
I am starting this new thread because Rajesh hinted that 'Bhava" is an elusive subject and one can't measure it or even define it easily.
Preamble:
For those totally ignorant of Indian languages, bhava we are discussing here is bhaava (rhymes with lava). Long a first. Not bhava (rhymes with rava) with short a- that word stands for ëxisting or this worldly existence, without the aesthetic connotations. bhAva or bhaava ( henceforth I will write bhava for lazy convenience) is to be pronounced with a long a.
My message:
I will try to define bhava as I feel it. I am emboldened by the innumerable viewings of the advertisement for the new movie Piku, where Big B stands for all that is "motion and emotion."
This universe is called jagat...In Sanskrit it means "what moves". There is no life without motion. Music is first and foremost motion. But the ineluctable and ineffable element in any great music is emotion.
Bhava is emotion in its most basic definition. Along with raga and tala, it defines music.
When someone renders swaras or chitteswaras, there is melody and rhythm or raga and tala. But when someone does niraval, there is bhava also.
Similarly every lyric worth its name ( I am excluding Ek Do Teen and such stuff) has a context and meaning called bhava.
There is madhura bhava (male-female love) in Astapadis. There is vatsalya bhava (motherly love) in songs sung as lullabies.
What's more: when a raga is presented with its total personality, it acquires raga bhava. Not just melody, but beyond melody. Some ragas are full of bhava potential, eg. Bhairavi, Shahana, Kalyani, Varali.
You can see that rasa and bhava are very related words.
A great musician can build up bhava from the first song through a concert and "hold" the mood. In fact any bhava has a staying power. They even define something called "Sthaayi" bhava meaning emotion that is not fleeting. Let the mood have a hold on the audience for some time...
In such a great concert, even swara singing will become bhava-laden, as it rides on the bhava created thus far!
Bhava is a collective consciousness of the CM aesthetic. It has an element of suggestion, memory, and recall. A great musician can create the bhava throughout the audience. The music and lyric both help him or her enormously.
Rakti ragas give more scope for bhava than the scalar "tonal" ragas which have melody but little scope for bhava. A raga with huge bhava potential is a raga like Kapi or Sindhubhairavi. I will not start defining connection between gamakas and bhava etc.
When we hear someone's music is impactful, we can guess it has melody, rhythm and also bhava in good measure. Without bhava, music will be easily passed over.
When you simply play the scale of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, without thinking of the words, you have melody and rhythm. But the moment you sing it with words, you start creating a collective imagery of a child looking up and wondering at the star-lit sky. That is bhava.
Sahitya has been mentioned by me separately from bhava elsewhere because of a reason. Whereas bhava is a more immersive feeling, sahitya has many dimensions of story, poetry, cleverness of construction, abstract ideas etc. When I hear "Sarvam Brahma-mayam" i enjoy the bhava as well as the sahitya.
Hope I am making sense here. What do you say?
I gotta go, Ciao!