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<document xmlns="http://cnx.rice.edu/cnxml" xmlns:md="http://cnx.rice.edu/mdml/0.4" xmlns:bib="http://bibtexml.sf.net/" id="None">
  <name>Listening to Indian Classical Music</name>
  <metadata>
  <md:version>**new**</md:version>
  <md:created>2004/11/23 13:08:50.108 US/Central</md:created>
  <md:revised>2004/12/15 13:55:34.487 US/Central</md:revised>
  <md:authorlist>
      <md:author id="Catherine">
      <md:firstname>Catherine</md:firstname>
      <md:othername>A.</md:othername>
      <md:surname>Schmidt-Jones</md:surname>
      <md:email>casjones@soltec.net</md:email>
    </md:author>
  </md:authorlist>

  <md:maintainerlist>
    <md:maintainer id="Catherine">
      <md:firstname>Catherine</md:firstname>
      <md:othername>A.</md:othername>
      <md:surname>Schmidt-Jones</md:surname>
      <md:email>casjones@soltec.net</md:email>
    </md:maintainer>
  </md:maintainerlist>
  
  <md:keywordlist>
    <md:keyword>Hindustani music</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>India</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>Indian classical music</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>Indian music</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>Karnatic music</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>raga</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>ragam</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>sitar</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>taanpura</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>tala</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>tambura</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>tanpura</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>thaalam</md:keyword>
  </md:keywordlist>

  <md:abstract>For the Western listener, some suggestions for beginning to listen to and appreciate the classical music of India.</md:abstract>
</metadata>

  <content>
  <section id="s0">
    <name>Introduction</name>

    <para id="p0a">
Many <cnxn document="m11421">Western</cnxn> listeners find themselves drawn to the classical music of India but aren't sure how to listen to it. The two traditions developed independently for thousands of years, and the music of one tradition can seem mystifying to someone raised in the other tradition. Below are some suggestions to help the beginning Western listener begin to make sense of Indian music.
    </para>
    <para id="p0b">
North Indian and South Indian classical music are two distinct traditions, but they share many similarities. Both will be discussed here in very general terms. Indian pop music and folk music will not be discussed. If you want more specific, technical information about tuning and <foreign>raga</foreign>s, please see <cnxn document="m12459">Indian Classical Music: Tuning and Ragas</cnxn>.	
    </para>

  </section>

  <section id="s5">
    <name>History and Geography</name>

    <para id="p5a">
There are two distinct traditions in Indian Music. The South Indian, or <term>Karnatic</term>, and the North Indian, or <term>Hidustani</term>. The Karnatic is the more ancient and purely Indian tradition. The Hindustani tradition has been more influenced through the years by other peoples and musical traditions, particularly by the Moghul (or Mughal) invasion and empire.
    </para>
    <para id="p5b">
Besides bringing musical influences from other cultures, the Mughal empire encouraged the appreciation of music as an upper-class, court activity, in much the same way that European classical music was mainly supported by the court aristocracy through the Baroque and Classical periods. Hindustani music therefore shares Western "classical" music's tendency towards long performances geared towards knowledgeable audiences. In the case of Indian classical music, this means very long, improvised performances on a single <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn>. In the south, music remained more commonly associated with everyday religious and secular activities. Even formal performances tend to feature shorter improvisations alongside (relatively) short composed pieces.  
    </para>
    <para id="p5c">
Thanks mainly to international superstars like Ravi Shankar, Westerners are more likely to encounter music from the Hindustani tradition. In general, terms below are from the Hindustani tradition, since that is the one that Westerners are most likely to encounter.
    </para>

  </section>

 <section id="s1">
  <name>Basic Elements</name>
 
   <para id="p01a">
The <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> and the <cnxn target="s15">tala</cnxn> are the basic building blocks of any classical Indian piece of music. These mainly affect the melody (<foreign>raga</foreign>) and rhythm (<foreign>tala</foreign>). But the approach to other basic elements of music - form, tuning, harmony, texture, timbre, and improvisation versus composition - are also quite different from Western music. Here is a short, basic comparison of each element of the two musics.
   </para>

  <section id="s11">
    <name>Improvisation</name>

    <para id="p1a">
Unlike most <cnxn document="m11421">Western "classical" music</cnxn>, most Indian classical music is improvisational. The musician chooses a <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> and a <cnxn target="s11">tala</cnxn>. These provide a basis for the musician to improvise a solo. This is a little similar to the way the <cnxn document="m11654" target="l0b">chord progression</cnxn> and the background provided by the the rhythm section of a jazz band give the jazz soloist the basis to improvise a solo. Of course, both the basis and the rules for improvising are different from jazz, so the results also sound very different.
    </para>

    </section>

    <section id="s12">
      <name>Melody and Mood: The Raga</name>

      <para id="p12a">
The <cnxn document="m11647">melodies</cnxn> and <cnxn document="m11654">harmonies</cnxn> in Western music are based on <cnxn document="m10851">major</cnxn> and <cnxn document="m10856">minor</cnxn> scales. Major-key melodies and harmonies are different from minor-key melodies and harmonies, but the same melody and <cnxn document="m11654" target="l0b">chord progression</cnxn> can be easily <cnxn document="m10668">transposed</cnxn> from one major key to a different major key, or from one minor key to a different minor key. Of course, some Western music is <cnxn document="m11633">modal</cnxn>, and some uses pentatonic, blues, twelve-tone, or <cnxn document="m11636">other scales</cnxn>, but the vast majority of the music can be classified as major or minor.
    </para>
    <para id="p12b">
The melodies of Indian music are based on <term>raga</term>s (in southern India, <term>ragam</term>). Like a scale, the <foreign>raga</foreign> is a list of the notes that are used in a particular piece of music. But there are many more <foreign>ragas</foreign> than there are scales - hundreds - and the various <foreign>ragas</foreign> are much more different from each other than the various scales are. The number of notes used, the <cnxn document="m10867">intervals</cnxn> between the notes, and even the <cnxn target="s6">tuning</cnxn>, can be different from one <foreign>raga</foreign> to the next. Because of these differences, the rules for constructing melodies are also different in different <foreign>raga</foreign>s, and so the melodies found in various <foreign>raga</foreign>s will not be the same; a melody cannot be transposed from one <foreign>raga</foreign> to another, because they are simply too different. 
      </para>
     <para id="p12g">
You may have noticed that major-key music tends to have different moods than minor-key music. (See <cnxn document="m10851">Major Keys and Scales</cnxn> for more about this.) <foreign>Raga</foreign>s are also associated with particular moods. Some are also associated with a specific time of day (early evening, for example) or year (the monsoon season, for example). Creating the <foreign>raga</foreign>'s proper mood is one of the Indian musician's most important tasks.
     </para>
      <para id="p12c">
If you don't mind getting a little technical, there is more information on <foreign>raga</foreign> at <cnxn document="m12459">Indian Classical Music: Tuning and Ragas</cnxn>.
      </para>

  </section>
  <section id="s6">
    <name>Harmony and Tuning</name>

      <para id="p12d">
Much of the interest in Western music lies in its complex, ever-changing <cnxn document="m11654">harmony</cnxn>. Indian music takes a different approach. Melodic scales and rhythms are much, much more various and complex than they are in Western music. Harmony, on the other hand, is usually kept simple, in the form of an unchanging <cnxn document="m11844">drone</cnxn> of a <cnxn document="m11639" target="s11">pure</cnxn> <cnxn document="m10867" target="p21a">perfect fifth</cnxn> or <cnxn document="m10867" target="p21a">perfect fourth</cnxn>. (See <cnxn target="p13b">below</cnxn> for more about the drone instrument.)
      </para>
      <para id="p12e">
In order to fit better with the pure interval of the drone, the tuning system used is not <cnxn document="m11639" target="s22">equal temperament</cnxn>; instead a <cnxn document="m11639" target="p12a">just intonation</cnxn> system, based on the pure fifth, is used. The tuning of the other notes (the ones not played by the drone) can vary to suit the particular <foreign>raga</foreign>. For more technical information on tuning, please see <cnxn document="m11639">Tuning Systems</cnxn> and <cnxn document="m12459">Indian Classical Music: Tuning and Ragas</cnxn>.
      </para>

    </section>
    <section id="s15">
      <name>Rhythm: The Tala</name>

      <para id="p11a">
Western music tends to use only a few popular <cnxn document="m12405">meters</cnxn> for almost all of its music, and these meters are usually felt as repetitions of two, three, or four beats. The rhythms of Indian music, rather than being organized into short <cnxn document="m10956" target="s1">measures</cnxn>, are organized in long rhythmic cycles called <term>tala</term>s (in southern Indian <term>thaalam</term>). There are more than 100 different <foreign>tala</foreign>s. These rhythmic cycles are quite long and complex; the Karnatic tradition in particular includes some of the most complex and sophisticated rhythmic structures of any music tradition.
      </para>
      <para id="p11b">
But some sections of a performance (see <cnxn target="s14">below</cnxn>) may be in free rhythm, with the <foreign>tala</foreign> introduced in the middle of the piece.
      </para>

    </section>
    <section id="s13">
      <name>Color and Texture</name>

      <para id="p13b">
The <cnxn document="m11645">texture</cnxn> of Indian music is typically a single melody supported by <cnxn document="m11844">drones</cnxn> and rhythm percussion. 
      </para>
      <para id="p13a">
The <cnxn document="m11059">timbre</cnxn> (color) of Indian music can sound very exotic to the Western ear, because of the unfamiliar instruments used.
      </para>
      <para id="p13d">
The harmony is usually provided by a drone instrument called the <term>tanpura</term>. (There  are many alternative English spellings for the name of this instrument, including <term>taanpura</term> and <term>tambura</term>.) This instrument has four very long strings. The strings are plucked one after the other, continuously throughout the music. It takes about 5 seconds for one four-string cycle to be plucked, and although the drone itself is constant, the complex interactions between the <cnxn document="m11118">harmonics</cnxn> of the strings vary during the cycle, creating a shimmering, buzzing effect that the Western listener will find quite exotic.
      </para>
      <para id="p13f">
In India, vocal soloists are very popular, but Westerners tend to hear instrumental soloists. The melody instrument is often also a stringed instrument: the most well-known is probably the <term>sitar</term>, a <cnxn document="m11896" target="s21">plucked-lute-family chordophone</cnxn> that has moveable frets to accomodate changes in tuning from one <foreign>raga</foreign> to the next. Other popular solo strings include the <term>surbahar</term>, which is basically a bass sitar, the <term>sarod</term>, a fretless plucked-lute-family instrument, and the <term>vina</term>, a <cnxn document="m11896" target="s21">zither-family chordophone</cnxn> with gourd resonators. On many of these instruments, only some of the strings are for playing the melody. Other strings are drone/rhythm strings and/or strings that are not plucked but only vibrate sympathetically with the other strings. Again, this can produce a buzzing <cnxn document="m11059">timbre</cnxn> that Westerners  find exotic. 
      </para>
      <para id="p13g">
There are other, less common solo string instruments. Bamboo flutes (<term>bansuri</term> or <term>venu</term>) are also popular solo instruments, and some Western instruments, particularly <term>violin</term>, are also fairly popular.
      </para>
      <para id="p13e">
The rhythmic accompaniment is usually provided by the <term>tabla</term>, a set of two small drums that are played with the hand. The <foreign>tabla</foreign> is tuned to the <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> by tapping wedges on the side of the instrument. Because the <foreign>tabla</foreign> is played with the hand rather than a stick or beater, the rhythms of the accomplished player are subtle and expressive as well as complex.
      </para>

    </section>

    <section id="s14">
      <name>Form</name>

      <para id="p14a">
There are many forms in Indian classical music, including shorter composed songs and hymns. But the form of the fully-explored <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> has three main sections. 
      </para>
      <para id="p14b">
The opening section, the <term>alap</term>, is a long, slow, free-rhythm improvisation. In it, the performer reveals the <foreign>raga</foreign> gradually, note-by-note. Although this section may be hardest to appreciate for listeners accustomed to the relentless rhythms of Western rock and pop, to those who understand Indian music, it is the section in which the musicianship of the great performer is most obvious.
      </para>
      <para id="p14c">
The <term>jor-alap</term> section introduces a rhythmic pulse, and the music becomes more animated. 
      </para>
      <para id="p14d">
The percussionist joins in on the <term>jhala</term> section, as the music becomes faster, more rhythmically complex, and more exciting.
      </para>

    </section> 
 </section>  

  <section id="s2">
    <name>Recognizing Indian Classical Music</name>

    <para id="p2a">
For the Western listener, probably the easiest clue that you are listening to Indian classical music is the instrumentation. Listen for the distinctive drone of the <cnxn target="p13d">tanpura</cnxn>, the expressive rhythms of the <cnxn target="p13e">tabla</cnxn>, and the un-Western <cnxn document="m11059">timbres</cnxn> of vocal and instrumental soloists.
    </para>
    <para id="p2c">
Listen also for the simple <cnxn target="s6">drone-and-rhythm accompaniment</cnxn> and the exotic <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn>-scale melodies and ornaments.
    </para>
    <para id="p2d">
As a first guess, a long piece with a very leisurely, free-rhythm opening is likely North Indian. A shorter piece with very complex rhythms is more likely to be South Indian.
    </para>
    <para id="p2b">
If the music has an Indian-sounding melody, but features a nasal-sounding vocalist and seems to have the simpler rhythms and bigger harmonies of Western music, you may be listening to Indian pop music, a genre largely developed by and for India's extensive movie industry.
    </para>

  </section>
  <section id="s3">
    <name>What to Listen For</name>

    <para id="p3a">
A listener educated in Indian classical music will be able to identify the <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> and <cnxn target="s11">tala</cnxn> by listening to the music. This is too much to ask of the beginning Western listener. Listen for the major sections of the music, the slow revelation of the <foreign>raga</foreign>, for the buildup and release of tension in both the melody and the rhythm, and the rhythmic excitement of the final section. You may also want to try to get into the mood of the piece; the mood may be hinted at by the performer, program notes, or the specific time of day or season that the raga is asssociated with. 
    </para>
    <para id="p3b">
If you have an ear well-trained in Western music, you may want to listen for the scale notes used by the <cnxn target="s12">raga</cnxn> and their relationship to the drone notes, and try to figure out the number of beats in the <cnxn target="s11">tala</cnxn>.
    </para>

  </section>

  <section id="s4">
     <name>Suggested Listening</name>

    <list id="l4a">
         <item>
The music of Ravi Shankar, the internationally famous <foreign>sitar</foreign> player, is easy to find and a good place to start.
         </item>
         <item>
If you find the buzzing sound of all those drone and sympathetic strings distracting, try to find some of the vocal-solo music which is so popular in India, or try to find some bamboo-flute-solo music.
         </item>
         <item>
The <cite>Rough Guide</cite> series is a good place to find additional information on Indian music as well as an extensive list of excellent recordings.
         </item>
         <item>
As of this writing, you could find links to downloadable Indian music at <link src="http://www.iiap.res.in/personnel/baliga/public_html/hind.html">Links to Hindustani music</link> and <link src="http://www.ecf.toronto.edu/~iyer/carnatic.html">CarnaticMusic@Skule</link>
         </item>
    </list>

  </section>
 

 
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