
PurandaraDaasa
-Fatherof CarnaticMusic
-Fatherof CarnaticMusic
Ancient treatises describe the connection of the origin of the swaras,    or notes, to the sounds of animals and birds and man's effort to    simulate these sounds through a keen sense of observation and    perception. The Sama Veda, which is believed to have laid the foundation for Indian classical music, consists of hymns from the Rigveda, set to musical tunes which would be sung using three to seven musical notes during Vedic yajnas. The Yajur-Veda, which mainly consists of sacrificial formulae, mentions the veena as an accompaniment to vocal recitations. References to Indian classical music are made in many ancient texts, including epics like the Ramayana and Mahabharata. The Yajnavalkya Smriti mentions vīṇāvādana tattvajñaḥ śrutijātiviśāradaḥ tālajñaścāprayāsena mokṣamārgaṃ niyacchati ("The one who is well versed in veena,  one who has the knowledge of srutis and one who is adept in tala,  attains salvation without doubt"). Carnatic music is based as it is  today on musical concepts (including swara, raga, and tala) that were described in detail in several ancient works, particularly the Silappadhikaram, and Bharata's Natya Shastra.    This music system was prevalent in Tamil Region of South India in    ancient days. It had no specific name mainly because it was the only    music form then. Later it spread to all other Telugu, Kannada and    Malayalam regions, undergoing changes in musical aspects and became a    southern music. It gained a name when Maharashtrian Kings who patronized    this music, named it as ' Karnatak' (Anglicized 'Carnatic') relating   it  to their immediate border region Karnataka where musicians came   from.  In some north Indian circles it is referred to as 'Madrasi Gana'   even  today.
Owing to Persian and Islamic influences in North India  from the 12th century onwards, Hindustani music and Carnatic music  styles diverged. By the 16th and 17th centuries, there was a clear  demarcation between Carnatic and Hindustani music.It was at this time  that Carnatic music flourished in Thanjavur, while the Vijayanagar Empire reached its greatest extent. Purandara Dasa, who is known as the father (Pitamaha) of Carnatic Music, formulated the system that is commonly used for the teaching of Carnatic music. Venkatamakhin invented and authored the formula for the melakarta system of raga classification in his Sanskrit work, the Chaturdandi Prakasika (1660 AD). Govindacharya is known for expanding the melakarta system into the sampoorna raga scheme - the system that is in common use today.
Carnatic music was mainly patronized by the local kings of the Kingdom of Mysore and Kingdom of Travancore    in the 18th through 20th centuries. The royalty of the kingdoms of    Mysore and Travancore were noted composers and proficient in playing    musical instruments, such as the veena, rudra veena, violin, ghatam, flute, mridangam, nagaswara and swarabhat. Some famous court-musicians and royalty proficient in music were Veene Sheshanna (1852–1926) and Veene Subbanna (1861–1939), among others.
With the dissolution of the erstwhile princely states and the Indian independence movement    reaching its conclusion in 1947, Carnatic music went through a  radical   shift in patronage into an art of the masses with ticketed   performances  organized by private institutions called sabhās. During the 19th century, Madras emerged as the locus for Carnatic music.




 
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