Monday, July 10, 2000
On the Bilawal Trail 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 Indian
Classical Music some of which have been archived on Sawf. Click here to read Rajan's archived articles.
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Rajan P. Parrikar with Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang"
Namashkar.
The old melodies assembled under the Bilawal rubric come on the heels of the Todis and the Bhairavs in the matutinal
parade of Ragas. The Bilawals bring to mind those marvellous, hot breakfasts in India, whipped up by the ladies:
soft Idlis idling in an ocean of Sambar and spreads of crisp sub-micron thick Dosai laced with gourmet
chutneys. Did I also mention filter coffee? (bonus points awarded to the gals if the beans are slow-roasted
and freshly ground for that deep, full-bodied flavour).
The influence of the Bilawal Raganga extends far beyond its immediate environs, its kernel
pressed into service in a variety of disparate melodic settings. Raganga Bilawal, therefore, merits a
careful study. Our trek begins with an introduction to the fundamentals of the
Bilawal Raganga. Later on in the programme, we call on several important members of
the enchanting Bilawal family. Let M = shuddha and m = teevra madhyam. In all these discussions on
Ragas, I strive to use the term "swara" instead of "note." They are not
equivalent, and there is no English equivalent of "swara." Those who talk about "note" in describing
the mechanics of Raga devalue the very idea of Raga.
The Bilawal thAT is composed of the seven shuddha swaras and corresponds to
the Carnatic melakartA Shankarabharanam. The features of Raganga Bilawal are best embodied
in its flagship rAga: Bilawal, often referred to as Alhaiyya Bilawal. The lakshaNAs of
Raga Bilawal are heuristically explored.
G M R G P, [P] M G R S
This tonal phrase suggests the alpatva nature of the madhyam in the Arohi
movement. The latter half embeds a vital gesture. The P in square brackets
signifies a peculiar 'shake' imparted to it. Parenthetically we may note that this is also a seminal phrase in
Bihag, a rAga of Bilawal extraction. The intonation - ucchAraNa - so critical to Bilawal is difficult to convey with
the written word but will be clarified in the audio clips.
G M (G)R G P, G P DG M G, G R G P D-M G
The kaN of R imparted to the rishab and the
coupling of D and G merit
consideration. The arc D-M is a Bilawal signpost, the precise
intonation of which is later addressed by Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang." It bears
emphasizing that although the dhaivat is the vAdi, it is not a nyAsa swara. A careless elongation of D can effectively ruin Bilawal.
P, P P (N)D N S"
This tonal strip is the preferred launch for uttarAnga forays and a
recurring theme in all Bilawals.
S" (N)D P M G
S", D n D P M G
The first of these tonal sentences illustrates a key avarohi locus,
terminating with a nyAsa on the gandhAr. The second phrase has
the komal nishAd tucked in, the manner of which is peculiar to Bilawal.
Obiter dicta: Some people regard Bilawal and Alhaiyya Bilawal as
two different rAgas, positing that the latter contains the komal nishAd whereas
the former doesn't. I see no reason to make that distinction and consider
them to be one and the same rAga. The lakshaNAs of Bilawal have an existence
independent of the komal nishAd whose inclusion (or exclusion) does not
alter the Bilawal landscape in any essential way. We shall continue to use
"Bilawal"
and "Alhaiyya Bilawal" interchangeably.
The core of Raganga Bilawal is masterfully abstracted and summarized by the
great vidwAn and vAggeyakAra, Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" of Allahabad -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_bilawalanga.ram
Primed with the foregoing preliminaries we now confront a dazzling array
of Bilawal performances. The basic Raganga is extended in a variety of ways in
the prakArs surveyed here. It takes a certain intelligence and experience sifting
the central ideas from the sidelights. The highly specialized constructions
render mastery of the Bilawal track a challenge exacting considerable training and thought.
Not surprisingly the Bilawals are seen to nest in the repertoire of seasoned
campaigners.
Raga Bilawal/Alhaiyya Bilawal
<- Mogubai Kurdikar of Goa
Full-length 'light' compositions with complete fidelity to Bilawal are
uncommon. We inaugurate the proceedings with Madan Mohan's composition from BAWARCHI
(1972), delivered by Manna Dey, Lakshmi Shankar and Nirmala Devi: bhora Ayi gayA
AndhiyArA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/bawarchi.ram
We have an outstanding Classical tableau erected here. The utterances of
Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" and K.G. Ginde must be singled out for special
attention from the shAstraic point of view. We kick-off with Salamat Ali Khan who introduces us to
the canonical vilambit Khayal: daiyyA kahAN gaye loga Braja ke basaiyyA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/salamat_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" deals the popular Alhaiyya chestnut: kavana
baTariyA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Nivruttibuwa was a musician of considerable power and depth, his gAyAki
cast in the Atrauli-Jaipur mould and fortified with tAleem under
Rajab Ali Khan of Dewas. His Bilawal offerings represent a very superior level
of musicianship. The earlier chestnut is reprised -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/sarnaik_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Nissar Hussain Khan ->
My own introduction to the delights of Alhaiyya came through the
Rampur-Sahaswan vocal master Nissar Hussain Khan. This cheez has been a member of our household for
as long as
I can remember: sumirana kara mana Rama-nAma ko -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/nhk_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Basavraj Rajguru, the eclectic master with a penchant for the Vacanas of
Basavanna: neerige naidile shringArA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rajguru_vacana.ram
Rajguru's second offering is classical proper: bina dekhe mohe chainA
nahiN Ave -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rajguru_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
The selfsame cheez from his distinguished Dharwad neighbour Mallikarjun
Mansur. This is a Mansur wet behind his ears, from his pre-Jaipur,
Nilkanthbuwa days -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mm_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
<- Ratnakant Ramnathkar of Goa
Ratnakant Ramnathkar of Goa, a pupil of the Agra luminary Vilayat Hussain
Khan "Pranpiya," was an ace harmonium player in his teens. He later sought vocal training from Pranpiya and amassed a not inconsiderable amount of material. He was a skilled composer and took "Premrang" for his colophon. Jitendra Abhisheki sings a lovely composition of Ratnakant-bab (the tabalchis's tihAi
crashes elsewhere before Jitendra-bab nonchalently supplies the adjustment):
roke thADo gail mori woh to NandalAla -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/abhisheki_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
<- Gangubai Hangal
A robust, delightful Alhaiyya from the full-throated Gangubai Hangal -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/gangubai_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
By now the uttarAnga-pradhAna character of Alhaiyya Bilawal ought to be
evident. Moving along, Kumar Gandharva's delectable composition: laitA jA
jyo -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kg_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Krishnarao Shankar Pandit and the President of India, Dr. Sarvapalli
Radhakrishnan ->
<- Krishnarao Shankar Pandit (seated right) with his extended family.
Rightmost is his wife
The Gwalior people relish Alhaiyya Bilawal. Krishnarao Shankar Pandit plies
a Tarana in this unpublished performance
given in his final years. Incidently, the same composition recently released
in Ulhas Kashalkar's voice lacks the
thrust and verve so characteristic of KRSP's style -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/krsp_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
A masterly Atrauli-Jaipur statement by the incomparable Mogubai Kurdikar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mogubai_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
An old, charming Marathi bandish by Malini Rajurkar: Shiva harA he bhava
harA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rajurkar_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Vilayat Hussain Khan "Pranpiya" chips in on behalf of the Agra clan -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/vhk_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
On the instrumental front, Bismillah Khan has a beautiful early recording of
Alhaiyya. Here we will
make do with Ravi Shankar. A solid, if not memorable, assay -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rs_alhaiyyabilawal.ram
Now that we have cultivated an acquaintance of the basic Bilawal, it is time
to unveil
its many prakArs, some of which are specialty items of specific Gharanas.
Those widely acknowledged as 'traditional' and embraced broadly are: Devgiri,
Yamani, Kukubh, Shukla and Sarparda. Each of these prakArs demands a fuller exegesis but here we shall only touch upon
the central themes. The motivated reader will have enough material in the clips as
a basis for further exploration. If the nature of the Bilawal kernel is
firmly grasped, any variations imposed on it ought not to present much difficulty in
comprehension.
Raga Devgiri Bilawal
The Kalyan and Bilawal Ragangas are natural allies, and Devgiri and
Yamani Bilawal are both products of their union.
In the eponymous Devgiri (after the town close to Daulatabad and home
to the celebrated 13th C. shAstrakAra Sarangdeva) elements of Kalyan -
Shuddha Kalyan in particular - are grafted on the Bilawal chassis.
The rAga's active region spans the mandra pancham and the madhya saptak
pancham which is where the definitive operations are undertaken. While
'local variations' prevail across schools, the common Devgiri
germ is apprehended in the following tonal strips:
S, (S)D' N' D' S, R G
G R S, D' P' G
Notice the D'-S chalan in the first phrase
and the influence of Shuddha Kalyan in the second, through the P'-G prayoga.
<- Omkarnath Thakur in performance with Chaturlal (tabla), and Parur
Sundaram and M.S. Gopalakrishnan (violins)
N'SRGMGRG, N' R G M G, G R G [P] M G
The advent of the madhyam attenuates the influence of Shuddha Kalyan and
re-installs Bilawal. There are special gamakas brought to bear on the
ucchAraNa (refer to Ginde's clip) in the poorvAnga of both Devgiri and Yamani, without which
they would be rendered lifeless. Occasionally, elements of Bihag are
introduced in some versions, to wit: S M G P or
G M P N.
<- K.G. Ginde
K.G. Ginde presents a canonical Devgiri through the traditional Gwalior
Khayal, E banA byAhana, and follows
it up with S.N. Ratanjankar's druta bandish, mAno zarA aba mAnani -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ginde_devgiribilawal.ram
Basavraj Rajguru's treatment reveals a
different spin (the "local variations" referred to earlier). For instance, his
advancing the
N' R G M G cluster -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rajguru_devgiribilawal.ram
Omkarnath Thakur -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/omkarnath_devgiribilawal.ram
Nivruttibuwa's interpretation is severely enchanting -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/sarnaik_devgiribilawal.ram
The details of the Atrauli-Jaipur conception of Devgiri depart from
convention but the Shuddha Kalyan influence is unmistakable. The placement of the sam on
the rishab in Kukubh-like fashion may raise some eyebrows.
Kishori Amonkar unpublished -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kishori_devgiribilawal.ram
Jha-sahab has composed several exceedingly charming compositions in Devgiri.
The cheez here
depicts a coy Sita fending questions about her brother-in-law Laxmana from
curious forest dwellers.
kauna tumhAre lAgata kuNwara sAnware gore
sakuchi sunAyo Siya devara gore more
'Ramrang' saiyyAN sANware
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_devgiribilawal_druta.ram
The Maihar statement from its most brilliant mind, Ravi Shankar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/rs_devgiribilawal.ram
Raga Bangal Bilawal
This old Bilawal prakAr has all but vanished from the Hindustani radar. No
uniformity of opinion prevails concerning its swaroopa. Jha-sahab outlines the
asthAi
of a traditional cheez: devana deva Mahadeva -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_bangalbilawal.ram
Raga Yamani Bilawal
This rAga builds upon the interplay of the Bilawal and Kalyan angas. The
teevra madhyam mediates the Bilawal-Kalyan interface. Some of the key tonal
sentences are outlined below. The kaNs (graces) in conjunction with
appropriate intonational behaviour (i.e. "ucchAraNa") are crucial
to rAgas of this type.
S N' D' N' S R G
This uThAv is a key lakshaNA of Yamani Bilawal.
S, G R G P, P m P, GMRG, G R S N' S R G
Both the Bilawal and Kalyan Ragangas are united here.
G R G P, G M D, P, m P G M (G)R G, [P] M
G R S
The chalan is now pieced together.
An explicit Kalyanic m D N cluster is
observed in some versions. On the whole, the Bilawal ambience dominates the proceedings with
strands of Kalyan judiciously spliced in.
<- Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" at the author's place in Goa
It will be evident that both Ramashreya Jha's and K.G. Ginde's
interpretations hew to the considerations
outlined above.
Jha-sahab's luscious compositions in Yamani Bilawal delight both the heart
and mind. We present a full suite, beginning with the vilambit bandish set to Roopak tAla and
addressed to Saibaba of Shirdi -
Sai tihAre nAma ki Asa lagi mohe
kara deejo beDA pAra
sANchA sAheb tu mero Sa'i
'Ramrang' ki saba lehu sudhAra
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_yamanibilawal_vil.ram
A couple of druta compositions back-to-back -
humari sudha leeje Sa'i
deenAnAtha dukha hAri
dAni dAtA dariyA dayA ke
'Ramrang' Ayo sharana tihAri
Shirdi ke Sa'i jana ke aghahAri
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_yamanibilawal_druta.ram
Dinkar Kaikini and K.G. Ginde, both students of S.N. Ratanjankar, combine
their talents in this offering of Yamani Bilawal.
Kaikini's traditional Khayal in Tilwada tAla: Ana paRo -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kaikini_yamanibilawal.ram
K.G. Ginde serves an upaj (lit. improvisation) where the words are not as
tightly bound to tAla as in a bandish: piyA bina kaise ke -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ginde_yamanibilawal.ram
Nivruttibuwa's Yamani Bilawal is of slightly different vintage. Notice the
highly pleasing touch of the teevra madhyam around 14 secs into the clip -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/sarnaik_yamanibilawal.ram
Alladiya Khan with his son Burji Khan (left) and grandson Azzizuddin
Khan (right) ->
The Atrauli-Jaipur conception of Yamani Bilawal deviates significantly from
convention. Alladiya Khan was a great innovator given to rethinking, refurbishing and
reconstituting well-worn rAgas and presenting them in surprising, ingenious formulations. In his Yamani
Bilawal, the Yaman component is subtle, expressed primarily through N' R N' G
cluster. Mallikarjun Mansur explicates -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mm_yamanibilawal.ram
The foremost exponent of Atrauli-Jaipur today, Kishori Amonkar: Ali ri
kituve gaye -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kishori_yamanibilawal.ram
For the Maihar view, we turn to the brilliant Nikhil Banerjee. The precise,
sharp tihAis are breathtaking -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/nb_yamanibilawal.ram
Raga Shuddha Bilawal
"Shuddha Bilawal" means different things to different people. Abdul Karim
Khan's
conduct draws on standard Bilawal in this magnificent old recording. A
strong presence of Yaman and Bihag elements prevails. The variety purveyed here
may be considered a subset of Yamani Bilawal: pyArA najara nahiN Aye -
<- Abdul Karim Khan
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/akk_shuddhabilawal.ram
Bhimsen Joshi reprises the composition but under the "Yamani Bilawal" label.
The Yaman component is discernible, absence of the teevra madhyam notwithstanding. It is a splendid recording and I
couldn't disagree more with the opinion issued by some dilettante awhile back on
rec.music.indian.classical (RMIC) that Bhimsen's hasn't gotten it
right. It is a kinetic performance, the rAga emerges refulgent, and
this is not an opinion -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/bhimsen_shuddhabilawal.ram
Mushtaq Hussain Khan of Rampur-Sahaswan ->
Mushtaq Hussain Khan of Rampur-Sahaswan was a powerful presence. His Shuddha
Bilawal co-opts the bandish traditionally identified with Yamani Bilawal: Ana paRo
-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mhk_shuddhabilawal.ram
Raga Kukubh Bilawal
The nub of Kukubh Bilawal lies in the presence
of the Jaijaivanti and Jhinjhoti chhAyAs in its poorvAnga. Kukubh's signpost
is the sui generis rishab, tugged with the gandhAr. Consider the following sequence:
S, N' S (G)R, G R G P M G, M G R G S (G)R
The initial portion is redolent of Jaijaivanti, the latter of Jhinjhoti. The
rest of the Kukubh trajectory falls back on Bilawal. Keep
an ear out for Kukubh's special ucchAraNa of the rishab.
Jha-sahab's servings of Kukubh include the vilambit, singhAsana
baithe, and the druta bandish, sumirana kar le mana. These
compositions are some piece of work.
sumirana kara le re mana bAware
chAra dina ko yaha melA khelA jagata ko
terA merA saba jhooTho nAta
socha samajha nAdAna
'Ramrang' meiN ranga le apno tana-mana ko
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_kukubhbilawal.ram
Kukubh Bilawal is a strong presence in the Atrauli-Jaipur imagination.
Mallikarjun Mansur: hE devatA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mm_kukubhbilawal.ram
Laxmibai Jadhav, disciple of Alladiya Khansahib's brother Haider Khan -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/laxmibai_kukubhbilawal.ram
Kishori Amonkar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kishori_kukubhbilawal.ram
Next on the Kukubh roster, Vasantrao Deshpande -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/vasantrao_kukubhbilawal.ram
Conformance is not a virtue one can associate with the Raga tradition. The
musicians of Agra gharana are the outliers in Kukubh space as witness the
following two
renditions.
Latafat Hussain Khan -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/lhk_kukubhbilawal.ram
Vilayat Hussain Khan "Pranpiya" -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/vhk_kukubhbilawal.ram
Raga Shukla Bilawal
<- Vilayat Hussain Khan
Strands of Khamaj are woven into the Bilawal fabric in this ancient rAga. The
key identifier is the poorvAnga prayoga S G G M, G P M with the
tailing, deergha madhyam. The Khamaj antecedents and other special clusters in Shukla Bilawal
are heard in the chalan cobbled up by Jha-sahab -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_shuklabilawal_chalan.ram
Lata's chanting of this verse from the Bhagawad Geeta, composed by
Hridaynath, carries a hint of Shukla Bilawal -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/lata_bhagwadgeeta.ram
A traditional Sadra by Jha-sahab: darasa bina mana vikala -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_shuklabilawal.ram
K.G. Ginde -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ginde_shuklabilawal.ram
Nivruttibuwa's opening bars cut straight to the chase -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/sarnaik_shuklabilawal.ram
The Atrauli-Jaipur musicians take their Shukla Bilawal very seriously.
Mogubai Kurdikar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mogubai_shuklabilawal.ram
Mallikarjun Mansur -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mm_shuklabilawal.ram
The Agra version is served by Khadim Hussain Khan "Sajanpiya" -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/khk_shuklabilawal.ram
Raga Sarparda Bilawal
This composite rAga draws its genetic material from Gaud, Khamaj
and Bihag, fitting it within an overall Bilawal framework. The disparate
constituents are held together with special sanchAris. The Gaud strand is at once evident
through (S, RGM) gesture in the poorvAnga. A sample
chalan is formulated below:
S, RGM, M D D P, DPMG, R G M
Notice the strong madhyam and the deergha dhaivat. There's also a piquant
M n D P cluster, part of its Khamaj heritage. The Sarparda selections ought to clarify its
swaroopa. Additionally, a brilliant discourse by Pandit Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" immediately following
the Sarparda section reins in the highlights of the prakArs discussed hitherto.
Mallikarjun Mansur, age 9 ->
An inspirited Jha-sahab amplifies on his own compositions -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_sarpardabilawal.ram
K.G. Ginde hauls the well-known Sarparda composition: E to manvA nA rahe
-
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ginde_sarpardabilawal.ram
The view from the B.R. Deodhar gallery -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/deodhar_sarpardabilawal.ram
Umrao Khan (Son of Sarangi maestro Bundu Khan) paints a somewhat different
canvass. The powerful madhyam creates a 'virtual Sa,'
releasing chhAyAs of Yaman (the Bilawalic G P D N
is transformed to N' R G m through the murchhanA) -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/umrao_sarpardabilawal.ram
Raga Hameer Bilawal
As the name suggests, this winsome melody issues from a happy
union of Hameer and Bilawal. Jha-sahab got this rAga and the composition from
his guru Bholanath Bhatt, who in turn picked them up from Bundu Khan.
The movements switch felicitously between the two parent rAgas.
The text speaks of the gopis and their anguish, expressed to Uddhava,
over Lord Krishna's absence.
itani jAya kahiyo, kahiyo re Udho Govinda soN
ina gopiyana ke marama ki
ina gopiyana saba bhasama ramAyo hai
TAre na Tare karama ki
Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_hameerbilawal.ram
Raga Nat Bilawal
The Nat contribution of this hybrid is manifested in the poorvAnga through
S R, R G, G M, G M R S.
Jha-sahab's composition lays bare the rAga lakshaNAs right away: peeharvA
nA Aye morA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_natbilawal.ram
The Maihar Sarodiya, Bahadur Khan -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/bk_natbilawal.ram
The placement of the sam on the rishab in the preceding renditions at once
points to the Nat Raganga. The final item in Nat Bilawal is an unpublished recording of a Kesarbai Kerkar
mehfil in Shantiniketan in 1950 -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kesarbai_natbilawal.ram
Raga Lacchasakh
There is no consensus concerning the swaroopa of this uncommon Bilawal
derivative. Lacchasakh is considered part of the traditional 'Sakh' quartet, the others being Devsakh,
Ramsakh and Bhavsakh. Three selections of Lacchasakh are offered and the reader is invited
to bring his own measure.
Jha-sahab first outlines the chalan and then sketches his bandish -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/jha_lacchasakh.ram
Omkarnath Thakur gives the Gwalior line: prathama tAla sur sAdhe -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ot_lacchasakh.ram
The Atrauli-Jaipur interpretation draws on Khamaj gestures. Anandrao Limaye
(Limayebuwa) 'explains' -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/limayebuwa_lacchasakh.ram
Raga Sukhiya Bilawal
This Atrauli-Jaipur specialty is infused with prayogas from Savani (GMPMPG) and Bihag.
Kesarbai Kerkar of Goa ->
Kesarbai Kerkar: devi Durge -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kesarbai_sukhiyabilawal.ram
Note: HMV has mislabeled this Kesarbai recording as Kukubh Bilawal.
Kishori Amonkar -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/kishori_sukhiyabilawal.ram
Anandrao Limaye (Limayebuwa) supplies a different composition -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/limayebuwa_sukhiyabilawal.ram
Raga Jaij Bilawal (Jayant Bilawal)
This Bilawal prakAr comes equipped with strands of Jaijaivanti in its
poorvAnga. Catch the subtle komal gandhAr in Mallikarjun Mansur's performance -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/mm_jaijbilawal.ram
B.R. Deodhar presents another formulation -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/deodhar_jaijbilawal.ram
The third and final version features Altaf Hussain Khan of Khurja -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/ahk_jaijbilawal.ram
Raga Narayani Bilawal
In our concluding item, Prof. B.R. Deodhar furnishes a cocktail of
Ragas Narayani and Bilawal. This sankeerNa rAga is regarded more as a
curio -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/bilawal/deodhar_narayanibilawal.ram
This brings us to the end of the Bilawal Trail. A refreshing, hot breakfast
is just what a man needs after a good musical workout. I can hear the call of the Idlis and Dosai. Ta-ta!
Glossary
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