Look Inside

Forgotten Chapters of Music and 22 Krithis of Thyagaraja on the Science, Art and Beauty of Music)

FREE Delivery
Express Shipping
$16.50
$22
(25% off)
Express Shipping: Guaranteed Dispatch in 24 hours
Quantity
Delivery Ships in 1-3 days
Item Code: HBE590
Author: G. Dwarkanath
Publisher: Vasantha Vallabha Music Academy, Bengalore
Language: English
Edition: 2012
Pages: 93
Cover: PAPERBACK
Other Details 11x8.5 inch
Weight 266 gm
Book Description
About the Book

The book traces and tries to reacapture the greatness of our music system, how our ancestors developed it step by step, and how these traditions were almost forgotten after the Thyagaraja Dikshitar Syama Sastry period.

Restoring the greatness of the system is not impossible and can be achieved with some sincere effort.

For a start, students of music can start singing the initial lessons in the traditional way of starting from the lower nishadha to shadja to sing the shadja, from shadja to rishabha to sing the rishabha and so on. This is on the basis that a swara cannot be born unless it is started from the previous swara. This, Venkatamakhi says in his Chaturdandi Prakaasikha, is a great sangeetha rahasyam (music secret). This had been traditionally taught to students but had never been written down and had always been kept a secret. Venkatamakhi for the first time has written it down in black and white. This and two or three other such traditions will become clear on a study of this book.

About the Author

Gomatam Dwarakanath, the author, is a science and law graduate of Mysore University. Born in Bangalore, he belongs to an orthodox family of srivaishnavas, followers of Ramanuja. His ancestors hailed from Kancheepuram in Tamil Nadu and had migrated to Maloor in Channapatna district of Karnataka around the year 1780 during the Carnatic wars and consequent unsettled conditions in Kancheepuram. By tradition, the family members had always studied Telugu, perhaps due to the influence of the Vijayanagar empire under which Telugu was the state language almost in the entire South India. In 1946, at the age of 12, the author had started learning music under an able vidwan and subsequently had some advanced training in this field in the Ayyanar College of music started by the late T.Chowdiah. He joined The Hindu newspaper in Chennai in the editorial department in 1957 and retired in 2001 as Associate Editor. In Chennai he came into contact with many eminent musicians, chiefly Thanjavur Sankara Iyer, an eminent composer who taught him not only many rare krithis of Thyagaraja from the original Umayalpuram notebooks but also such ideas as a raga not being limited to the arohana and avarohana, and a janaka raga having some nuances of a janya raga also and so on. Having Tamil as the mother tongue, a native of Telugu country studying Telugu in school and college and growing up in Bangalore in the Kannada country helped him in being familiar with these languages, besides Sanskrit which he learnt. It is with this advantage that the classics were studied.

Preface

The Academy has been training studenty at a senior grade and encouraging them to import the simple yet powerful and effective path of bhakti as enunciated by saint composers like Purandaradasa and Tyagaraja while singing during the Aradhana celebrations. The Academy has in the past published reprints of Purandara Kriti Shataka (1964; Kannada) in four volumes as Purandara kirtanas covering 68 songs out of the total 100. Text was added in Tamil, Devanaagari with meanings in English for wider usage. Audio CDs and cassettes for the 68 songs were also brought out.

We are presently bringing out two books on Tyagaraaja kritis in English. The first book "Forgotten Chapters in Music" deals with the nature of the components of music viz. sruti, swara, raga etc in the former half and the meanings of Tyagaraajaa's songs on music in the latter half. The second book is on the highest quality gems among Tyaagaraaja Kritis viz. "Ghanaraaga Pancharatna Kritis".

The author of these two books, Shri G.Dwarakanath, retd. Associate Editor, The Hindu, Chennai, has a wide read knowledge on music. He also has long years of association with eminent scholars and musicians at Chennai. His commentary in English, is based on some traditional books which are in regional languages like Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, hence not easily accessible to the younger generation. Both the books, cover word by word meanings of songs, followed by a brief summary.

We hope that these books will be of use to students as well as all lovers of Carnatic music. Thanks to the staff of Elegant Printing Press, Bengalooru, for their excellent work.

Introduction

These are painful times for lovers of classical Carnatic music and more so for Carnatic music itself. This music has to a large extent lost its populanty among the masses and connoisseurs. Forty or fifty years ago one could see concert halls overflowing with eager audiences and at temple festivals most of the people listening and intently enjoying nadaswaram playing. All these now seem to be distant past dreams. Barring a few, most concerts nowadays attract meagre audiences in Chennai. The position in other cities like Bangalore, Hyderabad and Tiruchi is still not that bad but there too things are at best at a standstill.

This situation is not peculiar to Carnatic music-the outlook for classical music is equally bad in the western countries also where concert hall authorities are making Herculean efforts to attract audiences back to the halls but with little success and sales of classical music albums have been continually falling, with many well known companies producing such albums having already closed shop. Some critics have called modern classical music a 'torture', and the U.S. Army is actually using classical music to torture prisoners.

Whatever the situation in the west, in South India the general complaint from lovers of classical music is that barring a few very senior vidwans, what can be called great or haunting music is largely missing in present day concerts of others. There has been no concerted effort to study what is great music.

The reason, an elderly musician points out, for this state of affairs is that the quality of musical training which learners today get is poor and when they later attempt to sing in concerts they are unable to attract attention. It is not the fault of the newer musicians or that of their teachers. Young people leaming music today are as intelligent and talented as the great musicians of yesteryears but they are not getting the right kind of lessons.

It also needs to be noted that classical music has practically ceased to be a fulltime profession and most present-day musicians do love the art but cannot make it their profession because of poor earnings and have to toil in some other profession to earn a decent income. This may be one reason for the disappearing appeal of classical music, but there are more valid reasons.

This writer, while trying to write the meanings of some of Thyagaraja's songs on music, practically came to a halt at the song, Vara raga laya, where there is the saint's remark in the anupallavi that 'those who do not have a deep knowledge of the nuances of swara, jati and moorchana differences, are bragging they are experts in swara, raga and laya'. An effort to find out what this means by studying the Brihad Desi of Matanga, the Sangeetha Ratnakara of Sarnga Deva and the Chaturdandi Prakasika of Venkatamakhi led to the only conclusion possible - that Carnatic music has lost its moorings and is now a rootless system which is unable to produce great music and attract listeners.

The situation is so bad that most musicians do not even know the difference between a sruti and a swara and are using these terms as synonyms.

The ancient traditions which were adhered to till the life time of the Great Trinity (Dikshitar. Syama Sastry and Thyagaraja) started losing ground thereafter and has now been practically forgotten. After Venkatamakhi finalised the 72-melakartha scheme, to a large extent he and more fully his followers thought that the old ideas about swaras and ragas, swara and raga rasas and the like were all outdated and anachronistic, and could be forgotten. And the overenthusiastic fans of Venkatamakhi's ideas even started talking indecently about people who did not agree with them. And it is to these people that Thyagaraja has given his spirited reply.

Frequently Asked Questions
  • Q. What locations do you deliver to ?
    A. Exotic India delivers orders to all countries having diplomatic relations with India.
  • Q. Do you offer free shipping ?
    A. Exotic India offers free shipping on all orders of value of $30 USD or more.
  • Q. Can I return the book?
    A. All returns must be postmarked within seven (7) days of the delivery date. All returned items must be in new and unused condition, with all original tags and labels attached. To know more please view our return policy
  • Q. Do you offer express shipping ?
    A. Yes, we do have a chargeable express shipping facility available. You can select express shipping while checking out on the website.
  • Q. I accidentally entered wrong delivery address, can I change the address ?
    A. Delivery addresses can only be changed only incase the order has not been shipped yet. Incase of an address change, you can reach us at help@exoticindia.com
  • Q. How do I track my order ?
    A. You can track your orders simply entering your order number through here or through your past orders if you are signed in on the website.
  • Q. How can I cancel an order ?
    A. An order can only be cancelled if it has not been shipped. To cancel an order, kindly reach out to us through help@exoticindia.com.
Add a review
Have A Question

For privacy concerns, please view our Privacy Policy