Monday, Feb 18 2002
The Marwa Matrix (Page 1 of 2) By Rajan P. ParrikarRajan P. Parrikar is a recognized expert on Indian Classical music and shares his knowledge freely with those interested in
the subject. He has written a series of articles on Classical Indian Music some of which have been archived on Sawf. Click here to read Rajan's earlier
articles. |
 Rajan P. Parrikar.
|
Namashkar.
The mention of Marwa insists on stirring halcyon memories of many youthful evenings spent walking on the Miramar beach in Panjim, lugging Amir Khan's stupendous opus in the corridors of my mind. The shimmering expanse of the Arabian Sea in all its vespertine glory made for an inspiring visual and, lost in this intoxicating ambience, I occasionally allowed myself the fantasy of imagining what it might be like to feel and see Raga from the Himalayan heights of an Amir Khan. I wondered if that great man, too, had likened himself to "a boy playing on the sea-shore, diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of Raga lay all undiscovered before me." Upon conclusion of this reverie, I would walk home, eat a hearty meal and hit the sack. Those were the days when we took pride & joy in leisure. How times have changed. Today, people are at pains to tell us how "busy" their lives are. It is as if they have been charged with re-designing God's floor plan for the universe.
In this installment devoted to the Marwa group, we will examine its familiar members and unveil some of the lesser known
affiliates. A companion feature to follow soon will address the denizens of the "Poorvi Province."
Throughout this discussion, M = shuddha and
m = teevra madhyam.
The Marwa-Pooriya-Sohani axis
Marwa is among the ten thATs enumerated by Pandit Vishnu Narayan
Bhatkhande and is characterized by the swara set, S r
G m P D N,
corresponding to the Carnatic melakartA Gamanasrama. The
flagship rAga of this thAT bears commandeers it name but omits the pancham
altogether. The same holds true for two other principals of this
group - Pooriya and Sohani. The three rAgas maintain a collegial
but contrasting melodic dynamic. It is therefore instructive to view
them together under the same lens. Here is a marvelous example
of the magic of Raga music - the evolution of differences originating
from the same scale set through the agency of chalan bheda (melodic
contours), ucchAraNa bheda (intonation of swara) and vAdi
bheda (relative emphasis of swara). Facility in this sport
demands cultivation of appropriate habits of mind and ceaseless
reflection. But the game is well worth the candle for the Ananda it
brings to the sAdhaka.
The main idea in Raga Marwa
is the overwhelming dominance of r and D. This is an apavAda
since no consonance exists between r and D; it must have been
a genius who sensed the germ of an idea here and brought it
to melodic fruition. The definitive tonal sentences are:
D' N' r G r, N' D', m' D' S N' r,
S
The points of note in this poorvAnga phrase are the nyAsa on
rishab and dhaivat, the langhan (skipping) of the S in both Arohi and avarohi directions, and the
alpatva (smallness/weakness)
of N.
D, m G r G m D, D m G r
The madhya saptak movement. Marwa typically employs
'khaDA' swaras - a direct and unwavering lagAv,
shorn of delicacies and meeNDs (the situation is
different in the scale-congruent Raaga Pooriya).
D N r" N D, m D N D S"
The uttarAnga marker where the nishAd is often skipped en route
to the shaDaj (Pooriya too shares this lakshaNA, but not Sohani).
That was Marwa in a nutshell. The symbiotic relationship between
r and D is
affective. Both the swaras are full-blown nyAsa
locations, yet bound to one another by an invisible cord: the pull of one is
strongly felt when you
visit the other.
We now prise open Raga Pooriya, an old rAga with
a swara locus identical to Marwa. Most popular accounts distinguish
the two based on their vAdi-samvAdi pair: r-D in
Marwa and
G-N in Pooriya. This is only part of the story.
Pooriya
employs delicate gestures and special sangatis through which
the G-N dominance is realized. It is not simply
a matter of
switching the vAdi-samvAdi pair. The lakshaNAs of
Pooriya are:
N' r G, G r N' D' N', N' m' D' S
The gandhAr is advanced, both r and D recede.
G m D N, N (N)m, G; m D-G m G
This tonal phrase represents Pooriya's prANa and packs
several key lakshaNAs: the dominance of G, the
N-m coupling,
and the D-G sangata. There is a measure of
subtlety to the intonation
soon to be superbly illustrated by Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang."
G m D N D S", N r" N (N)m, G, m D-G m
G, r S
Although the N is very strong in Pooriya, it
is, like Marwa, often
skipped en route to the S. The swoop from N to m is delicious;
sometimes it works in the reverse direction as well (N'-m).
 < -- Pandit Ramashreya Jha
"Ramrang"
Next in line, Raga Sohani. The first-order difference here
is that instead of the N'-r-G chalan employed in
Marwa and Pooriya,
the rishab is skipped and we have a N'-S-G type
of chalan. And unlike
the other two, Sohani's strength is vested in D
and G. Then there are
the special gestures. Sohani is an uttarAnga-pradhAna rAga, its
essence apprehended in the following sentence:
G m D N S", S"r" S"r" N S" N D, N D-G m
G
The nishAd is a required conduit to the tAr S".
As in
Pooriya, the D-G sangati is also observed but
the attack
is markedly different. In Sohani the D-G
prayoga
is initiated from N whereas in Pooriya it is
typically lauched
from m. Keen attention to these minutiae is
vital and cuts
to the core of Raga music. Great musicians instinctively recognize such
bheda-bhAva even though
they may not have the requisite expository skills or the vocabulary
to verbalize them.
Everything I have written above is superfluous, for Jha-sahab has
magnificently distilled the essence of these three rAgas and packaged
it into 6 masterful minutes. We are privileged that someone of his
background and calibre is still among the living, and fortunate
that the technology now exists for bringing him to a worldwide
audience.
Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" on the Marwa-Pooriya-Sohani axis -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/jha_marwaspeak.ram
With that propaedeutic to build upon, it is time get our feet wet.
Raga Marwa
 Lata Mangeshkar -- >
Lata Mangeshkar's beauty from SAAZ AUR AAWAAZ (1966)www.sawf.org/audio
composed by Naushad belongs to the ranks of the finest
'light' numbers based in this rAga: pAyaliyA bANwari bAje -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/lata_payaliya.ram
This quasi-Marwa has been beautifully composed
by K. Mahavir. Mahavir Kathak
comes from a long line of accomplished classical musicians.
His father, Mahadev Prasad Kathak, was associated with Swami
Hari Vallabh (after whom the famous annual sammelan in
Jullunder takes its name). Lata Mangeshkar: sAnjha bhayi ghara AjA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/lata_sanjhbhayi.ram
In Jha-sahab's exquisite suite, the vilambit bandish set in
Roopaka at once reveals the cut of Marwa's jib: joga le
Aye tuma Udho-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/jha_marwa_vil.ram
At the beginning of the next clip Jha-sahab explains the textual
import, then sketches his elegantly designed cheez:
gyAna ki tori bAta sunata lAge neeka nA
mere to mana ramey Madhava meN
japa-tapa-sAdhana-guna arpana Shyam charana
'Ramrang' dhyAna dharana ki chalana nA hamana meN
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/jha_marwa_druta.ram
 < -- Vasantrao Deshpande
When Vasantrao Deshpande passed away, Bhimsen declared that
Marwa had died in Maharashtra. Vasantrao's winsome phirat
and spontaneous delivery make for a memorable Marwa -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/vasantrao_marwa.ram
In this mehfil recording, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan wields an old
Khayal (documented by Bhatkhande) which places the sam on
the mandra teevra madhyam: nanadiyA chavAva -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bgak_marwa.ram
Aftab-e-Mousiqui Faiyyaz Khan's certitude in intonation expresses
well the khaDA swaras of Marwa as witness this unpublished excerpt -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/fhk_marwa.ram
Anant Manohar Joshi (Antubuwa), a disciple of
Balkrishnabuwa Ichalkaranjikar (the man responsible for
bringing Khayal gAyaki to Maharashtra), trained several
musicians of eminence among them his son, Gajananrao Joshi.
This recording of archival value has an Avartana or two of
Antubuwa's Khayalnuma in Jhoomra tAla followed by
a traditional cheez attributed to 'Rangile', bolana bina
kabahuN (Vasantrao sings this in druta Ektala, so documented by Bhatkhande)
-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/antubuwa_marwa.ram
The popular bandish piyA more anata des gai'lavA is put through
the Atrauli-Jaipur drill by Mallikarjun Mansur -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/mansur_marwa.ram
Bhimsen Joshi blends a soupçon of Raga Shree (mP->r) into Marwa to create a haunting effect.
There's a cameo for the
komal dhaivat (1:56 into the clip) -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bhimsen_marwashree.ram
 Jitendra Abhisheki -- >
Jagannathbuwa Purohit "Gunidas" conceived this explosive cheez,
delivered here by his disciple Jitendra Abhisheki: ho guniyana mela -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/abhisheki_marwa.ram
Abdul Karim Khan's blazing Tarana -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/akk_marwa.ram
 < -- Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze
Ramkrishnabuwa Vaze's dégagé manner is always a great pleasure -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/vazebuwa_marwa.ram
 Amir Khan -- >
The fleet lined up thus far has been of a very high quality. Now
please wipe your slate clean and jettison those Marwas.
Of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson remarked, "He was not of an age, but for
all time." The same is true of Amir Khan's Marwa. It is not merely
a performance. It is the ne plus ultra in meditation. What
Einstein's General Theory is to scientific thought Amir Khan's
Marwa is to musical thought. We must make do with but a
snatch here. The traditional piyA more anata des gai'lava in vilambit
Jhoomra, followed by guru bina gyAna nA pAve -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/amirkhan_marwa.ram
Raga Pooriya
Also known as Raat-ki-Pooriya, Pooriya's lakshANAs emerge
resplendent in Bhimsen Joshi (the reader is encouraged to recall
Jha-sahab's discourse on the subject). Right away in the opening
movement we have the elongated N and the N-m sangati,
eventually culminating in the sam via N'-r-N'-m'.
Both the
compositions are traditional: Sadarang's vilambit pyAre de gara
lAgi and the druta cheez, ghaDiyAN ginata jAta -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bhimsen_pooriya.ram
Behold the D-G sangati embedded in GmD-Gm G within the first
30 seconds of this Amir Khan classic. Bhatkhande has documented this Khayal:
yAre
maulA yalA yalalA le -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/amirkhan_pooriya.ram
We have come to expect coups de theatre from Omkarnath Thakur
and he doesn't disappoint. A traditional composition favoured by
the Gwalior musicians, sughara banA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/ot_pooriya.ram
D.V. Paluskar plies the selfsame sughara banA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/paluskar_pooriya.ram
Incidently, Bhatkhande's documented notation for sughara banA
shows the sam to be on the rishab but the subsequent movement
converges on the mandra nishAd. Recall that Amir Khan's druta
cheez in Marwa places its sam on the mandra nishAd but the thrust
points to the dhaivat. Now, if ethnopimp A saw Bhatkhande (remember
that no ethnopimp has the ability and knowledge to understand
much less critique Bhatkhande) he would conclude that
the Chaturpandit didn't know his Pooriya from Marwa and
publish this 'finding' in an ethnoporn rag. Then, ethnopimp B
will refer to A's ejaculate and in a display of tautological genius
declare it to be "seminal." Both A and B will then be awarded
tenure at their respective schools.
For the uninitiated, the ethnopimp calls himself "ethnomusicologist"
and is found loitering in the music departments of universities
in Western Europe, America and Canada. The racist term "ethnomusicology"
(when did you last hear the music of Beethoven studied under
"ethnomusicology"?) refers to the field infested by these worthless
parasites masquerading as academics. There are PhD theses, careers
and tenure to be had for the asking, for the benevolent Lord
expressly created the "third-world" cultures to be a font of rich
pastureland for the vultures inhabiting the humanities departments
in the West.
Apropos of Indian music, the ethnopimp had once fancied
himself as the intermediary between the Ustads and the lay
Indian masses, arrogating for himself the onerous task (the
proverbial "white man's burden") of explaining to the Indians
their own music. Never mind that the titmouse wouldn't recognize
swara even if it bit off his (or her) buttcheeks. Alas, things
haven't gone quite the way the ethnopimp had hoped. The newer
generation of Indians decided it wasn't going to play possum
while the ethnopimp peddled his balderdash. Today, the
ethnopimp lies in ruins, his family jewels shattered and his
head combed at will by even the kindergarten-going Indian child.
En passant, as a pleasurable pastime, I propose that Indians
fund a 'research' grant to study the ethnopimps and the
twaddle they have excreted all these years. A few ethnopimps
could be rounded up to be our lab rats. At the end of this
study (which ought not to take long - the combined 'knowledge'
of all ethnopimps put together can be had for a penny and you'll
get some change back) the poseurs can be officially
certified for the sewer rats that they are.
Reverting to the topic at hand, Bhatkhande's discourse on
Pooriya contains a rare and telling display of emotion. Recall
that his magnum opus Hindustani Sangeet Paddhati
is in the form
of a Socratic dialogue between pupil and master. At one
point, Panditji digresses (my translation cannot quite convey
the same effect as that in Marathi): ...Many years ago
I heard this rAga from a very famous Musalman gAyak. Believe it
or not, for a few moments I was lost to the world. You will not be
able to imagine the magnitude of the effect that his music wrought
on my person. Because you have not had that kind of anubhava yet
and because you have yet to acquire the requisite depth in this field...
Bhatkhande must be made compulsory reading for anyone setting
out to write anything on Hindustani music. His work is, to
put it mildly, "a feast of reason and flow of soul." Finally,
he was not a "musicologist" as is commonly cited by the
uneducated. Bhatkhande's work encompassed Music. He
was a musician, a vAggeyakAra, a shAstrakAra and a vidwAn
all rolled into one. He was also a visionary (that much molested
word of the dotcom era) with a deep social conscience.
"Musicologist" is suggestive of a relatively low-level activity. There
is no need at all to seek recourse to inadequate foreign
terminology, to describe a phenomenon the Western world is
unfamiliar with, when several Indian terms serve the
purpose admirably.
Vilayat Hussain Khan, accompanied by his son Younus Hussain
Khan: pyAra de gara lAge -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/vhk_pooriya.ram
A vigorous nom-tom inaugurates this rendition of
'Aftab-e-Mausiqui' Faiyyaz Khan. His colophon
"Prempiya" is heard in the antarA of the bandish: maiN kara Ayi
piyA sanga -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/fhk_pooriya.ram
An unpublished selection of Mallikarjun Mansur completes the Pooriya tableau
-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/mansur_pooriya.ram
Raga Sohani
The sprightly Sohani is an instant pleaser much like that buxom
leotard-wrapped babe at your local gym that you lust after while
pretending to work out (by way of comparison, think of Marwa as
your mother-in-law: solid, ponderous and seriously unfunny). The
Carnatic equivalent of Sohani is Hamsananda.
The number from SUVARNA SUNDARI (1957) set to
music by Adi Narayana Rao is a perennial favourite. Lata
Mangeshkar and Mohammad Rafi: kuhu kuhu bole koyaliyA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/latarafi_kuhukuhu.ram
Another old classic, from SANGEET SAMRAT TANSEN (1962),
tuned by S.N. Tripathi for Mukesh: jhoomti chali havA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/mukesh_jhoomti.ram
From GRIHASTHI (1963), music by Ravi, Asha Bhonsle's voice:
jeevana jyota jale -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/asha_jeevanajyot.ram
That much of Sohani's activity is uttarAnga-based should be
evident by now. Next, Jha-sahab sketches a traditional cheez:
bAri bAri jA'oon Murari -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/jha_sohani.ram
The movie MUGHAL-E-AAZAM (1960) carried a rendition by
Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, patterned after the well-known thumri,
prema ki mAri qatAra. BGAK's immensively popular classic: prema
jogana bana -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bgak_premjogana.ram
On the heels of prema ki mAri qatAra, an unpublished Punjabi bandish
-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bgak_sohani.ram
 < -- Bade Ghulam Ali
Khan blesses Lata Mangeshkar
Kumar Gandharva's thoroughly fetching composition
is delivered with his customary verve: ranga nA DAro Shyamji -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/kumar_sohani.ram
Bismillah Khan, the swarasmith par excellence, spins his magic -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/bismillah_sohani.ram
We come to the final entry in the Sohani catalogue, the sankeerNa Raga
Sohani-Pancham. As
the name suggests, the rAga blends elements of Raga Pancham (see On
Raga Bhatiyar) with those of Sohani. The motivated reader should
be able to figure out the dynamic. Vilayat Hussain Khan "Pranpiya": sakhi
mori -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/vhk_sohanipancham.ram
Raga Bibhas (Marwa thAT)
Bibhas has cast in its lot not with one but with three thATs - Bhairav,
Poorvi and Marwa, respectively. Even within each thAT it has
spun off subsidiary versions. The auDav-jAti Bibhas of the
Marwa-thAT - S r G P D - is the most
popular. D and r
dominate the proceedings; the pancham is another important nyAsa
location. Oftentimes, the r is rendered durbal
or even langhan
alpatva (skipped) in ArohAtmaka prayogas. An AvirbhAva of
Deshkar obtains in this formulation. The following sentence
conveys the essence:
G P D, D, P G r, S (P)G P, D, P (S")D S" r"
S, D, P
Occasionally the kaNs of m and N imparted cause
no injury to the rAga bhAva.
 'Chaturpandit' Vishnu
Narayan Bhatkhande -- >
Jitendra Abhisheki sings the very popular composition, He Narahara
Narayana. It is seldom mentioned that this is a composition of
Pandit V.N. Bhatkhande. Panditji's original Dhrupad composition has
been adapted by Khayaliyas. Abhisheki
stays textually true (almost!) to Bhatkhande whose colophon 'chatura'
is cleverly wedged in the antarA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/abhisheki_bibhas.ram
The lakshaNAs are clearly enunciated in this segment of
Shruti Sadolikar. Attention is drawn to the strong
dhaivat and the langhan of rishab in Arohi sanchAris -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/shruti_bibhas.ram
Kishori Amonkar's Bibhas is exemplary for its sensitivity and
subtlety in intonation. In this clip, Kishori singles out the dhaivat
for her shruti-play, toying with it, not explicitly advancing the
komal dhaivat but creating a deliberate AbhAs through delicate
meeNDs. Watch out for the first instance at 0.05 into the clip.
Narahari Narayana, this time in roopak tAla -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/kishori_bibhas.ram
A splendid, albeit maverick, Bibhas by Kesarbai Kerkar concludes
this section. Catch the distinct teevra madhyam in the mandra
saptak in S (D')m' D' S at 0:17. Then comes a
startling shuddha
rishab in the tAr saptak, viz., G"R"S" at around
0:53. There
are more deliberate occurrences of this shuddha rishab in the
tAns following. This bandish, morA re, is also heard in renditions
of the Poorvi-thAT Bibhas -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/kesarbai_bibhas.ram
< -- Kesarbai Kerkar with
Dhondutai Kulkarni
Raga Jait
Jait has a degree of overlap with Bibhas but there
are compelling differences. Consider the following chalan:
S G P G P, P DG P, P D P S", S" r" S", S"->P, P
D G P, P G r S
P has now advanced whereas D is in the back seat. The beauty
of Raga! The clusters P DG P and P D P S", and the S"-P
swoop
are Jait's signposts.
Jha-sahab gives the chalan and then sketches a composition -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/jha_jait.ram
Vasantrao Deshpande: kalasha jyoti lAgi -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/vasantrao_jait.ram
The Atrauli-Jaipur
version is bi-rishab (a variant documented by (who else?) Bhatkhande).
Observe the first instance of the shuddha rishab at around 0:18 in
Mallikarjun Mansur's hitherto unpublished excerpt -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/mansur_jait.ram
The Rampur-Sahaswan vocalist Hafeez Ahmed Khan makes
his maiden appearance on SAWF -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/hafeezahmad_jait.ram
Ravi Shankar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/marwa/rs_jait.ram
These five preceding rAgas form the core from which
several other Marwa-thAT melodies derive their genetic
material. A study of these fundamentals is sufficient to
understand the rest of the menagerie which is, in the main,
a consequence of an appropriate combination of the
foregoing melodic behaviors.
SankeerNa and joD rAgas have a limited compass. Their
lakshaNAs are usually embedded in a heritage composition
from which the development is extrapolated. The asthAi
and antarA hold the key to these rAgas (hence the term
"asthAi-antare ke rAga"). A quick sampler of prachalit
and aprachalita rAgas of the Marwa-thAT is presented on
the next page. It is assumed that the reader has by now
developed a fair degree of familiarity with the driving
lakshaNAs. The pace will be brisk and the commentary
minimal. Ragas with their Marwa thAT affiliation explicity
cited in the header have a counterpart in the Poorvi-thAT (sometimes
merely a shared name with no structural commonality) and are
addressed in the respective article. In instances where the rAga
carries both the dhaivats, one has to draw on ad hoc
considerations before assigning the thAT. Bhatkhande
often appealed to the rAga's internal structure to decide
on the thAT in these instances.
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