
Arun
I think dIrgha kampita would be a good description of R, M and N in madhyamAvatiarunk wrote:madyamavati - the ri is emphasized here too but is most notablly NOT flat. There is a also good gamaka on ni (more deeper kampita than in sri?). You see the nice gamakas in ri and ni in the sample. I think there is also a flavor of ni which has slight shades of n3 as anuswara.
Mine are like hearsay i.e. after my own understanding on correlating between what I have read and what I hear in renditions.cmlover wrote:Where are your raga lakshnas coming from? Is it SSP?
I have been too busy to spend time with your three raga clip, Arun. Till today, I have not been reading the answers thread on the hope I may be able to spend time on it. I still have not read the answers and I will try to do the exercise but if not, I will read up. You all can go to the next exercise if you like.arunk wrote:vk, cmlover - are you guys still in on this one?
I hear P, MRS. G is eschewed here.cmlover wrote:Now I would like you and Suji to listen to the following and say whether bells still keep ringing
http://www.mediafire.com/?2mtwinnmmtq
I got your point(s) indeed. Tastes do differ and for my taste, I dont see the need to make a big deal about nature of Sri without it - that it is fine without it etc.cmlover wrote:Arun
I have nothing against it. But my point is ( as well as Ramraj's I believe) that
Shree can retain her dhaivatvam without dhaivatam
Did it not here? Manirangu without gandharam (especially) would not be madyamavati, but it also certainly is no longer manirangu.cmlover wrote:Just changing a note will not destroy the raga characteristic
The fundamental "error" here is that treating swaras as notes - as in always flat. They are not. They have their (contextual) gamakas which sort of gets lost in our labelling. Also, the raga structure somehow leads towards specific gamakas in specific phrases -this part is still an enigma (atleast for me)cmlover wrote:You should explain sometime why each of these threats have their individuality in spite of their similarity in 'notes'.
RP can be followed by MRSarunk wrote:maybe Sri. Ramaraj and/or Uday can offer insights on this:
The R-P combination seems to make sense in manirangu (and common like rpmgr) but never in madyamavati? Am I correct? Also s-m (not sure about manirangu) - but does not fit madyamavati? I dont know but when I try it looks like omitting R or M does not seem to be preferable in madyamavati.
Arun