Sanjay @ Mudra

Review the latest concerts you have listened to.
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s_hari
Posts: 872
Joined: 20 May 2007, 18:45

Post by s_hari »

Vid Sanjay Subramanian - Vocal
Vid S Varadaraja - Violin
Vid B Harikumar - Mridangam
Vid Udupi Sridhar - ghatam

1. Varnam - Neelambari
2. Brocheva - Sriranjani - tyagaraja
3. Sudhamayi - Amritavarshini (Raga alapana) - Muthaiah Bhagavathar
4. Abhimana - Begada (Raga alapana, swarams at Abhimana) - Pattnam subramanya iyer
5. Enneramum - Devagandhari - GKB
6. Srinivasa tava charanam - Kharaharapriya - Papanasam sivan (Raga alapana, neraval & swaram at kamalaja manohara)
......
(I had to leave after this, someone else may complete)

Another great selection of songlist. Amritavarshini ragaa was detailed, but the keerthana was too fast. Could have been little slower. Begada alapana & keerthana was sung well bringing out bhavam. Swarams for kharaharapriya keerthana had too much kanakku, i haven't seen Sanjay indulging in kanakku before. He started devagandhari kriti with anu pallavi line - tennancOlai tazhaikkum.

Kharaharapriya alapana was very detailed, and i liked it very much.

-hari

mahavishnu
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Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 21:56

Post by mahavishnu »

Is the varnam is neelambari by LGJ?

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

Doubt it. Sanjay prefers vintage composers.
Two srIranjanIs in a row. He sang bhuvini dAsuDanE in his Bharat Kalachar concert...
Last edited by arasi on 29 Dec 2007, 20:01, edited 1 time in total.

mahavishnu
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Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 21:56

Post by mahavishnu »

Arasi, You may well be right about this varnam. I would be surprised too if he sang LGJ's varnam in Neelambari.

However, Sanjay does sing "non-vintage" compositions. He sang a kathanakuthukalam varnam by his guru KSK last year at the academy. He also sings Tanjore Kalyanaraman's compositions from time to time.

In any case, nice to hear from you...Trust you are enjoying the season!

Jigyaasa
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Joined: 16 May 2006, 14:04

Post by Jigyaasa »

And some tuned by Sri Calcutta Krishnamoorthy also IIRC...

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

mahavishnu, jigyaasa
You both are right! He does sing his guru's compositions and those of others too. That Kadana kutuhalam varnam is a favorite of mine.
My music season ended yesterday. Today, I am trying to rest my aching bones. I have only been posting in the Twitter and Rasikas Meet thread during my stay in Chennai. Are you still enjoying the season?
Last edited by arasi on 29 Dec 2007, 21:10, edited 1 time in total.

mahavishnu
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Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 21:56

Post by mahavishnu »

As much as one can from a cold nation far far away.....
This forum is a lifeline for many of us.

Jigyaasa
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Joined: 16 May 2006, 14:04

Post by Jigyaasa »

VERY MUCH :) Vacations in December are DEDICATED to the season... It's a pity it's gonna end :( n so are my hols...

ganesh_mourthy
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Joined: 02 Sep 2007, 23:08

Post by ganesh_mourthy »

lalgudi varman = non vintage?

I dont understand the meaning here of vintage.

vintage = something of high quality.

or do you mean to say somethng else.

To me all lalgudi compositions are great

Jigyaasa
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Joined: 16 May 2006, 14:04

Post by Jigyaasa »

i suppose, in this context, vintage=pre-1950 compositions...?

mahavishnu
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Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 21:56

Post by mahavishnu »

ganesh_mourthy: I agree with jigyaasa's definition. Vintage, in this context, refers to something that has been aged.
And no question about what you said. LGJ's compositions are top-quality. I wish more vocalists would sing them, their beauty comes out so much more than in an instrumenal rendition.

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

I meant it in the sense that he hardly sings anything post Subrahmanya Bharati and of course, there are exceptions...

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

Sanjay has been "indulging" in kanakku for quite a while now! From as far back as I can remember. I don't think he overdoes it however although at times one misses a sarvalaghu climax when a kannaku kuraippu is done

prashant
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Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 09:01

Post by prashant »

IIRC the nIlAmbari varNam Sri Sanjay sings is by tarangambadi panchanada iyer. I think bharath had once posted a review of a concert where this was mentioned.

ganesh_mourthy
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Joined: 02 Sep 2007, 23:08

Post by ganesh_mourthy »

well an absurd input here, yet...

what is tharangambadi ? the place near karaikal. someone told me it is out of Tharangam + paadi.
singing tharangam .....

could some knowledged person throw lights?

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

ganesh,
That is intresting. pADi refers to a town (Ur, Uru); vANiyampADi, a town of merchants or oil vendors. AyarpADi where krishnA grew up was a locale of cowherds. tarangam is sea (kaDal). So, a town near the sea?

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

Also called Tranquebar where there is quaint Bungalow on the Beach by a Danish fort which I hear is a great holiday destination

ganesh_mourthy
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Joined: 02 Sep 2007, 23:08

Post by ganesh_mourthy »

yeah that was a early danish settlement. now the fort is taken over by the TAJ .

fine tharangampadi . town close to the sea. of course it is a seashore town. gives a lot of meaning.
i have visited it 15 years back. Had a beautiful temple Maasillaamani kovil ( maasu + illaa = flaw less) which was eroded 4 / 5th even then by the sea.

I still remember standing in the edge of the remnants wondering when the left over will be completely vanish into the sea. Reading tharangambadi in the thread was like a throwback to those days.

Ganesh

apasruthi
Posts: 68
Joined: 08 Jan 2007, 14:12

Post by apasruthi »

For those who haven't been to Tranquebar or Tharangambadi(or pAdi). This comes on the way between Cuddalore and Karaikal. The main attraction is the dilapidated Dansborg Fortress and the Konk's street (King's street in Danish). The legend is that the Danish king Christiaan the IV somewhere in the 17th century sent 19 ships in expedition to India to fetch spices to preserve meat, and accordingly the ships reached Tranquebar, and the history has it that only 10 returned to Denmark, the rest would have got lost or some of the Danes would have chosen to marry Indian women and settle there itself. Anyways those who are interested in some history, you can also see a kind of MoU signed between the King of Tanjore and the envoy from the King of Denmark in the fortress and also enjoy the pristine beach, sorroundings, a nice chapel, and if you are lucky then get a few Christiaan the IV coins as souvenir from the beach sands (Don't worry, there are enough guys to chase you down to sell some of them, you can always claim later that you got it from the beach yourselves!)

For a lot of Danes, Tranquebar is a part of their folklore, a far-away land where their heroes have gone by and they learn about it through the rhymes and songs in kindergarten. But surprisingly, most of the Danes don't even know that it actually exists in India, south of Chennai!

So much on TharangampAdi!

Apasruthi
Last edited by apasruthi on 31 Dec 2007, 09:33, edited 1 time in total.

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

Thanks Apasruthi! Makes me want to set off immediately

rajeshnat
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Post by rajeshnat »

apasruthi wrote:This comes on the way between Pondicherry and Cuddalore.
Wrong here , comes in between cuddalore and KAraikAl.

vasanthakokilam
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Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 00:01

Post by vasanthakokilam »

Tarangambadi was one of the towns severely affected by the Tsunami. I wonder if the Maasillaamani kovil and the fort survived ( I do not know how close is the fort to the sea shore ).

Thanks apasruthi on the history lesson. I did not have a clue. If I meet any Danish person, I will ask for some Tranquebar nursery rhymes..;)

rshankar
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Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 22:26

Post by rshankar »

rajeshnat wrote:Wrong here , comes in between cuddalore and KAraikAl.
Makes more sense, because I do not remember it being between Cuddalore and Pondy - being that I did that route so many times!

apasruthi
Posts: 68
Joined: 08 Jan 2007, 14:12

Post by apasruthi »

Thanks all. I have corrected the post to Cuddalore and Karaikkal. I vaguely remember that after leaving Pondy one morning somewhere before or after Cuddalore it came. It was 6 years back and much before Tsunami, so I don't know post that.

VK, yes that's the whole idea. Tell it to as many Danes as possible, not just for Rhymes but to also make them fund for improvement in that place. Danes are sitting on pots of monies to be spent on developing world!

Apasruthi

rbharath
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Joined: 05 Feb 2010, 10:50

Post by rbharath »

the neelambari varnam that sanjay usually sings is 'nI vaNTi deivamu' in aTa tALam. composition of panchananda iyer as prashant was mentioning.

rbharath
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Post by rbharath »

however, this might be a different one.

ganesh_mourthy
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Post by ganesh_mourthy »

thanrangambadi is far away from cuddalore. just only 7 kms from karaikal

harimau
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Joined: 06 Feb 2007, 21:43

Post by harimau »

rajeshnat wrote:
apasruthi wrote:This comes on the way between Pondicherry and Cuddalore.
Wrong here , comes in between cuddalore and KAraikAl.
Let us narrow it down further. Between Sirkazhi and Karaikkal.

The Masillamaninathar Temple is still standing after the tsunami. The utsava idols have been moved off to a nearby structure.

Large rocks have been dumped along the seashore to prevent further erosion. The Danesborg fort is still standing and was not affected by the tsunami.

Three hundred years ago, Bartholomeus Ziegenbalg, a German missionary, landed in Tranquebar and set about trying to convert the locals to Christianity. He learnt Tamil, set up the first printing press in Tamil Nadu, and printed the Tamil translation of the Bible. A couple of pages can be seen at the museum in one of the churches; hopefully, a full copy survives somewhere.

As opposed to CSI (the Church of South India, the Protestant church organization), Ziegenbalg's church is known as Tamil Evangelical Lutheran Church, the word "Lutheran" being the more common usage in Europe as opposed to "Protestant".

The main street is full of churches and church-supported schools. Local fishermen's children attend these schools in large numbers sporting vibhuthi (holy ash) and kumkum (for girls) on their foreheads. Ziegenbalg's efforts seemingly have not borne much fruit nor does propaganda about the tsunami being caused by belief in false gods.... I actually heard a priest say this in a school assembly.

Bungalow on the Beach is a Neemrana hotel, not a Taj hotel. The office of the Tanjore Collectorate (of the Danes) has been restored and turned into this hotel. The ground floor is authentically restored; the columns of the upper floor are not exact replicas. The restaurant serves outrageously priced meals and doesn't have a liquor license. The rooms go for Rs 5000+ a night, a princely sum in Tharangampadi.

The nearby Governor's Palace is still in ruins; years of efforts by Neemrana Hotels to acquire and restore it have been in vain due to the dog-in-the-manger attitude of the state government.

Tharangampadi indeed does mean Singing Waves.

vasanthakokilam
Posts: 10958
Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 00:01

Post by vasanthakokilam »

Thanks harimau.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&t ... &z=10&om=1

Also, can someone mark the temple, fort etc. on this google satellite map...

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&t ... &z=17&om=1

gn.sn42
Posts: 396
Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 23:56

Post by gn.sn42 »

vasanthakokilam wrote:can someone mark the temple, fort etc. on this google satellite map...
Try Wikimapia:

http://wikimapia.org/#lat=11.02575&lon= ... =0&m=a&v=2

vasanthakokilam
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Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 00:01

Post by vasanthakokilam »

Nice. Thanks.

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

Spring cuckoo,
This year, I was lucky to savor two weeks of the season. As a castaway, I have felt the longings which comes out of being so far away from the musical feast. Nostalgia rules, and it extends to places as well, as this thread indicates. Not a bad idea to have a separate thread for the birth place of composers, don't you think? :)

vasanthakokilam
Posts: 10958
Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 00:01

Post by vasanthakokilam »

Excellent idea Arasi. That jives with a few thoughts I have been having( rather rants ) about the lack of in depth real history about our composers. May be a topic about their birth places or where they lived would add flesh to such details. With Google satellite maps, we get a more realistic picture as well. We will work on the most logical place to put those topics/threads of discussion so they do not get scattered. Thanks.

Svaapana
Posts: 147
Joined: 17 Aug 2007, 20:56

Post by Svaapana »

Song list after Karaharapriya:

7. Kanmaniye - Saranga - Adi - Malavai Chidambara Bharathi
8. RTP - Gowlai - Tanam in ganaragapanchamam - Pallavi had the following words - Karunai varumo kandha namai kathurala and in Adi talam.
9. Nagumomu - Aberi - Adi - T
10. Modi jesi - Javali in Khamas - Adi - Pattabhiramayya
11. Vizhikku thunai - Viruttam - Sindhubhairavi followed by Manadirku - Sindhubhairavi - Tanjore Sankara Iyer,and
12. Mangalam

The RTP was simply awesome. Never heard Gowlai sung so elaborately and beautifully.
Nogumomu as post RTP piece came as a pleasant surprise..

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