Devagandhari (pronounced devagāndhāri) is a raga (musical scale) - TopicsExpress



          

Devagandhari (pronounced devagāndhāri) is a raga (musical scale) in Indian classical music. In the carnatic classical music , Devagandhari is a janya raga (derived scale), whose melakarta raga (parent scale, also known as janaka ) is Shankarabharanam , 29th in the 72 Melakarta raga system. It is also there in the Sikh tradition of northern India and is part of the Guru Granth Sahib. In Carnatic music Structure and Lakshana Ascending scale with Shadjam at C Descending scale with Shadjam at C Its ārohaṇa-avarohaṇa structure (ascending and descending scale) is as follows (see swaras in Carnatic music for details on below notation and terms): ārohaṇa : S R2 M1 P D2 S avarohaṇa : S N3 D2 (N2, D2) P M1 G3 R2 S Devagandhari ragam is an owdava-vakra-sampurna raga meaning, in arohana 5 swaras come (so it is called owdava ) and in avarohana all swaras come (so sampurna ), and there is a "zigzag" pattern of notes (so vakra ). The notes used in this ragam are shadjam, chatushruti rishabham, antara gandharam, shuddha madhyamam, panchamam, chatushruti dhaivatam and kakili nishadam. This ragam sometimes includes the kaishika nishadam ( anya swara – a note external to the scale, making this a bhashanga ragam). The closest raga to this one is Arabhi. Some of the things that makes Arabhi different (though both share the same ascending and descending scale, in terms of basic notation) are: Devagandhari is sung with gamakas and vilambita kala prayogas (usages with elongated notes) [1] Devagandhari is sung with deergha gandharam (elongated G3) [1] Devagandhari is a bhashanga raga, and certain prayogas use the kaishika nishadam: S N3 D N2 , , D P
Posted on: Fri, 30 Aug 2013 14:33:10 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015