Increasing swara knowledge for rasikas and dabblers

To teach and learn Indian classical music
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vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

The thread on 'how to shape a violinist' ( http://www.rasikas.org/forums/viewtopic.php?pid=58169 ) led me to think further about a personal project of mine to do something to increase my own swara knowledge.

Though I am not a violinist, some of suggestions bilahari made in the above referred thread are useful for my ever ongoing personal desire to increase my swara gyanam. To be more correct, ability to 'get' the proyogas in chunks including the 'neLivu suLivu asaivu' of the raga in addition to the getting the long kArvai swaras that bilahari mentions.

One idea I have along these lines which I have not put to practise yet is: For a particular raga, there seems to be a characteristic 'color' depending on the four quadrants where the music happens to be. The four quadrants being: low octave uttarAngA, middle octave pUrvangA, middle octave uttarAnga and high octave pUrvanga. By latching on to this 'sound color', we can slot it to a particular quadrant. For example, taking the extreme case, it is easy for most people to say if the song is in the first quadrant or fourth quadrant.

By active listening, if I get the four demarcation swaras: 'lower pa', 'middle sa', 'middle pa' and 'high sa', then the four quadrants can be identified even more methodically rather than using the 'sound color' approach.

Once the quadrant is identified, to get to the actual swaras of the melody, the problem is reduced in complexity to identifying 2 or 3 swaras. For example, for the first and third quadrant, I need to learn to hear 'ni' and 'dha' by ear ( by no means a trivial task for a rapid succession of swaras but one can get started with held notes ).

Of course there is a whole lot of beauty when the prayogas cross these artificial quadrants but that can come later. But I am thinking along these lines to just simplify the approach using the familiar divide and conquer.

msakellaji, do you see any merit for the approach I am thinking of? This is not just for violin but for other instruments as well and also I am mainly thinking of this methodology for amateur dabblers like me and for other interested rasikas. I have not started 'doing' it yet, it is all theory so far. May be you have already experimented with such things in your teaching methods and have some great ideas to help us listen more actively. 'AMS easy methods for rasikas and dabblers'? :)

vijay
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Post by vijay »

Interesting VK, I am in the same boat as you are. Dividing the octaves into quadrants is something that did not strike me at first. What helps me a little is looking out for characteristic phrases and rest notes....identification of the rest notes is in a sense a dissection into quandrants (I would add Antara Gandharam where applicable - I often find it the most easily identifiable note).

A good place to begin is also to identify the constituent swaras in a raga, especially rarer ones whose construction one may not be aware of...in fact listening to Hindustani Music and drawing parallels with CM ragas has helped me a lot!

The most tricky part is measuring the intervals, especially irrengular ones....varja janyas of ragas which have closely spaced intervals like D2N2 or R2G2 pose a lot of problems especially when only the krithi is sung...

Active listening and preferably learning/singing is ultimately the only way to sruthi sense. Learning an instrument in particular, is a failsafe way to hone one's listening - unfortunately by the time the instrument is mastered to a reasonable extent, one is already out of patience so it is perhaps not a very rasika friendly way!

For others, listening to alaapanas closely and trying, no matter how unsuccessfully, to follow it note by note is useful. Also one should try to get a sense of the pure notes by playing a harmonium. You will surprised how different Thodi sounds as compared to what is actually sung in CM! Singing the 12 swaras with a sruthi box also helps fine tune one's musical sense.

As I've also said earlier trying to decode film songs is another great way to develop sruthi. This can also be done with the help of a harmonium, keyboard or any other instrument one is familiar with. I know people who've never heard CM develop a remarkable sruthi sense just by trying to reproduce film songs on a keyboard!

I am sure most of the above methods would sound crude (I am already dreading Sharmaji's reprimand!) but I feel that the rasika who does not have the benefit of formal training can still endeavour to acquire a better grasp of sruthi...however, all said and done, there is no substitute for formal training.

ninjathegreat
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Post by ninjathegreat »

What say we take up specific aalapanais or swarams to help us here? like uploading pieces of a song (just aalapanai, just swaram?) Transcribing the music into swarams can help...

Cheers
N.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

Nice topic Vk,
I am also interested in able to identify swaras in especially alapanas. Though I can do it to some extent for the ragas I know, it gets complicated as the alapana progresses.
I hope I will be able to play alapana for 15-30 secs at least some day.

Here a link to a lesson in MMG raga building. Sounds easy but....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xTdK7bjWGA

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

Thanks Vijay for your ideas. I will try first the characteristic phrases and rest notes approach.

Thanks Suji for that youtube link. Someone once said while cooking 'Wow, half an hour back these were just ingredients now it is such tasty food'. That is what I was reminded of when his simple swaras became the wonderful mayamalavagowla. It does not take too many swaras to bring out the raga. It is all the gamaka spices that color the swaras to make the raga. We all know that but it is still a startling revelation when you try to map what he does to swaras.

I tried my quadrant approach with that youtube segment and it was a humbling experience. So atleast for me, I need to start even more at a fundamental level to train my ears. In terms of swara chunks, one example I am thinking of is: after having listened so many times to the forceful MMI's ga ma pa. ma ga.. ri ga sa. ri ga.. any where that chunk or sequence is played in an instrument, I know the swaras for those. Same thing with the sequence 'ga ma pa ga ri sa'. May be I need to start with such attractive chunks in each quadrant and then get down to the swara level.

I have a good feeling that msakellaji has some great ideas here and can help us along the same lines as in the above youtube video.

arunk
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Post by arunk »

vk,

I have gotten a tad better but I think it is a combination of
a. learning (vocal)
b. the fact that my teacher is a vainika and so she breaks down the swaras always. This has helped me became more familiar with them particular in combination. Also with my poor memory and bad habit for "approximating" I need the swara breakdown to know what the "right way" is - i.e. when I practice and I don't have access to the recorded class.

I think the first signs of progress was when I could identify dhIrga/long swaras or swaras the musician hovered on (just like what bilahari said) - whether that is during the song or during the alapana. Here I usually rely (or confirm) on the swarasthanas I became familiarized when I was learning. I think you have to know them very well to do this well (which is where learning helps).

I also find that kalpana swaras in slow speed (i.e not mEl kAlam) are very useful to get to know the nature of swaras and their associated movements in a raga. You then are able to see the swara breakdown for "familiar patterns" of the raga. You then apply that to the song to see where they figure . You can get fair success with this.

But breaking down subtle swara combinations (i.e. the nELivu suLivugaL) as in alapanas and krithis is mighty tough I am also finding out that since swaras are not flat notes since they frequently have an associated pitch movement with them, in some cases one could label the "pitch movement" differently and still be valid. A crude example: you could say it is a N3 which has "sa" as anuswara or in some cases you say it is really "s n". I think it doesnt matter as long you associate the right pitch movement (and that swara does have that pitch movement for that raga). IMHO, for too many subtle combinations, labelling a swara for every turn makes it harder to then picture/regroup them easily. Fewer swaras but more gamakas/pitch-movements associated with them seems better. But I confess that this is just my wild guess.

I think based on your level of interest for these things, the best and perhaps easiest way would be to start learning :). It is never too late. I started only a few years back well into my thirties and it was one of the best decisions of my life. I think you will find it constantly satisfying, intriguing and challenging. A little patience at the start may be needed i.e. during varisais and alankarams, and even geethams.

Arun

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

In my case I have gotten better at vocal after learning a piece in violin.
Since picking up the violin I have become very conscious of how I am singing, ie., if I am hitting the correct swarastana.
It used to be the opposite when I first started learning years ago. I guess I was a good parrot then..... :)

We can compile all the comment in this thread to CM for dummies I guess :)

arasi
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Post by arasi »

When a complicated sangati appeals to you a lot, trying to learn it by writing it down in swarAs may not work. Internalizing it over a period of time might. 'Listen, listen, listen' to good music is the answer. When it comes to kritis, old school pieces of solid singing are what one should include in the 'learning by listening' lessons. I once learnt an MD kriti from a teacher (the school goes unmentioned) just because he happened to be there and some elder suggested that. While I still remember some 'heavies' of what B. Rajam Iyer taught the older kids in the family when I happened to be in the fringe--the littlest, this experience is a reminder to me that it is not a good idea to learn from someone I consider a practitioner of 'flimsy' music and to this day, I am reluctant to sing that song.
This applies to learning by listening too (kELvi gnAnam).
I would think Akkarai sisters had well-chosen recordings to listen to and practise with, thanks to their father...
Last edited by arasi on 12 Sep 2007, 03:43, edited 1 time in total.

shadjam
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Post by shadjam »

vk,

I second Ninja's idea of uploading bits of music (say 20-25 secs each) and let the rasikas identify the corresponding swarams. This can be made as a quiz. We could take 20-25 such bits for each major raga and could upload these on a daily basis. What do you guys say?

bilahari
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Post by bilahari »

VK,

As a rasika, I, too have been on the steep uphill climb to attain swara gnyanam! And it so happens that the quadrant splitting you describe is the method I've been using lately to try to identify phrases in alapanais. You hit the nail on the head when you say that narrowing a note down to the quadrant also narrows the region in which the swara phrases to follow can be found. This makes the job much easier. And VK, the swara group "GMP,MG...RG-S,RG...SR-S,RG" is one of the, perhaps, two phrases I can identify as well. But it's quite useful since these phrases are used in nearly any elaboration of Sh'bharanam and Kamboji!

Vijay, one of the main problems I encounter is definitely distinction between close swaras like D2N2 and R2G2, N3S, etc. However, when I play these phrases on my violin, I can make an immediate distinction. The more I learn, probably, I'll be better acquainted with the nuances of swaras. You and Arunk are right when you say that learning an instrument or vocal is the best means of acquiring swaragnyanam, layagnyanam, etc... You're not left floundering in an infinitely expansive body of water, looking for the shores! There is definite direction. I took up violin just as a means to learn all these things, but playing it well, somewhere along the way, became a priority, and now I'm hooked to it.

Arunk, I've often wondered about this complicating factor to swara identification: gamakam. It does seem to me that there may not be a singular right answer when reproducing phrases, since if gamaka is applied, the same sound can be produced via more than one route. An understanding of the raga being elaborated is probably pivotal for a violinist or an informed rasika to be able to decode phrases. We need an understanding of which notes are characteristically ornamented and flat in the raga, etc.

And one of the things that's really important, I've found, in following swaras, is the shruti the singer sings in. It is pivotal to know exactly where his "sa" is, before we can go any further! I've been tripped up by this sometimes.

At the end of the day, though, I really think Arasi is correct when she speaks of internalisation of the music. My violin teacher, when he's teaching me any composition, needs to think quite hard when translating it to swaras. Yet, when he accompanies, he can reproduce phrases exactly as the vocalist has sung, in lightning speed. The more you learn carnatic music, the deeper you explore the waters, things like swaras kind of lie shallow on the surface, and you really start identifying the "flow" of the ongoing music, the music as a whole rather than its various components, and I think this level of identification is where professional artistes must be. It is really what separates "boys from men," the "music-maker" from the "swara-maker," so to speak.
Last edited by bilahari on 12 Sep 2007, 07:06, edited 1 time in total.

arasi
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Post by arasi »

Bilahari,
As I am typing, by coincidence, NSG started singing bilahari!
I am listening to Introducing Ragas Through Pallavis by Neyveli Santhanagopalan. Seventy five short sketches--from the Sangeethapriya site. My spouse gave the recording to me a short while ago--may be after reading this thread! It is like taking short walks into the rAgA world--we are the true vidyaarthis, anyway...
Last edited by arasi on 12 Sep 2007, 08:47, edited 1 time in total.

ignoramus
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Post by ignoramus »

arasi, do u have the URL for the NSG sketches of pallavis you have mentioned above?

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

arunk wrote
I also find that kalpana swaras in slow speed (i.e not mEl kAlam) are very useful to get to know the nature of swaras and their associated movements in a raga. You then are able to see the swara breakdown for "familiar patterns" of the raga. You then apply that to the song to see where they figure . You can get fair success with this.
Excellent suggestion Arun. I will give this a shot. After I read this suggestion, I listened to a Dhanyasi krithi and you may have something here!!

With respect to learning to get this gyanam, I learnt flute for 2+ years 25 years back. It was all swara based. Now I want to transcend the swaras. But I lack the skill/gyanam to reproduce a song without thinking of the notes. So, my end goal is really not to transcribe the melody to notes but to have the ability to connect with the melody directly so I can play it on the flute just by listening. Even if it is not very good, it is still a great feeling when I have accidentally managed to reproduce a line or two of a famous krithi that I never learnt.

So here is the dilemma or conundrum. For the song I know by swaras, I want to transcend the swaras and think the 'sahitya' and play. It is much more fun but I can not do it. It is quite amazing to me that others who know the words to the krithi, hear the words from the sounds I make but I can't hear them since I am so focussed on the swaras in my mind. One amusing little story is: Long time back, while relaxing after lunch at a wedding, one distant relative aunt asked me to play bhagyadha lakshmi baramma. Not that I know to play it well but I know the swaras by heart, so I played. The charanams are all the same swaras, so for me it is all the same. I stopped after 3 repetitions of the charanam. She said, why did you stop, next one is 'sankhye illAda bhAgyava koTTu' and sang a little bit to prod me along. I always played it only three times as taught and now this aunt is throwing a new challenge at me now. It is head-scratching time but quickly recovering, I went 'Ah, right right..' and I played the charanam in swara form again. She was quite happy 'see you know it' and gave me the words for the next charanam 'sakkare tuppada kAluve harisi' which I dutifully obliged again. Of course, I could have played 15 charanams :lol:

Getting back to the conundrum, on the other hand, I am quite lost with a song for which I do not know the swaras at all. I do not necessarily want to get into the same mode of transcribing them to swaras but without swaras I am lost.

May be both of these are two sides of the same gyanam which is what I want to acquire methodically over time.

Just to be sure, my interest is not formal learning for a public performance or giving concerts etc. The word 'Dabbling' may trivialize this but essentially that is what it is. But there is quite a bit of personal enjoyment, satisfaction, joy and fun to do this, so it is not for trivial purposes.

I am afraid it will be hard to find a teacher who will work with me on this basis, that is why I want to do this myself methodically, slowly, deliberately over time. As Suji said, vocally reproducing a simple alapana line is something I can do (to a limited degree of course) but I am not sure if that will help with my objective with the flute. I also know at some level that what Arasi wrote is what matters eventually ( internalization) and I am trying to follow a baby step methodology to train myself.

bilahari
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Post by bilahari »

I do notice that quite a few patterns used in an alapanai are composed in metered form in the kalpanaswaras! That would indeed be a good way to acquaint oneself with swara patterns...

Arasi, I'm surprised Bilahari isn't taken up for RTP that often. To me, it is a raga that can be well demonstrated by thanam. The only pallavi I've heard is a concise one by TMK.

arasi
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Post by arasi »

VK,
I have been a veteran 'dabbler' all my life. By the way, it is not a trivial thing. It is a true rasikA trait!
Yes, Arun has a point there. Even if it is a fast sangati and you can get the drift of it, sing it/play it in slow motion to know its content. That way, it would stick.
By sticking it would become part of you in due course. But the best part of it is, it keeps you happy.

shadjam
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Post by shadjam »

Bilahari,

There is also a sweet Bilahari RTP sung by Shri.T.R.Subramaniam in kanda tiriputa talam. I heard him sing in an AIR program.

Discussed here: http://rasikas.org/forums/viewtopic.php?pid=44045
Last edited by shadjam on 12 Sep 2007, 10:06, edited 1 time in total.

bilahari
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Post by bilahari »

Thank you, Shadjam.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

VK,
Im sure with practice your fingers will automatically take you to sahitya playing. You will have to give up swara playing though. I can never play a kriti with swara in mind. May be a sangati or two-the swaras of which actually get fixed in my mind forever and I cannot switch them back to sahitya. I think I mentioned this in an earlier thread.
In my experience I feel the fingers do carry some kind of sound memory (i'm not sure how to explain). Something translates from mind to fingers. They just move to the next word in the sahitya automatically. I was recently trying to play akhilAnDESwari in Dwijawanti and I almost got it-I did not know the scale of this raga to begin with and I'm pleased with myself with the progress. Like you, I learn for personal satisfaction and the joy Yes ! when you get the few lines figured out is immense.

And your method of quadrant analysis is good. But there could be some confusion in pUrvAnga or uttaranga of 2 ragas which share either of these.

ninjathegreat
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Post by ninjathegreat »

ah! bilahari - MDR's dorakuna, accompanied by MSG, has a short, mesmerizing alapanai.... there is also one by Nedunuri, in which I think Lalgudi's section of the aalaapanai is amazing... brings tears to your eyes... (It's a long, more than an hour rendition...) [iff the moderators agree, I can post JUST the alapanai]
Last edited by ninjathegreat on 12 Sep 2007, 11:41, edited 1 time in total.

bilahari
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Post by bilahari »

Ninja, I'd LOVE that alaapanai (but sendspace and rapidshare don't agree with my connection)... if you could upload it. MDR's Bilahari is one of my favourites. From how frequently he sang it, I guess he must've like it too.

vijay
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Post by vijay »

Suji Ram very interesting!

arunk
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Post by arunk »

vk,

:) about that bhAgyada lakshmi anecdote.

I do share some of your conundrum. For songs I know the swaras, I am able to transcend to words - albeit not all the time, and I am sure my teacher would say not cleanly ;).

I use the swaras only as a reference and NOT while singing (this also gets near impossible in krithis atleast for me). The moment I start thinking "remember that next word/syllable you are going to sing is dppmgrs-" - its over :). It will come out wrong - flat, probably apaswara.

When I refer to swaras, it is when I am taking my own sweet time in practice. I take a step back from the whole line and look at the sangati/phrase just in isolation. I sing the swaras (or listen to the class recording) - and then words - enough times so that the sahitya with the music gets registered in my mind (but at my age, it doesnt stick well for long - but that is a different problem ;)). I also have a good reference point of how to transcend in such cases because my teacher showed it in class. But as I mention my problem is that I get confused between sangatis, create hybrids of 1st and 2nd unconsciously, "approximate" pmgrsn` to pmgrs- (e.g.). In other words over time (say a week of practice), I may have drifted a sangati away from what my teacher taught. It will still be in the raga, and so I would not realize it wrong - until I sing it in front of my teacher. So during my practice time, i sometimes double-check against the swara-breakdown and class recording to make sure I am still good.

The trouble then is when I look at books for ragas I am reasonably familiar with. I cannot transcend the swaras to the krithis that much. Even the other day, I was looking at a dIkhitar krithi in kIrthanamAlai book - i could not make head of tail. There were "too many swaras" per word and I could not tell how to translate them to Akaram or words of the song (but if I show it to my teacher - she can do it just like that).

Arun

arunk
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Post by arunk »

BTW, I also think a very good start could be to listen to varnams sung in slow speed (e.g. Bombay Sisters' album) and compare it against a book. Although there would be variations, there should be a reasonable match and you may even get some of the variations. Once you get a good handle - then tackle a krithi in the same raga and see how well you do with swaras.

But I also want to point out, that it is quite clear from a lot of evidence that you really need not know the swara breakdown for effective CM
1. You dont need it to identify and appreciate ragas. We all did that. We can tell between nAyaki/durbAr and mAnji/bhairavi without spelling them out.
2. Sing/Play the raga very well - bilahari's example about his teacher needing to pause to breakdown swaras but can innately play more complicated stuff is a good example. There are many teachers who do not teach swara breakdown - and their pupils do very well. They simply register how a sangati should sound like, and can internalize it (i.e. not simply memorize), identify with the bhAvam and deliver it to their satisfaction. They may know the general gist of the swaras but not all of them may know all the subtleties - and it is no hindrance.
3. I also think you do not necessarily need the breakdown in every case to even show differences in raga. I will not be surprised if there are people who can clearly show you the different phrases of allied ragas, but not necessarily breakdown each swaras in that phrase.

Also breakdown of swaras can be misleading. The representation of swaras as notated are still only guidelines as they do not reveal the anuswaras, gamakas. There are of course books that include gamaka indicators, but still there is no single, standard that all of us are used to (i.e. there is no unambiguous "language" for it yet that we are all familiar with).

But then why do many of us still get all worked up about knowing the swaras? I just think that some people (me, you as starters) are "wired a bit differently" that we think we must know the nuts-and-bolts behind the phrases - otherwise it somehow still remains a enigma, a mystery. We fill we do not know everything there is to know about it and we cannot rest while that possibility lies there - inviting. We are not satisfied in being able to relate to, identify with and even sing/play a phrase without knowing its precise contours in swara form. I guess that's how some of us are - sigh! :)

Arun
Last edited by arunk on 12 Sep 2007, 20:10, edited 1 time in total.

vijay
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Post by vijay »

Arun, swara ganam may not be required for appreciation but a competent performer certainily needs a reasonable degree of swara gnanam (of course what is reasonable is subjective and there are nuances like anuswarams that can present difficulties). Singing without knowledge of swarams is just rote music (although it can be pleasing) - classical music demands a more intellectual approach (of which you are an example yourself!). All artistes should aspire to the highest level of sruthi sense like, say, an SRJ...of course that is unfortunately not the case - I suspect many artistes get away with a rudimentary understanding of swaras....

Sujiram I am still trying to visualize how one can play an instrument without realizing what swaras are being played. This really tests some of my fundamental assumptions about instrumental music! But if I were to take the Akilandeshwari example you mentioned, surely you were able to reproduce it only because of an innate sense of sruthi (whether in your fingers on your head). I mean I could understand if you knew the song but if you were able to reproduce a song in a scale you did not know, it means you have developed the highest sruthi sense there is!

arunk
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Post by arunk »

vijay,

First - I was not talking about professionals - only amateurs and dabblers.

Perhaps you misunderstand my point. I was saying you do NOT need to do the breakdown of EVERY swara in an alapana. Nor do you need to break it down on demand otherwise you are useless and "singing rote". That is a premature and a damning conclusion and IMO quite misguided (and if I may say - a bit "high-horsed").

There are people who have a very good idea of the contours, bhava of a raga without knowing every nook and corner to great detail. Not knowing that is not an impediment nor need we take that to be some sort of a handicap. If you ask them "how does AbhEri go?" and they can do it unrehearsed without knowing swaras - then that is proof positive to me :).

Now does that mean they can do anything and everything? No. But why should we judge them? But also why must CM be intellectual when almost all the krithis are emotional ? Tangent alert! Let's avoid that - But I only mention this because I am not a big fan of the idea that some people have that unless you have swara-gnyAnam you dont have real gnyAnam. To me, it is just just an opinion, and comes off jaded the way it is usually delivered. Like I said, I see enough evidence to the contrary (This in spite of me wanting swara gnyAnam ;) )

Arun
Last edited by arunk on 12 Sep 2007, 21:02, edited 1 time in total.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

vijay wrote:Sujiram I am still trying to visualize how one can play an instrument without realizing what swaras are being played. This really tests some of my fundamental assumptions about instrumental music! But if I were to take the Akilandeshwari example you mentioned, surely you were able to reproduce it only because of an innate sense of sruthi (whether in your fingers on your head). I mean I could understand if you knew the song but if you were able to reproduce a song in a scale you did not know, it means you have developed the highest sruthi sense there is!
We are discussing about making out swaras and phrases from Alapanas in this thread aren't we? The same applied to the kriti akhilandeshwari. It was trail and error offcourse. I did realise soon it has both G and other swarastanas. I need to hear vocal renditions not even instrumental to learn anything on violin (I listen to 90 % vocal all the time).

Highest Sruti sense ? I do not know.
If I could play hindi film songs as a kid, I guess my fingers already knew music.
Last edited by Suji Ram on 12 Sep 2007, 22:57, edited 1 time in total.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

arunk wrote:vk,

I use the swaras only as a reference and NOT while singing (this also gets near impossible in krithis atleast for me). The moment I start thinking "remember that next word/syllable you are going to sing is dppmgrs-" - its over :). It will come out wrong - flat, probably apaswara.
Arun
Arun,
TRy learning a kriti without swaras. I know I am asking you to be a parrot. I think you are over analyzing while learning itself and that is the problem. Go just by hearing a recording of sahitya. There is always time to analyse the swaras behind it and then offcourse perfect your singing after you know it.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

arunk wrote:But then why do many of us still get all worked up about knowing the swaras? I just think that some people (me, you as starters) are "wired a bit differently" that we think we must know the nuts-and-bolts behind the phrases - otherwise it somehow still remains a enigma, a mystery. We fill we do not know everything there is to know about it and we cannot rest while that possibility lies there - inviting. We are not satisfied in being able to relate to, identify with and even sing/play a phrase without knowing its precise contours in swara form. I guess that's how some of us are - sigh! :)

Arun
Sounds so much like myself. When I cannot play a complicated sangati, my Mom tells me you can skip that, but I cannot give up until I figured it out.

Arun, Learning an instrument might help here.

arunk
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Post by arunk »

suji - i was implying that that is why i don't think of the swaras. I use them a "handy reference if needed" - and I dont use them while singing.

Learning a krithi without swaras - have done that too. But may be it is just me, unless I hear the recorded lesson repeatedly (as a handy reference), I unconciously morph the sangati. So in that respect, the swaras are very useful - atleast to me. I can always resync to what I am supposed to sing without having to hunt down and listen the recording.

Arun

arunk
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Post by arunk »

Suji Ram wrote:Learning an instrument might help here.
:). Actually learning from a teacher who is a instrumentalist works too. I am glad I have that - i.e. given my inclinations here.

Bhindi
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Post by Bhindi »

VK,

In your opening post you mentioned "For a particular raga, there seems to be a characteristic 'color' depending on the four quadrants where the music happens to be."

I love to listen to Carnatic music but cannot differentiate between ragas and complex koruvais etc. Please use the youtube video example of Mayamalawagoula ragam and explain the 4 quadrants you were talking about. It will help me a lot to understand this discussion.

Bhindi
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Post by Bhindi »

By the way could some one please tell me how to quote just a single line of text from a post without having to type or quote the whole post

Thank you in advance.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

Bhindi wrote:By the way could some one please tell me how to quote just a single line of text from a post without having to type or quote the whole post
Thank you in advance.
Hit the quote button on your right to the corresponding post.
You can erase the lines you don't want by using delete or back space, but be sure not to erase the tag "qoute" in brackets on either side of it.

Mod Addition: Another method is: In the reply box, copy and paste the lines you want, select those lines and hit the quote button. It is the right most button in the series of buttons above the emoticons.

vijay
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Post by vijay »

Arun, to the extent we are talking about amateurs/dabblers, I think we are on the same page...

As far as professionals are concerned, I am afraid I do have high expectations of swara gyanam. I am not insistent that every swara in an alaapanai needs to be reproduced on demand (although there are many musicians for whom this is child's play) but there should be a certain minimum standard (which I admit is subjective)

Taking your example of Abheri - I cannot bring myself to think much of a musician who can rattle off phrases in the raga without an understanding of its swaras. For me there is little that differentiates such a person from a playback singer except perhaps greater vocal dexterity (but often at the cost of sruthi). But I will admit that that is just my viewpoint and I do not wish to impose it on anyone else.

What attracted me to CM, more than anything else was its intellectual content. That's the element I look for more than anything else and it's what I believe really differentiates CM (and to a lesser extent HM) from other forms of music. As a consequence, it is intellectually curious artistes that I am drawn towards (which I suppose explains my fascination for TNS, TRS, Sanjay, GNB, Voleti among many others).

In any case, it is quite impossible for a professional carnatic musician of any standing not to have basic proficiency in swaras gyaanam (although as I have noted above, in many cases it appears to me as grossly inadequate) - singing swaras for example is hardly possible without a basic level of knowledge...

Anyway, to cut a long (and potentially diversionary) story short, it is certainly OK for dabblers not be swara aware but for professionals, in my opinion at least, it ought to be a central part of one's artistic quest....

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

Suji: That is a great gift you have, to go from melody to finger movements & techniques without using the swaras as an in between. That is where I want to get to, not necessarily the lowest level swara breakdown. Incidentally, if I can do what you can do, the swara break down is then a simple exercise of noting what I am playing and writing it down. I have a feeling that those who can do it naturally are born with it. But then I hope it may be possible for someone who does not have it like me to get there. In the context of this discussion, 'swara gyanam' includes both of the above kinds of gyanam.

Arun: I agree with you on our propensity to know clearly and without any obfuscation at a lower level of detail. On the music front, I am trying to move away from intellecutalizing it too much to the 'understand and enjoy' level. But it is a grey area between the two.

Bhindi: I assume you understood what I meant by the four quadrants( low ga to sa first Quadrant, sa to pa second quadrant, pa to high SA third quadrant and high SA to high PA fourth quadrant ). I am grasping at straws at all this so I am not the right person to map that youtube MMG to the quadrants. If the the vidwan vocalized the swaras while playing that, then it would be easy and a good starting point. Others correct me on this but I think most songs stay in the second and third quadrant for a majority of the time. If it goes decisively to the first or fourth, you will readily notice. Another one that is probably easy to notice is the song beginning. Song beginnings tend to be in the second quadrant through there are some sparkling exceptions. Saroja Dhala Nethri ( sankarabaranam ) starts high and I would tentatively slot it in the 3rd quadrant. kAru bAru ( mukhari ) starts very high and I would tentatively slot it in the fourth quadrant. SS Bhairavi Swarajathi 'amba kamakshi' starts really low and I would slot that in the first quadrant.

While I am at it, here is a tip regarding 'playing along'. What Akkarai Subbulakshmi's dad taught her to do ( playing along to recordings ) is possible with the violin since the sruthi can be changed at a finer level of granularity. For a fixed sruthi instrument like flute, modern technology comes to rescue by doing the opposite. If the recording is in mp3 form, load it into a program like audacity and adjust the pitch of the recording. It does a good job without distorting the music much. It would not sound like the original recording but that is OK for this purpose. ( even if someone has multiple flutes with various sruthis, it still may not match the sruthi of the recording ). I have tried that with one or two songs as a way to wire the brain to the fingers directly ( like what Suji does.). (I am a long way from getting there.) This trick/technique may be useful for vocalists as well.

One pleasant gift was, a recording of MSS's Swara Raga Sudha I have is already at the exact pitch I wanted and it was a pleasant experience to just play along with her to the extent I can, especially the long held notes Sa, Ga and Pa.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

VK,
Noting down swaras as you play is a good idea of understanding music. I often do this in my bus commute while listening to artist's renditions especially alapanas or certain sangatis. Ocassionally my fingers seem to move as if playing a virtual violin. I write down the swaras and go home and check on the instrument to see if I guessed them right.

arunk
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Post by arunk »

I may be mistaken and this is no way trivializing what suji has, but I think that for (decent, amateur) instrumentalists to reproduce a phrase that they just heard - there need not be a breakdown of swaras stage. In other words, many do it the way suji does. I definitely used to think that this required swara knowledge so that they know the positions etc. - but I have heard people say "I just know where to play and how much to slide/bend to get that sound" or "(smile) I just play it".

Its like that the brain remembers how much bend is required on this fret/position to get that sound in that raga etc. - and so it all becomes sub-concious, and so they skip the active part of swara breakdown. It is possible that they remember in terms of "for this sound, this action is required".

Perhaps instrumentalists can confirm or refute this. Is this true (perhaps after a certain level of expertise - and that level is not like way above average)?

BTW, we know already this is true for vocal. Many people can simply repeat a phrase - even internalize it without knowing the constituent swaras. In fact, many kELvi gnyAnam rasikas can do a "decent" (for their level) job at doing arbitrary raga sketches - even without understanding anything. Now, in reality they may be subconciously pulling stuff from memory and piecing together. But I think that may be true even for pros during stage (i.e. pulling stuff from memory and piecing togethet on the fly but subconsciously).

Arun
Last edited by arunk on 13 Sep 2007, 01:32, edited 1 time in total.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

Arun , you are right.
I think most of us discussing in this thread already have the knowledge of swaras(vocal and instruments). It does happen subconsciously. It's that unknown depths of CM we are all searching for.
Practice is the only key.

BTW I am still a dabbler..
Last edited by Suji Ram on 13 Sep 2007, 01:46, edited 1 time in total.

arasi
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Post by arasi »

Ignoramus,
You asked for the URL of Neyveli's RagAs Through Pallavi. Hope this works: http://www.sangeethapriya.org/~sridharan
In his index, it is the 11th bullet.

arunk
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Post by arunk »

I am a dabbler and a babbler ;)
Last edited by arunk on 13 Sep 2007, 01:58, edited 1 time in total.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

Now what are swaras? sa ri ga ma ....are they not sounds. For an instrumentalist that is the sound emanating from the instrument itself at the correct positions. Everytime a note is played it tell us what swara that is.

We don't need to learn a sahitya in swaras at all. Infact that is an additional exercise learning swaras first and then play sahitya. I won't have that patience if I really had to do it.

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

Suji: Are you offering a new way to think about playing instruments? Meaning, once you learn the mechanics of the instument for how each sound is produced, don't think about swaras but learn how to produce a sequence of sounds that matches the sahithya based melody?

As a second item, I have got to modify the 'born with it' theory I wrote before. I am taking it as a given that many people are born with 'musical gyanam'. But that does not necessarily translate to the 'finger memory' that you talk about. Somehow during the learning of the instruments that gyanam got wired to the mechanics of playing the instrument. To be specific, do you think if you just learn how to play the 7 swaras on the flute, that 'wiring' you have will translate to flute as well? May be keyboard is one instrument where you can test that possibility readily ( hope the difficulty with producing gamakams does not stand in the way of this experiment ).

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

vasanthakokilam wrote:Suji: Are you offering a new way to think about playing instruments? Meaning, once you learn the mechanics of the instument for how each sound is produced, don't think about swaras but learn how to produce a sequence of sounds that matches the sahithya based melody?
This isn't a new way I think.
After learning geetham and varnams one is already familiar with swaras and its position. So while transitioning to sahitya just think about the sound and offcourse which raga and its scale. Soon the phrases in the raga will come alive. Subconsciously you will have the swara gyanam no matter what.

Even when I try alapana on violin my mind says tana nana, aaa ta da ri etc and I go automatically to play the phrases in that raga. The fingers know the swaras.

The facts I mentioned can be applied to any instruments even key board. When I started playing key board I did not know anything about music. Just moved my fingers to the melody. One immediately will know sounds going up and down with practice.

My teacher never taught underlying swaras (vocal and instrument) for kritis. If I made a mistake she would just say antara gandaram or shudda rishabam etc.. at that position that's all.

Now offcourse I am learmning on my own at my own snail pace.

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

vasanthakokilam wrote:Suji: To be specific, do you think if you just learn how to play the 7 swaras on the flute, that 'wiring' you have will translate to flute as well? ).
Yes, if I can learn to blow the swaras with proper gamakams, I will be able to translate that wiring to flute as well.
However, I will have to teach my right hand fingers. I can play keyboard with left hand only-maybe playing bulbul tara-that typewriter like instrument wired me that way :)
Last edited by Suji Ram on 13 Sep 2007, 06:32, edited 1 time in total.

mohan
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Post by mohan »

A few points (some of which have been raised already):
- Swara knowledge is essential for effective kalpana swara singing.
- Most of the vocal music teachers I know don't teach krithis swara by swara. If there is a difficulat sangati then the teacher may sing that sangati in swara form.
- for instrumentalists, accompanying other artistes reall helps develop their swara knowledge
- the lack of a perfect system of notation for Carnatic music has resulted in knowledge transfer to be based on an oral tradition. Over time this has resulted in sangatis for krithis being varied
- for vocalists and instrumentalists alike, learning varnams and practicing kalpana swaram will greatly enhance swara knowledge

vijay
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Post by vijay »

arunk wrote:I definitely used to think that this required swara knowledge so that they know the positions etc. - but I have heard people say "I just know where to play and how much to slide/bend to get that sound" or "(smile) I just play it".

Its like that the brain remembers how much bend is required on this fret/position to get that sound in that raga etc. - and so it all becomes sub-concious,
Arun
Even I was confused about Suji's statement that he could play something (i.e a piece not heard before) without a swara bbreak-down. Now it does start to make sense...in a sense it is no different from a lay person humming a tune without necessarily comprehending its musical form...

I suspect even artistes who do have a sound swara knowledge would be hindered if they continuously thought about what swaras they were singing, say during an alaapanai...I used to think that instrumentalists were somehow different but what Arun/Suji say makes sense now

SUch sub-conscious internalization is probably a pre-requisite for an effetive presentation but I think it is nevertheless important to keep continual track of where one is going with an alaapana, experiment with some new combinations, take cues from supporting artistes. Sanjay's alaapanas for example give me the impression that his mind is working on exploring possibile phrases even as he is delivering one...I find it very hard to keep track of the swaras in his alaapanas as compared to other artistes - he takes me by surprise very often and this is what makes him such an exhilarating performer..

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

Even I was confused about Suji's statement that she could play something (i.e a piece not heard before) without a swara bbreak-down. Now it does start to make sense...in a sense it is no different from a lay person humming a tune without necessarily comprehending its musical form...
But there is a slight difference from layman humming. Once I play it I would know immediately the swaras behind it.

There is a nice lecdem by Vidushi Smt Vedavalli on learning varnams and manodharma.
There are different layers in learning CM.
Learning to play swaras helps alapanas and kalpana swaras, that is the basics.
Sahitya is another dimension where one needs to bring out bhavam which one can get only having sahitya in mind.

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

in a sense it is no different from a lay person humming a tune without necessarily comprehending its musical form...
Vijay, how I wish it is just that way. I know what you are saying that at some level what is going on is 'no different'. May be so, but substantially at different magnitudes. Most people can hum a tune that they hear, nicely or not ( except one chinese colleague of mine she just did not have that ability which was quite strange ). It comes naturally without thinking about it. Using Suji's words, people can be a good parrot. But once you bring an instrument in to the picture and having the same ability is a pretty high achievement in itself. I just can not do it yet. One still have to train their hands, fingers and blowing which are the external counter parts to the vocal chords. It is quite fantastic that in some people that works in the same natural way.

I am not sure if you necessarily need individual swara breakdown for a great and creative alapana. ( though it may be very rare that an established musician may not have the individual swara knowledge.) If one believes that raga came first and then came its analysis into scale, swara etc. then theoretically raga should be describable, playable and demonstratable by directly translating ideas into raga music. Niraval might fall into the same picture. Kalpanaswaram singing by the very definition requires that swara breakdown but that is just the way it is. People will not accept it if you substitute your own solfa symbols or other sounds instead of sa ri ga ma pa...

Going a bit off topic but to illustrate a great exception: One famous example of a great musician who did not know any notes but who just played guitar at the highest level similar to what we are talking about here was Django Reinhardt.( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Django_Reinhardt ). May be because of that lack of established musical 'swara' knowledge, he managed to play in a unique fashion which is now recognized as a distinct bANi. There are many in Pop and Rock world who claim they can not read music ( it is mostly used as a promotional item to their target audience since that conveys an air of born musical genius ) but here is a case of high quality original music that came out of someone who did not know how to read music.

ignoramus
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Post by ignoramus »

arasi, thanks very much.. got it

Suji Ram
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Post by Suji Ram »

There are many in Pop and Rock world who claim they can not read music ( it is mostly used as a promotional item to their target audience since that conveys an air of born musical genius ) but here is a case of high quality original music that came out of someone who did not know how to read music.
One needn't really know how to read music (western notes). Sound gyanam is sufficient. There are numerous scope for developing different styles as in the case of the famous guitarist you mentioned.

Our piano instructor told me that western classical music was once improvisational music before it got written down. I insisted on such lessons and he obliged and I am amazed at how creative the student can get when asked to improvise on C or D major without notes. I even insist on ear training on notes.

But still I am amazed at how they can coordinate left and right hand looking at the notes from the book in front of them. I am always told I can also do it too- just keep one eye on the book and the other on your hands. Now that's being like Mad-eye Moody :D
Last edited by Suji Ram on 13 Sep 2007, 22:13, edited 1 time in total.

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