.
> It is just that it is in an odd ratio, that is all
well if you go that way, so would what MLV does (;-). Any speed change can be expressed as a ratio of the original speed.
Arun