H
Haridasa | A saint who asked Tyagaraja, when he was about eighteen years of age, to recite ‘Rama Nama’ 6-860 million times. It is said that Tyagaraja was able to complete this number in twenty-one years. In the Telugu opera Nowka Charitram, the composer pays homage to this saint who transformed his life. |
Harmonics | The higher frequency notes related to the fundamental frequency, produced naturally in all physical vibrations. When a stretched string is plucked, its vibration consists of a combination of its fundamental frequency and a number of integral multiples of the fundamental. This is called the harmonic content of the vibration. The fundamental note would be dominant in the full string vibration If the string is stopped at particular points along its length, e.g. half the length, one-third the length, etc., and then plucked, the sound produced is called an artificial harmonic. These frequencies are called the upper partials or higher harmonics. The corresponding notes are called Swayambhu Swaras, i.e. notes born naturally, of their own accord. |
Harmonium | A portable organ-like instrument with bellows, which are pumped using the hands or feet. Its scale is tempered. It is believed that this instrument was brought into India by Western Christian missionaries in the recent past. |
Harmony | The overall pleasant awareness of sounds played together in consonant notes. In Western music, the major third and the major fifth are played along with the main note, to get a major chord. |
Hechhu Sarani | The name of the highest pitched string of the Tala strings of the Veena. |
Heptatonic Scale | A Sampoorna scale, like any of the 72 Melakartas. |
Hexatonic scale | Any six-tone or Shadava scale, e.g. Sriranjani. |
Hindustani Sangeet | The system of music prevalent in the north of India, as contrasted with the Carnatic system, which has its origins in south India. Both systems of music have as their foundation the concepts of Raga and Tala. Another common point is the fact that both systems have defined the vocally produced note as the yardstick for the Swara, unlike Western music, where the notes have been standardized with respect to the frequency of tuning forks and an equally tempered scale. |
Hrasva | Literally, short. A Hrasva note usually has a length of one unit of time. See also Dirgha (antonym). |
I
Indu | Literally, moon. In Carnatic music, this is the name of the first Chakra in the 72 Melakarta system, comprising the first six Melas. |
Interval | The ratio of the frequency of a note to that of a lower note. |
J
Jaati | In contemporary Carnatic music, refers to the five kinds of Laghus used in Talas. There are five of these –Chaturasra (4 counts), Tisra (3 counts), Misra (7 counts), Khanda (5 counts) and Sankeerna (9 counts). Thus, the application of these five kinds to the 7 basic Talas results in 35 Tala system. In the Natya Sastra, the term is used as a melodic attribute, but this had already gone out of vogue during the time of Matanga. See also Brihaddesi. |
Jalatarangam | Literally, water waves. Name of a musical instrument, consisting of china cups filled to varying levels with water. The water level is adjusted to tune each cup to a specific note. The rim of the cup is struck with sticks after tuning, to give a pleasant ringing sound. This is often used in small ensembles and for orchestral support. The dexterity to play this instrument is one of the traditionally enumerated 64 arts. |
Janaka Raga | A parent raga. The three conditions for a parent Raga are - it should be Sampoorna in both ascent and descent, employing seven notes; it should not have any zig-zag patterns (Vakratva) in it; and the ascent and descent should use the same set of seven notes. There are 72 Janaka Ragas. See also Melakarta. |
Janaka-Janya | The classification of Ragas into parent and derivative ragas, analogous to the genus-species system of classification. See Janaka Ragas and Janya Ragas. |
Janta Swaras | A note that is repeated twice, e.g. Sa-Sa, Ri-Ri, Ga-Ga etc. These are part of the scale exercises taught to the beginning student. |
Janya Raga | A Raga that is derived from a parent scale, by either omitting notes from the parent scale, or by introducing a zig-zag pattern, or by adding alien notes that are not present in the original parent scale. |
Jati | Pronounced with a short a – the syllables used to count rhythmic patterns, e.g. tari kita naka etc. |
Jatiswaram | A composition that used only the Sa Ri Ga notation for the notes and rhythmic syllables like tari taka, ta-din-gin-na-tom etc. It has no words, but there are the usual Pallavi, Anupallavi and Charanam divisions. Widely used in dance recitals. |
Javali | A Kannada word, meaning an earthy and sensuous erotic song. It is distinguished from the Padams, in which love and erotic sentiment is treated with more gravity. In Javali, love is light, provocative, flippant and sometimes even lewd and bawdy. It is usually set to bright and attractive tunes in well-known Ragas, and sung in medium or slow tempo. |
Jew’s Harp | A rhythmic instrument. See Morsing. |
Jiva | Literally, life. Also known as Jawari. It is the fine thread that is inserted between the bridge and the strings of the Tambura. The sound texture and quality are enriched by this means, giving the Tambura the enveloping sound that is vital to the performance of music. |
Jiva Swara | The note that imparts the central character to the Raga. This could be the same as a Nyasa Swara of the Raga, though not necessarily so. |
Jod | In Hindustani music, a rendition of an Alapa with an inbuilt Laya and rendered in the medium tempo. This is performed principally on instruments and in the nom tom alap of dhammar and dhrupad. This is similar to the Tanam singing in Carnatic music. |
Jugalbandi | A performance of two instrument players or singers. It spaces out a performance, dividing its progressions in a shared manner. In the Carnatic tradition, this is termed Jodippattu. |
K
Kutcheri | Concert, or any musical entertainment. |
Kutcheri Dharma | The duties and obligations, rights and privileges of musicians performing in a concert, its organisers and the audience. This entails everything from dress, mode of address and welcome, to the seating arrangements on the platform. |
Kakali Nishada | The major seventh note. Called Shuddha Nishada in Hindustani music. In practice, in Carnatic music, the note is often intoned slightly higher than the Suddha Nishada of Hindustani music, and the note is closer to the position of the Shadja. |
Kakapadam | One of the six Angas among the musical time measures and has a total of 16 counts. |
Kaku | A Swara technique that emphasizes the significant characteristic of a raga. Parsvadeva’s Sangeeta Samaya Sara describes six kinds of Kakus – 1. Raga Kaku is the essential splendour of a raga; 2. Swara Kaku is the embellishment of a Raga through the quality and shading of its Mukhya Swara through Gamakas or mere vocal power; 3.Desa Kaku is the introduction of folk and regional inflections into the Raga, giving it a novel and strange, yet rich form; 4. Anya Raga Kaku is the contrasting quality achieved by introducing Graha Bheda techniques or bhavas of foreign ragas; 5. Kshetra Kaku emphasises all the rules of the Raga in various combinations; 6. Vadya Kaku is the technique of bringing an instrumental quality into the vocal expression of Ragas. |
Kala | Pronounced Kalaa, it means art. Pronounced Kaala, it refers to time. |
Kalahasti | Temple-town near the border of Tamilnadu and Andhra Pradesh. The name was used as a Mudra by the composer Veena Venkataswami Raju of Kalahasti, in his Tana Varna composition Valachiyunna in Pushpalatika. |
Kallinatha | See Chatura Kallinatha. |
Kalpanaswara | The creative part of Carnatic music, where the performer sings patterns of solfa notes (swaras) extempore, according to his imagination, but within the boundaries of the Raga. |
Kalpita melakarta | The name given to fifty-three out of the seventy-two Melas described by Venkatmakhi. These were purely academic at the time, as they had not been used in compositions until then. The other nineteen were already popular when the classification was carried out. |
Kalpita Sangita | Composed music, e.g. Kritis and Varnams. |
Kampita | See Gamaka. |
Kanjira | A tambourine, used as a percussion instrument in concerts. |
Katapayadi Sankhya | An ancient Indian system of mnemonics that is used to correlate numbers with words. numbers of words. This was widely used in astrology, musicology, and several other arts and sciences in India. Each letter of the Sanskrit alphabet is associated with a number, as summed up in four key phrases. Kadi Nava – the nine letters, Ka, Kha, Ga, Gha, N(g)a, Cha, Chha, Ja and Jha, are given values from 1 through 9. Similarly, Tadi Nava – the letters beginning with ‘Ta’ and ending in ‘Dha’ are again given values 1 through 9. Padi Panca – the five letters from ‘Pa’ to ‘Ma’ are given values from 1 to 5. Yadi Ashta – the series of eight letters, Ya, Ra, La, Va, Sha, Shha, Sa and Ha have values from 1 through 8. The letters N(j)a and Na represent zero. The names of the 72 Melas are based on this scheme, such that the first two syllables of the name correspond to the Mela number in a reverse fashion. This can be illustrated with an example. Take the Mela Ramapriya. Ra and Ma are the first two syllables. The serial number of ‘Ra’ is two and that of ‘Ma’ is five, so that ra-ma encodes the number 25. The digits in this number are to be reversed, to give the number 52. This is the Melakarta number of Ramapriya. |
Kathakalakshepam | A combined word, formed from Katha (story), Kala (time) and Kshepa (spending). It is the art form of passing leisure time through musicalized story-telling. Legends from the Puranas are narrated through songs rendered in a dramatic fashion. The Ramayana, the Mahabharata, and Bhagavatam form the basis of the stories and anecdotes that are sung and recited by performers. Tanjavur Krishna Bhagavatar is described as the father of this art-form, which requires its practitioners to be scholars, musicians and dramatists simultaneously. |
Khayal | A word of Persian origin, meaning ‘imagination’. It is believed to have developed out of the Qawwal style of singing and through the period of Amir Khusro became an important part of the Hindustani music tradition. The arrival of the khayal slowly displaced the old Dhrupad style of singing and effected a revolutionary change in the Hindustani music tradition. The structure of the Khayal requires a high order of improvisational skill in the musician at several levels and layers of the Raga. The range and scope of improvisation also covers the whole range of human experience, from the poetic and mystic to the frontiers of quick arithmetic calculation and intellectual exploration. |
Koot-taan | A complicated and extensive set of notes in complex figures in a Taan. |
Kovur Pancharatna | A set of five Kritis, composed by thy great composer Tyagaraja, in praise of the deity, Sundareswara, in the shrine at Kovur near Madras. These are ‘Sambho Mahadeva’ in raga Pantuvarali, ‘Ee vasudha nivanti’ in Sahana raga, ‘Kori Sevimparare ‘in Karaharapriya, ‘Nammi Vacchina’ in Kalyani and ‘Sundira Varuni’ in Shankarabharanam. |
Krama | Order, regularity. Krama Sampoorna means an orderly Arohana and Avarohana without zig-zag patterns and tortuous variations. Shadava Krama indicates a six-note regular scale, and Audava Krama refers to the regularity of the five-note scale. |
Krishna | The most well-known God of Hinduism, asociated in music with the Venu or Murali, the divine flute. Hence, he is also called by the name Muralidhara. The pure music ascribed to Lord Krishna is believed to be the essence of Indian music. Composers and musicians have used this figure of Krishna with his flute from the dawn of Indian memory. Krishna appears as the inspiration behind Jayadeva’s Ashtapadis in the Gita Govinda, the songs of Meera, the Bhajans in Brij, and in numerous Thumris and Khayals. |
Krishna Leela Tarangini | The longest Sanskrit opera, composed by Narayana Tirtha. It contains 112 cantos. Its origin is in the Bhagavata Purana’s tenth chapter, which begins with the birth of Krishna and ends with the marriage to Rukmini. |
Kriti | Literally, composition/work. One of the most highly evolved forms of musical composition in the Carnatic music system. Every composer in the Carnatic School has attempted to compose Kritis and contributed richly to this form of music. Therefore, Kritis form the bulk of musical compositions in Carnatic music today. Unlike the Khayal in Hindustani music, the Kriti is a fully composed piece of music, complete in its architecture and motion. Its value lies not only in its musical content, but also in the lyrical content, the Sahitya. An allied form of composition, the Kirtana, lays much greater stress on the Sahitya than the Kriti. There are three movements – the Pallavi, the Anupallavi and the Charanam. In many such compositions, there are multiple Charanams. The Kritis are ornamented with several technical devices, such as Chitta Swaras, Madhyamakala Sahitya, Swarakshara Sangatis, Solkattu Swaras, Swara Sahitya and so on. |
Kriya | A mode of counting time. There are two main kinds of Kriyas, e.g. the Nis-shabda Kriya, which is silent or unvoiced, and the Sa-shabda Kriya, which is voiced by means of a beat. |
Kshana | The smallest division of time that can be conceived in a Kala, or between two beats. |
Kudimiyamalai | An inscription on a rock face in Pudukottai, giving much information about music. It belongs to the seventh century, and was inscribed by Mahendra Varman, a Pallava king. Except for the incomplete inscriptions available from Titumayam and Pudukottai, the inscription at Kudumiyamalai is unique in all of India. This inscription belongs to the period before Hindustani and Carnatic music took slightly different paths and therefore can be said to belong to both the traditions. It gives brief Sancharas of seven ragas – the Madhyama Grama, the Shadava, the Sadharita, the Panchama, the Kaisika madhyama and the Kaisiki Nishada. The Sancharas are given in four note steps of Taans, in what is known as the Chatushprahara Swaragama |
Kural | Tamil word, meaning voice. The name of the tone that is equivalent to Shadja, in ancient Tamil music. |
Kusa and Lava | Sons of Rama, known as great singers and balladeers. They sang the Ramayana and enthralled the court of their father King Ramachandra of Ayodhya. |
L
Laghu | One of the six Angas that reckons musical time. It consists of a beat and a variable count of fingers. See also Jati. |
Laghu Gotuvadhyam | A small Gotuvadyam, with a short stem and only five strings. |
Laghu Vina | A shorter Vina, with five strings, with a range of one and half octaves. |
Lakshana | A science or grammar, and refers to the Raga and its characteristics. The Lakshanas include Aroha, Avaroha, Jiva Swaras, Nyasa Swaras, Raga Prayogas, Vishesha Sancharas, subtle Srutis, Rasa and the appropriate time of singing. |
Lakshana Gita | See Gita. |
Lakshanakara | Sanskrit term for musicologist. He is deemed to know a lot of facts about music and is an authority on it. |
Lakshana Prabhanda | A composition in which some laws of music are described in its Sahitya. The Murchhana Karaka Mela Ragamalika is a case in point. |
Lakshya Grantha | Treatise on the science of music, with basic notations of compositions. |
Langar | A Hindustani word that means anchor. It refers to the metallic ring-like device to the right of the bridge, through which the strings are tied in a Veena or a Chitraveena. |
Laya | Literally, merging. In Carnatic music, the term refers to the tempo and indicates the speed and gait of a piece of music in the form of a regularly repeated beat a recognizable speed. Vilambita laya is slow tempo, the Madhya Laya is medium paced and the Druta Laya is fast tempo. |
Laya Meettu | Refers to the technique of plucking the Tala strings of the veena. This is a simultaneous upward stoke of the little finger on the three Tala strings. |
Linguaphone | An instrument fitted with tongues that vibrate in different Swaras when plucked. The Morsing is an example. Often bamboo wood, bone and metal are used as tongues. |
Lithophones | Musical instruments made of stone. There are several varieties of such instruments, including sets of stone pillars that sound various notes from the scale when struck, and certain Mukhaveenas, which are miniature Nagaswarams. |
Lochana Kavi | Musicologist from Mithila, who lived towards the end of the 14th century. He is the author of the grantha Raga Tarangini and quotes Vidyapati, the well-known poet of Mithila. Lochana kavi recognized the 22 shruthis and enumerated twelve Thaats. His shuddha scale was Kafi (or Kharaharapriya of Carnatic music). |
Lohaja | The sound emanating form metal. e.g. the sound produced by cymbals. |
Lute | Any stringed instrument, which has a resonator shaped like a pear at one end, and a stem with a fretted fingerboard. The strings are plucked with the fingers. The standard south Indian Veena is a lute. |
M
Madhyama or Ma | The fourth note of the Indian scale. It is the fa of the solfa of the European scale. (See GRAMA). |
Madhyamadi | A raga mentioned in the Sangita Makaranda of Narada, which can be sung at noon. It is an Audava Raga. This seems to have been the earlier name for Madhyamavati. |
Madhyama Kala Sahitya | Sections in Carnatic Kritis that are composed at twice the basic tempo. The Madhyama Kala piece usually appears at the end of the Anupallavi or the Charanam or sometimes in both sections. Many Muthuswami Dikshitar compositions include such sections. |
Madhya sthayi | Middle octave |
Madhya laya | Medium tempo. See Laya. |
Madhyama Grama | One of the three old scales of which there were three. The other two were the Shadja Grama and the Gandhara Grama. This is only of academic interest today, as the Grama system is no longer in use. |
Magudi | A musical instrument used by snake charmers. It is called Punji in North India. This instrument is polyphonous. A bottle gourd attached to a double cane pipe is cut in reeds. While one of the pipes gives the basic tonic, which it produces in a constant drone, the other pipe is able to play the tune. This pipe has finger holes that can be stopped just as in a flute. The wind that enters is blown out through the other end of the bottle gourd. Its sound is melancholy and is normally tuned to the scale of the South Indian Punnagavarali, a kind of Mishra Bilaskhani Todi of Hindustani music. This scale is said to attract serpents. The southern Magudi is unable to produce the Shadja of the higher octave. The North Indian Punji, being longer, is able to produce the upper Shadja. |
Meruswami | Nineteenth century musician, Samasthana Vidwan of the state of Travancore. His vocal range is said to have been three and a half octave. |
Major scale | The principal scale in which Western music is composed. It corresponds to the Shankarabharanam scale of Carnatic music, or the Bilawal scale of Hindustani music. |
Makuta Swara | A crowning Swara pattern. It generally denotes the string of Swara passages at the end of each section of a Ragamalika, connecting the previous Raga with the next Raga. |
Mandram | The name of the lower octave. Also the name of the lowest pitch string of the Tambura tuned to the lowest tonic of its scale. |
Mandra sthayi | Lower octave. |
Mandra Sadhana | The vocal training that involves a series of exercises in the Mandra region of the scale. This exercise gives body and resonance to the voice. |
Mangalam | An auspicious song of salutation. It is the concluding piece in Carnatic concerts. It is mostly in the Kirtana form and consists of a Pallavi and several Charanams, which are all sung in the same tune. |
Mangala Raga | Those ragas that are associated with auspiciousness. Dhanyasi, Asaveri, Vasanta, Saurashtram, Madhyamavati, Sri and Yadukulakambhoji are some of the Mangala Ragas in the Carnatic tradition |
Mani | Little beads threaded upon the strings of the tanpura which are used to fine-tune the swara. |
Manipravala Kriti | A composition in which the lyrics use two or more languages but despite this remain grammatically accurate. Linguists usually compose Manipravala krithis. The Bhairavi composition, ‘Ni sari samaana’ and ‘Tyagara Swami’ in Vacaspati are Manipravala compositions. |
Manodharma Sangeeta | Music that is sung extempore - a product of the moment. Manodharma is improvisational music and is produced instantaneously, without much planning or forethought. It has particular significance in Carnatic music, where the improvisational music is overlaid on the firm structure provided by Kritis and other such compositions of the great composers. In Hindustani music, since the compositions are normally short pieces, almost all the performed music is Manodharma. The Alapa, the Taanas, Pallavi exposition, Swara Kalpanas and the Niraval are aspects of Manodharma in Carnatic music. |
Mantra | A short phrase or group of letters of the Sanskrit language, meant for constant mental repetition, thereby gaining a curious power and impulse. Mantra is derived from the word ‘manana’ meaning memory or thinking. Magical properties are assigned to a Mantra such as those of purifying the mind, entering it and stilling it. |
Marga | Ancient, or classical, as against Desiya which is provincial and local, belonging to the region. A strict sense of rules is the characteristic of Marga, while Desiya makes local adaptations of the rules. Thus there are Marga and Desiya varieties of both Ragas and Talas. |
Marga Kriya | The classical or Marga technique of reckoning musical time. |
Markata Taana | A kind of Taana that mimics the gait of a monkey. The movement of Taanas is often likened to the gait of animals like the elephant, peacock or snake. For instance, a Taana is often said to be lumbering like a bear or jerky and jumpy like a frog. |
Matanga | Author of the Brihaddesi of the fifth century. Matanga is believed to be the originator of the Raga system of Indian music. All the later Lakshanakaras quote him widely. |
Matra | A unit of time measure and is used as the basic unit of the 108 talas of Indian music. |
Mavu | The paste of rice and water applied to the left side of the Mridangam, left side to dampen the vibrations and add tone and timbre to the sound. The quantity and spread of the paste is adjusted so that the sound emitted is about an octave or the Panchama below the note played on the right side of the mridangam. |
Meend | A smooth uninterrupted glide from one note to another. Its closest western equivalent is the pornamento of bowed instruments. |
Mela (Melakartha) | A parent scale of notes possessing a definite melodic character, with each note bearing a particular relationship to a tonic note and retaining that characteristic in ascent and descent. Full complement of seven notes are used in both the ascending and descending scales. There are seventy-two melakarthas emerging from the twelve notes of a full scale. This then becomes the basis from which a raga is derived. The character of a mela is so clear that the shortest section of its ascending or descending notes reveals the identity of the mela to the listener. Its Hindustani equivalent is the Thaat. The melas are seventy-two in number and the thaats are ten in number. The ragas are formed out of these melas as melodic units from which ragas are born. |
Melakarta Ragas | Scales which can be made into a Raga. e.g. Hari Kamboji and Kharaharapriya. |
Membraphone | An instrument that uses a membrane to produce a musical sound. A drum would be a membraphone. It is also called Avanaddha Vadya. |
Meru | The fret nearest the peg area of the Veena. |
Minor tone | A Sruti with a frequency interval of about 10/9. The interval between the chatusruthi rishaba and the antara gandhara is a minor tonic. |
Misra Raga | Compound ragas, which are usually two Ragas joined together. There are several styles of mixing Ragas. The Poorvanga of one raga with the uttaranga of the other is one way of effecting this. The real test of a mishra raga is in the way the two ragas mesh into each other. This requires skill and intellect in the musician. |
Misra Tala | A compound of two Talas. |
Modal Shift | Shifting the reference note (Shadja), in order to produce another raga. Also see Graha Bheda. |
Mode | The Greek and ecclesiastical scales. See also Major Scale. |
Mohara | The concluding seal of a performance sometimes done three times. It is usually done in rhythmic display. The finish then feels conclusive and final. (This is so yucky. Can’t this be done better?) |
Moorchana | The scales that emerge when each successive note of the scale is made the tonic note and a new set of notes defined from that point. The word is deriving drorm the root moorcha, meaning unconsciousness. The change of the Shadja in emphasising a note gives the mind an oppurtunity to take another pathway, which changes the feel of the first Raga that was being performed. This new pathway ends in a new Raga, with redefined relationships among the notes. When Ragas are derived from Moorchanas, the technique is called Moorchana Paddhati. |
Moorchanakaraka Raga | A raga from which several Moorchanas emerge. |
Morsing | A thin flat iron slip called the tongue attached to the ring shaped circular metal passing across the centre of the ring and sticking out just a little. The instrument is held in the mouth and struch with the forefinger which makes the metal tongue vibrate, making the mouth act as a resonator. This instrument is used to play Laya and Jati sequences along with the Mridangam. The Morsing can be made to appropriate the scale of the singer by using a little wax at the tip of the tongue. See also Jew’s Harp. |
Mridangam | The classical two-faced drum, used as percussion in Carnatic music, and played horizontally with the two hands by laying it on the lap. Mridangam literally means ‘made of clay’. It is actually made out of a scooped out single block of wood, usually from the Neem tree or Jack or Coconut. A smooth paste of rice flour and water is used on the left side to dampen the two skin tympani (See Mavu). A mixture of rice paste and iron filings is permanently loaded on the right drumhead. The Mridangam can be made to sound like a human voice, with a rich tone and timbre. This makes its use as an accompanying percussion instrument very evocative. |
Mudra | The signature used by the composer as part of the lyrics of a Kriti. Usually, the Mudra identifies the name of the composer, but one other use of the signature is the imaginative incorporation of the Raga name into the composition. |
Mukhavina | A wind instrument, like a small Nagaswaram. |
N
Nabhi swara | A kind of vocal production that is layered with harmonics and seems to originate at the navel of the singer. |
Nada | A mystical concept that has several connotations, one of which is the Nadabramha, which is an esoteric understanding of the silence of the spheres. On a more physical level, it refers to the basic vibration that enters the audio level and can be heard as sound as it impinges on the consciousness - the matrix of sound. It can be subdivided into Ahata nada (the heard sound) and Anahata nada (the unheard sound). |
Nada roopa | Is the embodied form of nada. |
Nadaswaram | See Nagaswaram |
Nadopasana | It is the practice of nada as a meditative exercise that cleanses one's musical perceptions. |
Nadopasika | Refers to one who meditates on the swaras of music and obtains the power of nada from the exercise. |
Nadayoga | It is a Sanskrit term used to describe the meditation on a swara as a kind of yoga where the swara is understood to be the fundamental sound and the raga, secondary. |
Nadayogi | Is a musician who practices music as part of yoga, a kind of rigorous discipline that involves the gathering of one's faculties and focussing on the Art. |
Nagaswaram | An ancient Carnatic wind instrument, similar to the Western Clarinet. |
Navaratnamala | It is a garland of nine kirtanas composed by Swati Tirunal on the theme of bhakti. There are nine kinds of bhakti - sravanam (attentive listening), kirtanam (singing religious songs), smaranam (mentally imagining the deity), padasevanam (worshipping at the feet of the deity), archanam (making an offering), vandanam (paying one's respects), dasyam (offering one's services to the deity), sakhyam (constant companionship) and atmanivedanam (self-enquiry). |
Navaratri kriti | Refers to a set of nine kritis in praise of Goddess Devi, specially composed by Swati Tirunal to be sung during the Navaratri festival. |
Navavarna kritis | Refers to a set of nine kritis in praise of Goddess Devi, to be sung during the nine days of the Navaratri festival. There are two such sets, one composed by Oottukadu Venkatasubbayyar and one by Muthuswami Dikshitar. |
Nibaddha | It refers to a composition that is set to a tala. It is the opposite of Anibaddha, which is the unbounded area of a raga, i.e. alapana. |
Nindastuti | Refers to that form of worship (Bhakti) in which the faults of the God/Goddess is highlighted as an indirect act of adoration. There are many compositions based on this form of Bhakti. |
Nishada or Ni | It is the seventh note of the Indian scale. |
Nisabdha kriya | It is the act of reckoning rhythm without sound. |
Niyama | Sanskrit word that means rules. There are various niyamas (rules) by which Ragas, Talas and Sahitya are bound. |
Nyasa swara | It is the final note on which a phrase or an alapana rests. |
O
Om | According to Hindu cosmology it is the sound that pervades the entire universe - the sound of silence. It represents the Absolute as sound and is often called Nadabrahma. The production of this sound by the human voice is the totality of al perceived vibrations, whether by the ear or the subtle senses of the spirit. |
P
Padam or pada | Is a poetic composition with verses of lyrics. |
Pallavi | In Carnatic music it referts to the basic first movement. In the Hindustani system, it is called sthayi. |
Panchama or Pa | Refers to the fifth note of the scale. It is a constant note and does not have a sharp or flat variations. |
Pluta | Refers to one of the seven parts of the tala and has a total of 12 counts or aksharas. |
Poorvanga | It is the lower tetrachord of the scale, the first four notes, Sa, Ri Ga and Ma |
Prayoga | Refers to the technique of expression in raga, a characteristic progression, a manner of negotiation on the scale. |
Pundarik Vittal | One of the great musicologists of South India, who lived in the 16th century. He wrote several treatises like Ragamala, Raga manjari and Nritya nirnaya. |
R
Raga | Constitutes the basis of the music of the subcontinent. A raga is basically a melody. |
Ragamala | Literally means a garland of ragas. |
Rasika | A lover of music |
Rishabha or Ri | Is the second note of Indian music. |
Roopaka tala | A tala that has six counts. It also refers to the third of the Sapta Talas which has a dhrutam and a laghu. (See Sapta Talas) |
S
Sabha | An organisation that gives patronage to music/dance. |
Sabha gana | Denotes singing in a sabha or to a large audience - public concert. |
Sadhana | Is a word commonly used to indicate practice |
Sahitya | Lyrics or prosody |
Samasthana or Asthana vidwan | Refers to a musician recognized by the royal court or a respected musical establishment. |
Sampoorna Jati / Raga | Refes to a raga that has all the seven notes in it. |
Samvadi | Refers to the relationship between any given swara (which becomes the vadi swara) to its perfect fourth or perfect fifth. Eg. The relationship between Sa and Ma or Sa and Pa, where Sa is the Vadi swara and Ma/Pa become the Samvadi swara. |
Sanchara | Literally means motion. In music, it indicates a manner of exploration of the terrain of a raga with a particular gait, geometry, progression and rest. |
Sangeeta or Sangita | Is a Sanskrit term that means music. It has two parts, ‘san’, which is derived from 'sam', which means together and 'geet' , which means song. |
Sangeeta Makaranda | Is a treatise on music, by Narada around the ninth century. |
Sangeeta Parijata | A treatise on music, written by Pandit Ahobal around 1750 AD. |
Sangeeta Ratnakara | One of the major treatises on Indian music, written around the thirteenth century, authored by Sarangadeva. It covers a wide area of scholarship and understanding and has influenced all subsequent writings on music. |
Sangeeta Saramrita | Was written by the Maharaja of Tanjavur, Tulaja between1763-68. |
Sangeet upasana | The devoted practice of music. |
Sarani | Refers to the first of the two middle strings of the tambura and is tuned to Shadja, the tonic note. |
Sarangadeva | Was a musicologist who lived between 1175 and 1247 AD and authored the well-known treatise on music Sangeeta Ratnakara. |
Shadava | Refers to a sequence of six notes either in the ascent or descent. |
Shadja or Sa | The very first note of the Indian scale. It is a fixed note with no variable values. |
Shankha | Refers to the conch shell and is believed to be the instrument of Lord Vishnu. |
Shehnai | A wind instrument similar to the clarinet, used in Hindustani music. Its Carnatic counterpart is the Nagaswaram. |
Sishya | A student or disciple. |
Sloka | A Sanskrit word for poetry, usually of four lines and considered sacred and powerful. |
Sringara | Is one of the nava rasas (nine emotions) and indicates love. |
Sruti | Refers to the microtonal intervals between notes. Twenty-two such microtonal points have been identified in Carnatic music. |
Solkattu | Refers to the mnemonics of Indian dance, specifically Bharatanatyam. |
Sthayi | Means octave in Carnatic music. |
Suddha | Sanskrit word for pure or untainted. |
Swara | The solfa note in Indian music. |
Swara bedha | Refers to the technique of modal shift of the tonic note. |
Swara lipi | It is the notation or the score of a musical composition. Lipi means script and thus the writing of the swara is a literal translation. |
Swaramela Kalanidhi | A treatise on Carnatic music authored by Ramamatya in 1550. |
Swara prasthara | See Kalpanaswara |
T
Tala | Refers to the physical expression of Laya or rhythm usually expressed in the form of beats, wave of the hand or finger-counts. |
Tala vadya | Means percussion instrument. |
Tambura (tanpura) | Is a four-stringed instrument in Indian instrument used to provide a constant pitch/drone. |
Tara sthayi | Higher octave. |
Tillana | A musical composition that mostly uses jatis, but also has some lyrics in the Charanam. |
Tukkada | Literally means piece. Usually refers to the songs that are sung in the latter half of a Carnatic concert, after the main piece. |
U
Uttaranga | Refers to the upper tetrachord of the scale and includes the notes Pa, Da, Ni and Sa (of the next octave). |
V
Vadya | Means instrument in Indian music. |
Vaggeyakara | Is derived from the words Vak (speech), geya (to sing) and kara (one who does). Thus it refers to a composer who composes both the lyrics and the tune. |
Vakra | Literally means twisted or irregular. In the context of ragas, it indicates a break in the continuity or regularity of the accepted order of notes either in the arohana-avarohana (ascent-descent). |
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