SrinathK wrote: ↑02 Sep 2017, 23:01
To move one step out of the familiar comfort zone requires significant effort.
Good post modern cliche! At least you didn't go the extent of saying - just the way the mylaporians are - it causes oppression!
MaheshS wrote: ↑03 Sep 2017, 00:29
It moved from Rajah's and Jamindars to Chennai, which was the capital of the Madras Presidency due to their downturn + was a metropolis and that's where the new rich came
Now credit goes to the British - they set it all up - rest of the stuff is all incidental. Just like we have so many good IT programmers because the British taught us English and Math! - as Narayana Murthy says! But somehow this extends to Cleveland and beyond. As narrated by many impresarios , the early touring CM musicians, especially instrumentalists like Lalgudi - hoped to see a lot of audience beyond the usual Mylapore crowd! In two trips they figured out that it is the same people
https://youtu.be/8LY9MlGiYBE?t=379
The Mylapore people coming again and again and again to concerts whose language most do not understand!! All incidental - money flowed from patrons and things happened. If the patrons desired they could have made Brinda-Mukta so popular!! So should we blame the patrons? Oh the Ariyakudi bANi became popular! - lets blame the format!
You see in all this , things cultural are set aside. We don't talk about culture like we talk about sanitation or education :
https://youtu.be/lQdkFRUzoTU?t=955 , or economics or people behavior or their motives!
He is part of so many clubs :
https://youtu.be/lQdkFRUzoTU?t=804 - Culture is a club! Somebody like me who has never been part of this club in physical terms ( psychologically may be I am) - I just happened to have lot of cash once I worked abroad! I paid my way through and sat even in a front row - the one below the stage at MFAC - I paid good money - it is the highest priced ticket! About Rs 3000 or so for me and my brother ( 2002/2003 season). See all it takes is money to pierce through the club! This is much before the prices generally went up - blame the likes of me!
But I didn't pay through my nose to look at him wearing Dhoti and Angavastram!
https://youtu.be/lQdkFRUzoTU?t=876 . My brother was already learning key board after years of some Pazhani style Mridangam training ( from a disciple of Madurai T . Srinivasan) and has never been in the habit of concert going even working in Chennai. Me the NRI in the discovery of my culture dragged him along supposedly. We were just sort of interested in hearing Trichy Sankaran that day - but yes we did enjoy that part.
But my brother was also not there because of dhoti , angavastram, antiquity and the Sastras and purANas! His impression as he expressed - "Man TMK sang like a sport star!! - like CM is the in thing these days!!"
I am sure there are so many fans of my generation and later that related to him that way! - way before his transformation. But yet the people he is dissing are all the elders who held on to this art - however corrupt may be the clubs!
In all this however, we sat through so many songs - we would not have understood a word. Were we some elite art lovers? I don't think so!
Only thing culturally I could reconstruct - why we did it, is something I found recently:
https://swarajyamag.com/culture/the-col ... ed-indians
Of the clerks or crannies as they were called, Williamson offered: “They are with very few exceptions, Hindoos, and obtain situations merely from an ability to write a clear hand with tolerable quickness. It may appear strange, but it is perfectly true that many crannies who can read and write English with fluency and correctness, do not understand one word in 10! Others affect great erudition, which they are desirous of displaying on all occasions
I think there is something about the sacredness of things that bestow knowledge eventually. Of course world over in all cultures children have recited rhymes! But for adults to do this as work - there is something more! Is this confined to just Brahmins? Don't think so - this was likely prevalent in all literate castes. But obviously this will not be there in people beyond that!
I think this would later lead us to our political independence - or at least sustain it even imperfectly!
My tamizh teacher used to mock the Sanskrit classes and the rote recitations we do there! Of course she forgot that Avvai said "OdAmal oru nALum irukka vEnDam" - and much of her tamizh treasures came via oral tradition as well for quite long time.
I cannot think of anything more than this, in explaining this cultural trait!