
I hope this will be a free-wheeling discussion among experts and lay persons like me on a topic that exercises my mind often. To state it simply, I feel gender propensities have a lot to do with our approach to Carnatic music either as listeners or as musicians. At the same time, Carnatic music allows us to express ourselves musically by going beyond our gender "constraints". Some examples of my thoughts:
1. Whereas men have generally dominated the "management" and "shaping" of Carnatic music (like almost all else in our society), still women have a natural advantage when it comes to melody and emotive impact through Carnatic music. I mean, with proper training, women can do very well in Carnatic music.
2. In instrumental music, men and women performers can overcome their natural "constraints" of expression. I have often noted how women violinists can play a very virile and masculine type of music, and how vainikas like Chitti Babu play an essentially feminine type of music. I hope you can catch my drift here.This morning, over radio, a lady vainika was playing with a decidedly "masculine" manodharma of music. This is what triggered this post! It is important to separate what is the result of "training" and learnt behaviour vs. a natural approach. In any case, in my opinion, instrumentalists can be both Yin and Yang irrespective of their biological gender.
3. The one area which seems to be the preserve of men is percussion and "laya vyavaharam". I think women are unable to do equally well as men here. Similarly, many rakti bhava compositions, bhajans, lullabies etc. are the exclusive preserve of women! And by the way, the latter portion has more takers among audiences.
4. I have noticed over time that men audiences tend to appreciate more readily women stars and vice versa. Call it a natural orientation!
5. What about compositions? Are there decidedly "masculine" ones and "feminine" ones? I feel a lot of Thyagaraja compositions, and all Ashtapadis, and many Swati Tirunal compositions, have a feminine nature.
6. Can fusion music be feminine? Or is it not mostly masculine, being speed- and percussion-dominated?
I do hope we can have a good discussion on this, without casting aspersions on one another or one or the other gender.
Happy Sunday!

