Monday, May 14 2001
Cracked Open - The Nats! (Page 1/2)
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Classical Indian Music some of which have been archived on Sawf.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 at the Hoover Dam, Arizona (1989)
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Namashkar.
The saga of Raga continues. The primary focus in this series of
features has been on the structure and contemporary practice of
rAgas. Their fons et origo, the associated lore and legend, insofar
as we can say something with any degree of certainty - and there's
not a great deal we can say with a high degree of certainty in
matters of Indian history - lie outside the ambit of our present
discussions. The ladies at Sawf invite you to join them this week on a safari
to those regions of the Hindustani space inhabited by "The Nats."
Expect a smooth ride but in the event we run into any unforeseen
turbulence we ask that you hold on to your, er, Nats.
Raganga Nat
Raga Nat - pronounced "naT" - is an old melody and sometimes
also goes by "nAT"; the latter denomination bears no resemblance to
its Carnatic namesake. A stand-alone display of the rAga is very
rare nowadays. Instead, Nat is singular for its unabashed promiscuity,
for its numerous, across the board liaisons. Its musical behaviour has
been consolidated into a Raganga which serves as source
material for synthesis of newer, usually hybrid, rAgas.
Throughout the causerie M=shuddha and m=teevra madhyam.
Nat is an M-centric rAga; the rishab and
pancham are also strong in their nyAsa bahutva role. The crucial clusters
belong to the
poorvAnga region:
S, S R, R G, G M..., M P..., S (G)R, R G M P, G G M, P
S G (R)G M, M, M P, P M, G M R S
The uttarAnga is less busy, the highlight being the frequent P-S"-P
interval put to good effect. The shuddha nishAd is typically rendered
durbal (weak) whereas the komal nishAd is admitted occasionally
via S" D n P. A sample uttarAnga chalan is:
PDPP S", S" P, P S", S" R" S"S" (N)D P M
That, in a 'Natshell,' is the basic topology of the Raganga. Mallikarjun
Mansur surveys the Nat terrain in this tonal briefing: bairana nanandiyA
-
<-- Mohammad Rafi
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/mansur_nat.ram
With this propaedeutic behind us we are now enabled to investigate l'amours
de Nat.
Raga Chhayanat
Few rAgas in the Hindustani community measure up to
Chhayanat in popularity. The union of its two constituents - Chhaya and Nat -
is so
good as to leave virtually no trace of any suture.
Chhaya, like Nat, rarely strikes out on its own. There is some
overlap with Nat and although differences of opinion prevail
on the details, there's a meeting of minds that the meeND-laden
swoop P->R is Chhaya's signpost. The curvature
of this P->R
trajectory is subject to variation. It must be underscored that
that ucchAraNa here is distinct from the Kalyanic P-R. Some
other features set Chhaya apart from Nat: de-emphasis of the
madhyam and rishab, shades of Bilawal and Bihag and so on.
These ideas are succinctly developed by Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang"
in a didactic monologue recorded during the course of
a telephone conversation last week. He concludes
by reciting an old composition in Chhaya -
Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" in Goa -->
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/jha_chhayaspeak.ram
The bandish in the foregoing clip, bendiyA gira jAyagi, is credited
to Ramzan Khan "Rangile" of Sikandarabad. 'Aftab-e-Mausiqui'
Faiyyaz Khan was born into the Rangile tradition and although
he came into his own later under the auspices of Agra, his samskArAs
are said to have been derived from the Rangile clan. This Rangile
is not to be confused with Mohammad Shah "Rangile" who was contemporaneous with
Sadarang.
Chhayanat's poorvAnga is assembled from Nat, leading
to a dominant rishab and madhyam. R is the
lifeblood of
Chhayanat, its treatment vital to the realization of the rAga's swaroopa.
The tug on R with a kaN of G, the repose following the
Chhaya-esque swoop P->R - all these advance the
rishab's
credentials. Several forays are either initiated from or conclude
on that swara.
Although the pancham is strong it lives in the shadow of
R and M. The
uttarAnga is typically launched from the
pancham as in PDPP S" or PP S". Some few take to
P N S" or even D
S". The illumination of the dhaivat -
R G M D, D, P - adds a piquant effect. The
gandhAr,
although necessary, is relatively low key; the shuddha
nishAd gets to eat the humble pie. A soupcon of teevra
madhyam registers but that swara is not essential: m has no independent
existence and is chained to the pancham through kaNs or quick
trills such as PDmP or PmP or RGMDmP.
Finally, there
remains the case of the komal nishAd. In Arohi passages,
it shows up in R G M n D P and in avarohi
through D n P.
A precis of the foregoing discussion is presented in notation:
S, RGMP, P-->R, RG, GM, M R, S
S, D' n' P', P' S, N' S (G)R, R G M D, D P
P-->R G M R S, S R, R G, R G M n D P, PDPP S"
S" (N)R" S", D P M, G M n D P-->R, R G, G M R S
S S M G P, DNS", S" D P-->R, GMP G M R S
At various points in Chhayanat there obtain AvirbhAvas
of rAgas such as Kedar (P M), Kamod (G M P G M R S),
Hameer (R G M D, P) and Bilawal (S" D n P).
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Coming up, some choice cuts of Chhayanat. Arrayed in the
flotilla are almost all the traditional Khayal compositions and
their elaboration by the masters. Although it boasts a high and refined
musical stature,
Chhayanat is no caviar to the general. The lay Indian listener
is well-acquainted with its genius loci for the elementals of Nat
are pervasive in the musical memory of India. The first few exhibits
are drawn from the popular sphere where the rAga-swaroopa
may not present itself in full flower. Nevertheless, there are compelling
vista points en route.
From ZIDDI (1948) comes this gem by Lata Mangeshkar, for
composer Khemchand Prakash: chandA re jA re jA re -
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Lata Mangeshkar and Madan Mohan
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http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/ziddi.ram
S.D. Burman's baton directs Mohammad Rafi to some Nat phrases
in this classic from KALA PANI (1958): hum bekHudi meN -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/kalapani.ram
S.D. Burman again, in this stylish number from TALAASH (1969),
delivered by Manna Dey: tere nainA talAsh kara -
Lata Mangeshkar and Sachin Dev Burman -->
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/talash.ram
Madan Mohan was peerless in wrapping tune around verse as witness this
beautiful creation from JAHAN ARA (1964) delivered by Mohammad Rafi and Suman
Kalyanpur. The
mukhDA is textbook Chhayanat: bAd muddat ke yeh ghaDi Ayi -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/jahanara.ram
Over three decades later we find Madam Mohan re-cycled by composer Rajesh
Roshan (he
first did so in LOOTMAAR but nobody noticed) in PAPA KEHTE
HAIN (1996). Sonu Nigam: mujhse nArAz ho to -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/papakehtehain.ram
A very subtle flavour of Nat comes to us from Khandwa's
Pandit Kishore Kumar. Panditji's interpretation retains the appropriate
ingredients of Nat although you may have to look long and hard
for them to register. In BOMBAY TO GOA (1972) set to
R.D. Burman's music, Panditji coos with Lata Mangeshkar:
tum meri zingadi meN -
<-- Prof. Kishore Kumar explains the subtleties of Raganga Nat
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/bombaytogoa.ram
The classical parade opens with a zesty Ramashreya Jha "Ramrang" hitting
his stride in this superb mehfil recording. Both are traditional
compositions and come in for unalloyed praise from Jha-sahab.
The vilambit kHayAl, Eri ab gundalA'o, and the druta, jhanana
jhanana, are definitive Chhayanat, the latter a celebrated
creation of Sahaswan's Inayat Hussain Khan. Ramrang -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/jha_chhayanat.ram
D.V. Paluskar's engaging rendition presses the canonical Nat bandish, E
karata ho mose nehA ki
jhoothi batiyAN, into Chhayanat's service (thus in a manner certifying
Nat's de facto demise as an independent
operator). Observe that the catchy mukhDA points to its Nat antecedents -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/dvp_chhayanat.ram
The same composition is treated by Omkarnath Thakur and his theatrics
come along for the ride -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/ot_chhayanat.ram
The Atrauli-Jaipur Chhayanat by Mallikarjun Mansur places its
sam on the madhyam, at once illuminating the mukhDA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/mansur_chhayanat.ram
A prized hearing of the Rampur heavyweight of yesteryear,
Mushtaq Hussain Khan. Notice the uttarAnga launch via GMP N S"
or PP N S". Eri ab gundalA'o -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/mhk_chhayanat.ram
Kumar Gandharva's Vesuvian tAns delight in this mehfil
recording. He chooses another popular traditional kHayAl:
nevara ki jhankAra in jhoomrA tAla -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/kg_chhayanat.ram
K.G. Ginde -->
K.G. Ginde's is the lone Dhrupad rendition in this collection. The
traditional
chhAyA paRi Jamuna jala meN is set to chautAla -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/ginde_chhayanat.ram
A vignette of Kashinath Bodas's private mehfil in Berkeley in
1995, a couple of weeks before his passing away in Canada. On
the harmonium is yours truly and on the tabla is Pranesh Khan.
He sings the traditional cheez: sandeshwA piyA se morA kaiyyo jA -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/bodas_chhayanat.ram
I understand that Shri Bodas's sister, the middle-aged, middle-class,
mid-sized vocalist Ms. Sahashrabuddhe, has been recently having
"thoughts." These "thoughts" have never been visible to the naked
eye but their alleged occurence and the recent increase in the levels
of global warming may not be entirely random, unrelated events.
Enter Mr. Khan, the dark and dimunitive (naked) Emperor of
San Rafael. It is given to only a few to personify rAga. Alumeister
is one such -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/alubhai_chhayanat.ram
<-- Bade Ghulam Ali Khan
One wonders why anyone would ever give Amjad Ali Khan or Buddhadeb Dasgupta
the
time of day. Amjad Ali and his silk kurta are urged to repair to
the catwalk to tend to his true calling: modeling. As for Buds, may we
interest him in a box of Lego blocks? It would be terrible to
let all that gold-medalist engineering talent go to pot.
We now come to the best clip in this feature, perhaps the greatest
Chhayanat on record. Time spent listening to Bade
Ghulam Ali Khan is time spent in the company of a supreme
musical intelligence. His gift for _expression beggars
description. There is nothing for us to do but kneel down
and praise the Lord for depositing Ghulam Ali on this planet
if only for a brief while. He settles into an old kHayAl
describing a well-known prasanga from the Ramayana:
Sugreeva Rama-krupA. It is followed by another chestnut,
nevara bAjo. (This latter cheez is sometimes played as a gat on the
Sarod by our soon-to-be-Lego-expert.) Bade Ghulam's
spontaneous shoptalk adds to our delight The segment after about 7 minutes
into the clip should
not go unnoticed. Hint: On which swara do the tAns
terminate? Chhayanat can't get any better than this -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/bgak_chhayanat.ram
The selfsame Sugreeva Rama-krupA from Rampur-Sahaswan's
Nissar Hussain Khan. In the druta segment he rolls out his Gharana patent,
Inayat Hussain's jhanana jhanana -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/nhk_chhayanat.ram
Faiyyaz Khan's composition, pavana chalata, takes after Inayat -
http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/faiyyaz_chhayanat.ram
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Nissar Hussain Khan -->
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The section concludes with a rendition of Chhaya by Bhimsen
Joshi. The Nat component is de-emphasized and the role of
madhyam diminished. There is no hint of the komal nishAd whereas the
shuddha nishAd hews to the Bihag line. Bhimsen's
is a splendid take on an old bandish. This composition and several other
traditional chestnuts encountered earlier have been documented by Bhatkhande
under "Chhayanat" in his Kramika Pustaka Malika:
tana-mana-dhana
saba un par vAra DAruN -
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Bhimsen Joshi
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http://www.sawf.org/audio/nat/bhimsen_chhaya.ram
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