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9780195145915

Music in South India: The Karnatak Concert Tradition and Beyond Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780195145915

  • ISBN10:

    0195145917

  • Format: Package
  • Copyright: 2003-12-04
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

Music in South India is one of several case-study volumes that can be used along with Thinking Musically, the core book in the Global Music Series. Thinking Musically incorporates music from many diverse cultures and establishes the framework for exploring the practice of music around theworld. It sets the stage for an array of case-study volumes, each of which focuses on a single area of the world. Each case study uses the contemporary musical situation as a point of departure, covering historical information and traditions as they relate to the present. Visitwww.oup.com/us/globalmusic for a list of case studies in the Global Music Series. The website also includes instructional materials to accompany each study. Music in South India provides a vivid and focused introduction to the musical landscape of South India, discussing historical and contemporary performance, cultural history and geography, and the social organization of performance traditions. The book centers on Karnatak concert music, aunique performance practice that juxtaposes gorgeous musical compositions with many different types of improvisation. T. Viswanathan and Matthew Harp Allen first compare two types of song--bhajan, a structurally simple devotional genre, and kriti, the primary concert genre--and also analyze raga andtala, the basic elements underlying Karnatak music. They go on to examine the evolution of Karnatak music during the twentieth century, paying special attention to gender and caste and illuminating these issues through case studies and historical recordings (on the accompanying CD) of a small groupof enormously influential musicians. In the final chapter, the authors move beyond Karnatak music to address other aspects of South India's rich musical environment, such as its thriving popular music scene (based on cinema music); regional traditions ranging from the sacred to the secular, many ofwhich integrate elements from dance and drama; and contemporary composition. Featuring numerous listening activities, Music in South India is packaged with an 80-minute CD containing examples of the music discussed. The CD includes a full, uncut concert recording of a kriti performance, which shows how Karnatak musicians weave together composed and improvised elementsto create extended performances.

Author Biography

The late T. Viswanathan was Professor of Music at Wesleyan University. He was one of India's most noted and respected musicians, and received the NEA's National Heritage Fellowship Award in 1992 Matthew Harp Allen is Assistant Professor of Music and Director of the World Music Ensemble at Wheaton College (Massachusetts). A student of Karnatak vocal music with Viswanathan since 1983, he is also active as a guitarist and composer

Table of Contents

Foreword xv
Preface xvii
CD Track List xxiii
1. Song in South India 1(33)
Bhájan (Devotional Song)
1(14)
Songs and Singing
4(3)
Meaning of the Text: Devotion, Love, and Praise
7(2)
Celebrating Tyagarája in the United States and in South India
9(3)
Languages of the Region
12(3)
Kriti
15(18)
Evolution of Kriti
15(1)
Text and Context-a Continuum of Performance from Devotion to Virtuosity
15(4)
Music, Language, and Politics
19(1)
The Tamil Music Movement
19(2)
Muttuttandavar (Seventeenth Century)
21(2)
The Text of "I Trusted You/Urinal Nambinén" (CD track 3)
23(1)
The Musical Setting of "I Trusted You/Unnai Nambinén" (CD track 3)
24(2)
The Group's Progress Through the Kriti
26(3)
The Ensemble
29(1)
The Instruments
29(5)
Violin (Chordophone)
29(2)
Mridangam (Membranophone)
31(1)
Tambura (Chordophone) and Its Sruti, Drone, Function
32(1)
Summary
33(1)
2. Key Concepts in Karnãtak Music 34(22)
Tala: Meter and Rhythm in Karnãtak Music
34(8)
The Five "Families" of Rhythm and Drummers' Thinking
35(1)
Hand Gestures and Vocalized Syllable Sequences for Commonly Used Tãlas
36(2)
Tala Exercises in Three Speeds
38(4)
Raga: Melody in Karnãtak Music
42(9)
Scale
42(1)
Note (Svara) and Solfege Syllable Names
43(1)
Kiravani and Kapi Rãgas: Raga as a "Vast Ocean"
44(3)
Ornamentation (Gamaka)
47(1)
Phrase (Sañcãra or Prayóga)
48(1)
Phrases in Kiravãni and Kapi Ragas
49(2)
Functional Notes-Svaras Holding Particular Functions
51(1)
Integrated Melodic-Rhythmic Training
51(4)
Summary
55(1)
3. The Karnãtak Concert Today 56(14)
Presentation and Discussion of the "Main Piece" of a Concert
56(4)
The Setting
56(3)
Tuning Up
59(1)
Beginning
59(1)
Kriti as an Orally Transmitted Composed Case of a Performance
60(1)
Brief Guide to the Performance
60(9)
Composition and Improvisation; Fixity and Fluidity
60(1)
Kiravãni Raga Ãlãpana
61(2)
Aesthetics and Dynamics of Accompaniment
61(2)
Kriti: The Core Component
63(2)
The Pallavi
65(1)
The Anupallavi and Pallavi reprise
65(1)
The Caranam and Pallavi Reprise
65(1)
Niraval
65(1)
Svara Kalpana
66(2)
Different Ways to Improvise: A Comparison of Niraval and Svara Kalpana
66(2)
Tani Ãvarttanam-Drum Solo
68(1)
Summary
69(1)
4. Contextualizing South Indian Performance, Socially and Historically 70(33)
Women and Music: The Dévadãsi and Her Community
70(10)
Women's Public Performance Circa 1900
72(2)
Loss and Recovery of a Woman's Work
74(1)
"Now We Women Have a Platform to Commence Singing"-Bangalore Nagarathnammal and the Tyagarája Festival
75(1)
Bangalore Nagarathnammal as a Performer
76(4)
Sringãra Bhakti: Being in Love with God
76(3)
Listening through the Static: The Rise of Audio Recording
79(1)
Men and Music: From Temple and Court to Public and State Patronage
80(6)
Men's Performance in Precolonial South India
81(1)
The Hereditary Male Temple Service Musician
81(2)
The "Emperor of Nãgasvaram": T.N. Rájarattinam Pillai
83(3)
"The Audience Would Not Be Satisfied If He Did Not Play This Raga"
84(1)
Alãpana in Todi Raga
85(1)
A New World of Performance: Concert Halls, Media, and Audiences in the Urban Environment
86(9)
The Development of Radio
87(1)
The Recording Industry: Commodification and Resistance
88(1)
"The Effect of the Performance Should Be Such As to Keep the Listeners Spell-Bound"
88(7)
Men Scripting and Singing Women's Inner Feelings
91(4)
A Hereditary Music Family
95(6)
A Dual Musical Enculturation and Education
96(2)
"I Am Going to Snub These Male Chauvinists"
98(2)
Music and Gender Today
100(1)
Summary: An Ancient and Modern Tradition of Musical-Social Behavior
101(2)
5. Regional and Modern Traditions: Contemporary Music Making in South India and Beyond 103(26)
Music in Kérala
103(9)
Idakka, a Pressure Drum from Kerala
104(1)
Kathakali Dance Drama
105(3)
Character Types, Costume, and Makeup
106(2)
Changes in the Twentieth Century
108(1)
The Kathakali Music Ensemble
108(1)
Kathakali Songs: Slókam and Padam
109(1)
Performance of Padam from Nala Caritam
110(2)
Music of the Cinema in South India
112(4)
The "Company Drama" and the Silent Cinema
112(1)
Early Sound Films: The "Mythological"
113(1)
The "Social"
113(1)
The Playback Singer
114(1)
The Cinema and Karnatak Music: A Parting of Ways
114(1)
"When I Say Come/Ba Ennalu"
115(1)
Cross-Cultural Composition and Collaboration 116
"Can There Be Release/Mõksamu Galada?"
116(4)
Tatva, a Regional Performance Tradition in Karnataka State
120(8)
The Deccan Plateau: Meeting of North and South India
120(1)
The Kannalla Tatva Composer Sharif Saheb
121(1)
Hindu Muslim Relations in Karnãtaka State
121(1)
Kathã Performers of the Kinnari Jõgi Community
122(2)
"Why Do You Worry/Yãke Cinti?"
124(3)
A Circle Completed
127(1)
Summary
128(1)
Glossary 129(6)
Resources 135(8)
Index 143

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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