Suggestions for quiz
-
- Posts: 1317
- Joined: 30 Jun 2006, 03:08
See here: http://carnatica.net/special/raganubhav ... am-ppn.htmramakriya wrote:Which source shows it as ragupati?
The ancient name of mOhanam is “rEguptiâ€
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
jayaram,jayaram wrote:I had read somewhere that the number is 35. Wish I could lay my hands on the reference...
You may be referning to the fact that sangItasAra (of vidyaraNya) describes 15 mElas and 35 janya rAgas born from these mELas .. But in the given context of the question, it is not relevant.
-Ramakriya
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
See here: http://carnatica.net/special/raganubhav ... am-ppn.htmjayaram wrote:ramakriya wrote:Which source shows it as ragupati?
The ancient name of mOhanam is “rEguptiâ€
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 00:33, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
I do not dispute that at all. I only pointed out the antiquity of the concept of battIsa rAgas. Since both Basappa Nayaka and Nijaguna Shivayogi are both post Purandara Dasa, it is certain that they are carrying the tradition from vachanakAra's and Haridasa's time.drshrikaanth wrote:Certainly the "battIsa rAgagaLu" concept was not restricted to the haridAsa period or movement. I have not said this either in the question. But haridAsas certainly endorsed it, used it and spread it. Anyway, if I put everything in the question, that would simply be an explanation and give away the answer wouldn't it?ramakriya wrote:Actually the concept of 32 important rAgas goes to a period few centuries earlier than haridAsas.18) During the haridAsa period, among the many rAgas known, a set number of rAgas occupied the pride of place.How many were they?
Answer: 32(battIsa rAgagaLu)
The set of battIsa rAgas was not always constant. The number certainly was. This concept of grouping rakti/popular rAgas was present for a very long time in the music scene of the kannaDa land. It was very much an indigenous concept having no such parallel in the rest of the country. SivatattvaratnAkara, the encyclopaedic work of the keLadi kng basavarAja mentions the concept and lists the rAgas as well. I think, nijaguNa SivayOgi also mentions the concept.
-Ramakriya
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 00:35, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
Yes. It is very interesting that some of the prAkrit(Iam not sure Hindi was around then) numbers have been used to denote groups of set numbers in ancient kannaDa literature/tradition. battIsa rAgas and chappannaivattAru dESagaLu( 56 contries). of course aThArAkachEri is a more moder counterpart(From Hyder-Tipu times I should think)rshankar wrote:DRS,
Interesting that the hindi word for 32 (battIs) is used to mean 32 in this context as well. And for that reason, any number other than 32 will not fit here.
-
- Posts: 1529
- Joined: 09 Feb 2006, 00:04
In tamizh we often use the number 32 to mean "how often"rshankar wrote:DRS,
Interesting that the hindi word for 32 (battIs) is used to mean 32 in this context as well. And for that reason, any number other than 32 will not fit here.
for eg" I told you 32 times"
Do speakers of other languages have this term in their language.
Anyway, why 32 ragas were used by Haridasas?
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
I checked SSP. The wording in SSP was rather crypticrbharath wrote:and about other ragams which have crept into madhyama sruthi, quite surprisingly, SSP says "indha rAgam madhyama rAgam endru mayanga kUDAdu" for kuranji
"Just because this rAga is mentioned first in the list of upAnga rAgas in the gite of venkaTamakhi, it should not be mistaken(bhramiyincu) for a madhyarAga".
Now, what is the connection between being mentioned first and singing in madhyama Sruti. This connection is certainly not borne out for punnAgavarALi or navarOju. Also, judging by the tone of subbarAa dIkShitar, it appears that the practice of singing kuranji in madhyama Sruti had already become quite well-accepted by his time.
I have decided to give the benefit of doubt and give marks to the few who have given kuranji as one of the answers for the said question.

-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
hee are the much-awaited scores. Highest scorer is Ramakriya with 15/20. Congrats.
Other scores in the order of entries received
ammamaha-7, venkatpv-9, ksrimech-9, vijay-4, vasya10- 8, srinidhi-10, rbharath-8, lakshman-8, Rajeshnat-10, Sridevi-8, Suji Ram-14, Mohan-13, Thanjavur-10, Jayaram-12, Ranjani-5.
Good job everyone.
Other scores in the order of entries received
ammamaha-7, venkatpv-9, ksrimech-9, vijay-4, vasya10- 8, srinidhi-10, rbharath-8, lakshman-8, Rajeshnat-10, Sridevi-8, Suji Ram-14, Mohan-13, Thanjavur-10, Jayaram-12, Ranjani-5.
Good job everyone.
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
I have a question about this question 
9) When are 2 swaras called vivAdi swaras?
When there is an interval of just one SRuti between the 2 swaras (EkaSruti)
I am aware of this definition given in caturdanDi prakAshike. But as per the same text, the rishabha in shankarAbharana/Sriraga etc is called panchashruti rishabha, and it is 2 shrutis higher than shuddha rishabha. This note is same as shuddha gAndhAra as well. Now, since shuddha rishabha is said to be 3 shrutis from shaDja, does it not make a 2 shruti interval between the two vivAdi notes? How do we resolve this?
If we consider the popular notion that the rishabha in Sriraga/ shankarAbharaNa is chatusshruti, then there is no issue.
-Ramakriya

9) When are 2 swaras called vivAdi swaras?
When there is an interval of just one SRuti between the 2 swaras (EkaSruti)
I am aware of this definition given in caturdanDi prakAshike. But as per the same text, the rishabha in shankarAbharana/Sriraga etc is called panchashruti rishabha, and it is 2 shrutis higher than shuddha rishabha. This note is same as shuddha gAndhAra as well. Now, since shuddha rishabha is said to be 3 shrutis from shaDja, does it not make a 2 shruti interval between the two vivAdi notes? How do we resolve this?
If we consider the popular notion that the rishabha in Sriraga/ shankarAbharaNa is chatusshruti, then there is no issue.
-Ramakriya
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 03:22, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
This is not correct. Absence of vivAdi swaras does not automatically make a rAga rakti rAga. neither does the presence of a vivAdi note disqualify a rAga rom being a rakti rAga. rakti rAgas are thos rAga that quickly evoke rakti/pleasure on listening. They re also called naya rAgas.Lakshman wrote:I read somewhere that there are 40 vivadi mELAs and thus 72 minus 40 will give you the 32 rakti rAgAs.
V.S. Sampatkumaracharya and V.Ramaratnam opine that nayarAgas are those which shine well in viLamba tempo.
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
Now this is one question for which I did not know the answer, and without caturdandi in hand, would not have been able to answer correctly! While descrbing different types of prabandhas, it defines svarAnka prabhandha, and indicates it has to be sung in mAlavaSrI rAga.Suji Ram wrote:Can anyone throw some light on mAlavaSri rAga used in singing prabhandas
Here is a rendition of a Tyagaraja kriti in mAlavaSrI
http://www.musicindiaonline.com/music/c ... ragam.136/
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 03:41, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 1317
- Joined: 30 Jun 2006, 03:08
Lakshman, thanks for that.Lakshman wrote:I read somewhere that there are 40 vivadi mELAs and thus 72 minus 40 will give you the 32 rakti rAgAs.
However, the 32 ragas for the Haridasa list are not all mela ragas. I believe some of them belong to the same mela (e.g. Todi/Ahiri, Saranga/Kalyani). So not sure if this arithmetic can account for the 32.
-
- Posts: 1529
- Joined: 09 Feb 2006, 00:04
DRS,
what is your source of Gundakriya melting stone when Hanuman sang?
One search did gave me this reference in The Hindu.
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:LQe ... =clnk&cd=3
what is your source of Gundakriya melting stone when Hanuman sang?
One search did gave me this reference in The Hindu.
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:LQe ... =clnk&cd=3
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
As I indicated in some earlier posts, the 32 rAga concept predates the 72 mEla concept by several centuries; So this has to be ruled out.jayaram wrote:Lakshman, thanks for that.Lakshman wrote:I read somewhere that there are 40 vivadi mELAs and thus 72 minus 40 will give you the 32 rakti rAgAs.
However, the 32 ragas for the Haridasa list are not all mela ragas. I believe some of them belong to the same mela (e.g. Todi/Ahiri, Saranga/Kalyani). So not sure if this arithmetic can account for the 32.
-Ramakriya
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 03:54, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
One list of battIsa rAgagaLu I have
8 puruSha rAgas- bhairavi, bhUpALa, SrIrAga, rAgapanjara, vasanta, mALava, bangALa, naTTa
24 strI rAgas (3 for each puruSha rAga)-
dEvakriya, mEgharanji, kuranji (For bhairavi)
vELAvaLi, malahari, bhauli (For bhUpALa)
AndhALi, bhallAti, mAhuri (For SrIrAga)
dESi, alita, tODi For rAgapanjara)
rAmakriya, varALi, kauSi (For vasanta)
guNDakriya, ghUrjari, gauLi (for mALava)
karNATa, kAmbOdhi, dhanyAsi (For bangALa)
dESAkShi, Ahiri, nARAyaNi (For naTTa)
(Im not sure where I got this is from. Very likely one of the two sources I mentioned earlier)
8 puruSha rAgas- bhairavi, bhUpALa, SrIrAga, rAgapanjara, vasanta, mALava, bangALa, naTTa
24 strI rAgas (3 for each puruSha rAga)-
dEvakriya, mEgharanji, kuranji (For bhairavi)
vELAvaLi, malahari, bhauli (For bhUpALa)
AndhALi, bhallAti, mAhuri (For SrIrAga)
dESi, alita, tODi For rAgapanjara)
rAmakriya, varALi, kauSi (For vasanta)
guNDakriya, ghUrjari, gauLi (for mALava)
karNATa, kAmbOdhi, dhanyAsi (For bangALa)
dESAkShi, Ahiri, nARAyaNi (For naTTa)
(Im not sure where I got this is from. Very likely one of the two sources I mentioned earlier)
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
My memorySuji Ram wrote:DRS,
what is your source of Gundakriya melting stone when Hanuman sang?
One search did gave me this reference in The Hindu.
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:LQe ... =clnk&cd=3

The only reference you get on googling for guNDakriya, hanumanta is my post in this forum. I have already given a link for the same.
If you use guntakriya, hanuman for Google search, you come up with this
http://www.hindu.com/ms/2005/12/16/stor ... 190600.htm
That apart, the anecdote is also quoted by V.S.Sampatkumaracharya and V.Ramaratnam in their book "karNATaka sangIta dIpike"
Iam almost sure it also figures in the "karNATaka sangItada pAribhAShika SabdakOSa"- the encyclopaedia of CM from Mysore Uni.
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
I too wrote it from my memory; Probably read it in the book second book you have cited.drshrikaanth wrote:My memory
That apart, the anecdote is also quoted by V.S.Sampatkumaracharya and V.Ramaratnam in their book "karNATaka sangIta dIpike"
iam almost sure it also figurse in the "karNATaka sangItada pAribhAShika SabdakOSa2- the mencyclopaedi of CM from Mysore Uni.
-Ramakriya
Last edited by ramakriya on 25 Jan 2007, 04:20, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 3424
- Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41
Per old texts (all the way to bharata period), swaras separated by two (not one) sruthis had a vivAdi relationship. So even in those old days, the gandara and nishada were tagged vivadi in some contexts (as gandara was 2 sruthis from rishaba, and nishada from dhaivata), and hence were not be used as amsa etc. This doesnt of course mean they were considered vivadi swaras in the same token as vivadi swaras of today - but it did seem to imply that their usage was less prominent in comparison with others.ramakriya wrote:I have a question about this question
9) When are 2 swaras called vivAdi swaras?
When there is an interval of just one SRuti between the 2 swaras (EkaSruti)
I am aware of this definition given in caturdanDi prakAshike. But as per the same text, the rishabha in shankarAbharana/Sriraga etc is called panchashruti rishabha, and it is 2 shrutis higher than shuddha rishabha. This note is same as shuddha gAndhAra as well. Now, since shuddha rishabha is said to be 3 shrutis from shaDja, does it not make a 2 shruti interval between the two vivAdi notes? How do we resolve this?
If we consider the popular notion that the rishabha in Sriraga/ shankarAbharaNa is chatusshruti, then there is no issue.
-Ramakriya
Note that in those days there was no occurence of two swaras separated by 1 sruthi together in use. The eka-sruthi interval was there only between the 2 panchamas of 2 gramas and hence would never be employed together. The only possibilities of 2-sruthis interval was R-G and D-N. You did have antara gandara, kakali etc. which added more possibilities for 2-sruthi interval, but again in those days these did not have swara status and were merely considered variations of the (then suddha) gandhara and nishada. Later on (SarngadEva) you had other variants (cyuta-sadja etc.), which also introduced possibility of 1-sruthi intervals but again those wont be in use together. I think cyuta-sadja was a variant of sadja and so wont appear along with it.
This is all from memory and so i could be remembering things wrong.
Or is it that swaras that are one semi-tone apart are vivadi? Is that how it is in HM where they still talk about samvAdi, anuvAdi etc. This would then include S-R1, R1-G1, R2-G2, R3-G3, G3-M1, M2-P, P-D1, D1-N1, D2-N2, D3-N3, and N3-S as having a vivAdi relationship. Not sure if this makes sense.
Drs - can you pl. provide a reference about ekaSruthi and vivadi please?
Arun
-
- Posts: 3424
- Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41
I notice kalyANi is missing in this but ramakriya's included it. That is interesting. Wasnt that a "later" raga?drshrikaanth wrote:One list of battIsa rAgagaLu I have
8 puruSha rAgas- bhairavi, bhUpALa, SrIrAga, rAgapanjara, vasanta, mALava, bangALa, naTTa
24 strI rAgas (3 for each puruSha rAga)-
dEvakriya, mEgharanji, kuranji (For bhairavi)
vELAvaLi, malahari, bhauli (For bhUpALa)
AndhALi, bhallAti, mAhuri (For SrIrAga)
dESi, alita, tODi For rAgapanjara)
rAmakriya, varALi, kauSi (For vasanta)
guNDakriya, ghUrjari, gauLi (for mALava)
karNATa, kAmbOdhi, dhanyAsi (For bangALa)
dESAkShi, Ahiri, nARAyaNi (For naTTa)
(Im not sure where I got this is from. Very likely one of the two sources I mentioned earlier)
Arun
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
||
Even though kalyANi was a "later" rAga, it must have been in use for at least a century before puranadara dAsa.
Three charaNas of a dEvaranAma of SrIpAdarAya (lAli gOvinda lAli) have this in 3 of the charaNas.
.....
Ananda bharitarAgi tUgidaru Ananda bhairaviyinda||
.....
sallalilta gAnadinda tUgidaru kalyANi rAgadinda ||
.....
dEvagandharvaru pADi tUgudaru dEvagaNdhAradinda ||
....
Thus we see Kalyani being mentioned with Ananda bhairavi and dEvagandhAra around 1450 AD; about 2 generations before Purandara Dasa, and about 200 years before Venkatamakhi dropped it off saying it is a rAga liked by turushkas!
SripAdarAyaru lived between 140 4AD - 1502 AD
-Ramakriya
Arun,arunk wrote:I notice kalyANi is missing in this but ramakriya's included it. That is interesting. Wasnt that a "later" raga?
Arun
Even though kalyANi was a "later" rAga, it must have been in use for at least a century before puranadara dAsa.
Three charaNas of a dEvaranAma of SrIpAdarAya (lAli gOvinda lAli) have this in 3 of the charaNas.
.....
Ananda bharitarAgi tUgidaru Ananda bhairaviyinda||
.....
sallalilta gAnadinda tUgidaru kalyANi rAgadinda ||
.....
dEvagandharvaru pADi tUgudaru dEvagaNdhAradinda ||
....
Thus we see Kalyani being mentioned with Ananda bhairavi and dEvagandhAra around 1450 AD; about 2 generations before Purandara Dasa, and about 200 years before Venkatamakhi dropped it off saying it is a rAga liked by turushkas!
SripAdarAyaru lived between 140 4AD - 1502 AD
-Ramakriya
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
alpatva simply means "Sparing use" and is further subdivided into langhana and anabhyAsa. Using only once will fall into the category of alpatva/anabhyAsa but the term alpatva is not specific enough as it could be used to term using once, or twice or thrice for example. SO that answer is not specific enough for the question.rajeshnat wrote:Is this using only once called alpatva or alpa.
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
I doubt very much if rEgupti was ever the name of the tamizh paNN. Simple linguistic rules rule this name out. Te name starts with "r" and no taizh word can ever start with that letter. And if you are talking of paNN names a millenium or two ago, that simply will not do at all.mohan wrote:From Google
Raga Mohana
Other Names: Mohanam; Bhoop (Hindustani); Regupti ( Tamil Pan).
Arohana: S R2 G2 P D2 S || S Ri Gu Pa Dhi S Avarohana: S D2 P G2 R1 S || S Dhi Pa Gu Ra S ...
http://www.rit.edu/~pnveme/raga/Raga_Mohana.html - 6k - Cached - Similar pages
Mohana Raga - Sify.com
Mohanam is one of the oldest ragas and had been used in rendering Tiruvachakam hymns
in raga Regupti which is similar to Mohanam in Tamil music. ...
http://sify.com/carnaticmusic/fullstory.php?id=13498530 - 31k - Cached - Similar pages
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
Here we goarunk wrote:Drs - can you pl. provide a reference about ekaSruthi and vivadi please?-Arun
Evam samvAdilakShmOktam vivAdI lakShyatE-dhunA |
EkaSrutyantaritA yayOstu svarayOrdvayayOH ||148||
tayOrmithO vivAditvamEvam sarvatra kalpayEt |
rigau dhanI ca SuddhEShu swarau syAtAm vivAdinau ||149||
(caturdaNDIprkASikA, swaraprakaraNam)
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
-
- Posts: 10123
- Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 08:04
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
Even though SSP mentions that "It is the opinion of pUrvAcharyas that the prayOgam 'p d n p' alone can appear only once and not many times in the gIta prabandha kIrtanams and rAga AlApana" (page 451, SSP), I think it is not followed 100% in practice; In that context alpatva may be a better description IMO.drshrikaanth wrote:alpatva simply means "Sparing use" and is further subdivided into langhana and anabhyAsa. Using only once will fall into the category of alpatva/anabhyAsa but the term alpatva is not specific enough as it could be used to term using once, or twice or thrice for example. SO that answer is not specific enough for the question.rajeshnat wrote:Is this using only once called alpatva or alpa.
Even in SSP there is a kriti of Ettendra Maharaja - shaDAdhAra tattva vinAyaka, notated in page 462-463, in which we can see the prayOga 'p d n p' occuring thrice; once in the pallavi, once in charaNa and once again in the chiTTe swara.
T.V.Subbarao, and S.R.Janakiraman, in the commentory on Tulaja's sangIta sArAmrta, say that "The modern practice, however is to use the dhaivata not in the initial phrases but only in one or two of the final sanchAras"
-Ramakriya
Last edited by ramakriya on 26 Jan 2007, 00:14, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 4066
- Joined: 26 Mar 2005, 17:01
A mistake cannot make the fact redundant. If people wrongly sing dhaivata more than once for whatever reasons, it is their fault. Not that SrIrAga has to be changed. Tomorrow, someone else will come along and say "as dhaivata is already being used more than once by some musicians, we might as well use it very frequently." That will not be SrIrAga anymore.ramakriya wrote:Even though SSP mentions that "It is the opinion of pUrvAcharyas that the prayOgam 'p d n p' alone can appear only once and not many times in the gIta prabandha kIrtanams and rAga AlApana" (page 451, SSP), I think it is not followed 100% in practice; In that context alpatva may be a better description IMO.
-
- Posts: 1877
- Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 02:05
DRS,
The point I am trying to make is that there are compositions which violate this 'one time use' rule which Subburama Dikshitar cites. As I remember, even the Adi tALa varna in Sriraga (sAmi ninnE) as I was taught ( not that I can sing it
now!), had two instances of 's n,, p d n p m' - once in the sAhitya and one in the last ettugaDe swara.
-Ramakriya
All,
For the record, let me also state that I gave the answer expected by the quizmaster
in the answersheet, and have scored a point for that question 
The point I am trying to make is that there are compositions which violate this 'one time use' rule which Subburama Dikshitar cites. As I remember, even the Adi tALa varna in Sriraga (sAmi ninnE) as I was taught ( not that I can sing it

-Ramakriya
All,
For the record, let me also state that I gave the answer expected by the quizmaster


Last edited by ramakriya on 26 Jan 2007, 03:00, edited 1 time in total.