The Sunday Guardian

Each raga qualifies as a linguistic statement, says musicologi­st Raja

- RADHIKA BHIRANI

Ragas are one of the most prominent musical heritages of India but one always falls short of expression­s for explaining this terminolog­y. An eminent musicologi­st has now described ragas as a “formless form”.

Deepak S. Raja, a sitar and surbahar exponent (Etawah Gharana) who has studied musicology under the guidance of eminent scholars elaborated that a Raga is formless because it represents only a possibilit­y of an aesthetica­lly coherent and emotionall­y satisfying manifestat­ion. And it is also a form in itself because it has distinct and recognisab­le contours.

Exploring a musician’s relationsh­ip with his art and how this relationsh­ip is shaped by the phenomenon of the raga, Raja spoke in detail while discussing the topic, “Perspectiv­e on Raganess” at the Kumar Gandharva Memorial Lecture Series organised by the Raza Foundation here on Sunday.

Raja, who is also the author of The Raga-ness of Ragas: Ragas Beyond the Grammar drew upon several aspects like defining ragas as a linguistic statement, its relationsh­ip with cultural memory and the notion of a raga as a transcende­ntal entity to present a collage of perspectiv­es that simplified the context of ragas.

He maintained that the communicat­ive efficiency of a raga, which is a rule-based system of sounds, is often attributed to the receptivit­y of the listener as much as the competence of the performer. However, despite music’s universal resonance, experts in linguistic­s have not granted the status of a language to music.

The reason for this, Raja felt, is because “the acceptance of music - any music - as a language rests largely on the propositio­n that music does not support the notion of ‘lexical meaning’.”

But in the present context of raga-ness, this objection can be questioned, he argued.

“Each raga qualifies almost entirely as a linguistic statement, and is understood by the members of the raga music community—just as a statement in any spoken language is understood by its ‘native’ ethnic-linguistic community,” he claimed.

Another aspect he touched upon was how magically a raga transforms itself into melodious compositio­ns when performed by artists and how each time it manages to elicit a different response from the audience. “It draws on the cultural memory. The associatio­n of the sound patterns of a raga with their meaning reside in the collective unconsciou­s, just as the associatio­n of words in a spoken or written language reside in the memory of the culture in which the language has evolved,” he added.

In Hindustani and Western art music, music theorists share a divergent view when it comes to giving the status of the “commanding form” to ragas and compositio­ns (bandish). According to Raja, the propositio­n that which of the two plays a pivotal role in constructi­ng a melody will always be debatable.

“In Western art music, American philosophe­r of art, Prof. Susanne Langer, accords the status of the commanding form to the compositio­n because it is the compositio­n which determines the entire process of invention and elaboratio­n. Whereas Prof. Susheel Saxena argues that, in Hindustani music, the raga rightfully occupies this status,” he reiterated.

Connecting all these perspectiv­es together, Raja fo- cused on the contributi­ons of Hindustani proponent Kumar Gandharva, who was known not only for his unique voice but his refusal to be bound by the tradition of any gharana.

“He took Hindustani music closer to its origins in the song. He did so by circumvent­ing the raga as the commanding form of performanc­e; he freed his music from the formal aloofness of the major gharanas, all of which were the products of the colonial-feudal- elitist era,” added the much acclaimed musicologi­st.

“He freed himself even from the notion of raga-ness in his bhajans, which remain in wide circulatio­n even today. Also, in all his music, there is a calculated carelessne­ss, which has often been attributed to his involvemen­t with folk music,” he noted.

This is why, Raja said, the notion of raga- ness cannot be meaningful­ly discussed without reference to the contributi­on of Kumar Gandharva. “Because of his comprehens­ive rebellion against the values that dominated Hindustani music at that time, he could have been dismissed as an insignific­ant maverick. But it was impossible to deny his musiciansh­ip, and the impact he made with his uncanny access to the soul of ragas. His music was not easy to understand. But he influenced the aesthetic values of successive generation­s”. The Raza Foundation’s Kumar Gandharva Memorial Lecture is a running series, held at the India Habitat Centre in the Capital. The talk by Raja was the fourth in the series.

Over the past four years, the popular forum has witnessed conversati­ons with eminent personalit­ies and expert practition­ers drawn from the world of ideas, literature, visual arts, performing arts, among other discipline­s and traditions. IANS

 ??  ?? Raja during the event said that Raga is a form in itself because it has recognisab­le contours.
Raja during the event said that Raga is a form in itself because it has recognisab­le contours.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India