- Related Topics:
- rangoli
- desi
- South Asia
- South Asian music
- Indian dance
From each of the two parent scales were derived seven modal sequences (the murchanas described above), based on each of the seven notes. The two murchanas of a corresponding pair differed from each other only in the tuning of the note pa (A), the crucial distinction in the tunings of the two parent scales. One of each pair was selected as the basis for a “pure” mode, or shuddha-jati; in the groups of seven pure modes, four used the tuning of the sadjagrama and three that of the madhyamagrama. In addition to these seven pure modes, a further 11 “mixed” modes, or vikrita-jatis, are also mentioned in the Natya-shastra. These were derived by a combination of two or more pure modes, but the text does not explain just in what way these derivations were accomplished.
The jatis were similar to the modern concept of raga in that they provided the melodic basis for composition and, presumably, improvisation. They were not merely scales, but were also assigned 10 melodic characteristics: graha, the initial note; amsha, the predominant note; tara, the note that forms the upper limit; mandra, the note that forms the lower limit; nyasa, the final note; apanyasa, the secondary final note; alpatva, the notes to be used infrequently; bahutva, the notes to be used frequently; shadavita, the note that must be omitted in order to create the hexatonic (six-note) version of the mode; and audavita, the two notes that must be omitted to create the pentatonic (five-note) version of the mode.
No written music survives from this early period. It is not clear from the description whether or not the music was like that of the present period. There is no mention of a drone, nor do the instruments of the orchestra—consisting of the vipanchi and vina, bamboo flute, a variety of drums, and singers—appear to include any specifically drone instrument, such as the modern tambura. The evidence tends rather to suggest, from the emphasis on consonance and some of the playing techniques, that some form of organum (two or more parts paralleling the same melody at distinct pitch levels) and even some type of rudimentary harmony may have been characteristic.
Medieval period
Precursors of the medieval system
It is not clear just when the jati system fell into disuse, for later writers refer to jatis merely out of reverence for Bharata, the author of the Natya-shastra. Later developments are based on musical entities called grama-ragas, of which seven are mentioned in the 7th-century Kutimiyamalai rock inscription in Tamil Nadu state. Although the word grama-raga does not occur in the Natya-shastra, the names applied to the individual grama-ragas are all mentioned. Two of them, sadjagrama-raga and madhyamagrama-raga, are obviously related to the parent scales of the jati system. The other five seem to be variants of these two grama-ragas in which either or both the altered forms of the notes ga and ni (F♯ and C♯) are used. In the Natya-shastra the reference to the various grama-ragas is far removed from the main section in which the jati system is discussed, and there is no obvious connection between the two. Each of the grama-ragas is said to be used in one of the seven formal stages of Sanskrit drama.
Further development of the grama-ragas
In the next significant text on Indian music, the Brihaddeshi, written by the theorist Matanga about the 10th century ce, the grama-ragas are said to derive from the jatis. In some respects at least, the grama-ragas resemble not the jatis but their parent scales. The author of the Brihaddeshi claims to be the first to discuss the term raga in any detail. It is clear that raga was only one of several kinds of musical entities in this period and is described as having “varied and graceful ornaments, with emphasis on clear, even, and deep tones and having a charming elegance.” The ragas of this period seem to have been named after the different peoples living in the various parts of the country, suggesting that their origin might lie in folk music. Matanga appears to contrast the two terms marga and deshi. The term marga (literally “the path”) apparently refers to the ancient traditional musical material, whereas deshi (literally “the vulgar dialect spoken in the provinces”) designates the musical practice that was evolving in the provinces, which may have had a more secular basis. Although the title Brihaddeshi (“The Great Deshi”) suggests that the latter music might have been the focus of the treatise and that the grama-ragas were possibly out of date by the time it was written, the surviving portion of the text does not support such a theory.
The mammoth 13th-century text Sangitaratnakara (“Ocean of Music and Dance”), composed by the theorist Sharngadeva, is often said to be one of the most important landmarks in Indian music history. It was composed in the Deccan (south-central India) shortly before the conquest of this region by the Muslim invaders and thus gives an account of Indian music before the full impact of Muslim influence. A large part of this work is devoted to marga—that is, the ancient music that includes the system of jatis and grama-ragas—but Sharngadeva mentions a total of 264 ragas. Despite the use in both the Brihaddeshi and the Sangitaratnakara of a notation equivalent to the Western tonic sol–fa (i.e., with syllables, as do–re–mi…) to illustrate the ragas, modern scholars have not yet been able to reconstruct them with assurance.
The basic difficulty scholars face lies in determining the intervals used in each of the ragas. In the ancient system, the jatis were something like the ancient Greek and medieval church modes in that each was derived from a parent scale by altering the ground note and the tessitura (range). In modern Indian music, however, the ragas are all transposed to a common ground note. This change may well be connected with the introduction of the drone and the evolution of the long-necked-lute family on which the drone is usually played. In the old system, with the changing ground note, it would have been necessary to retune drone instruments from one raga to another, which would have been a cumbersome and impractical operation to carry out during a recital. It may have been this factor that provided the impetus for the change to the standard ground-note system. There is no conclusive evidence to show just when this change might have taken place, and it is not clear whether the Brihaddeshi and the Sangitaratnakara are using the old ground-note system or one similar to that used in modern times.