gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

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SrinathK
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Joined: 13 Jan 2013, 16:10

gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by SrinathK »

Yes, the original gauLipantu, before his transition from the periya katchi of shuddha madhyama rAgAs to the chinna katchi of prati madhyama rAgAs.

The raga as Subbarama Dikshitar has written of it, was known as gauDipantu, a janya of mAyAmALavagauLa, featuring M1. gauLipantu just seems to be a variation of the old name that has since then eclipsed. But despite the following ascending and descending sequences.

Aro : S R1 M1 P N3 S
Avaro : S N3 D1 P M1 G3 R1 S

This is a very different rAgA from the one we call gauLipantu today (that one now has M2, has a lot of phrases in common with gauri, and if there was indeed a separate raga gauripantu at one point, it has been totally assimilated out of existence). The presence of M1 instead of M2 completely changes the character of the raga, although not to the extent of what would happen if a pantuvarALi turned into mAyAmALava gauLa. It expresses more pathos in its bhava. And you can linger on the M1 in a way you simply can't on M2.

What else characterizes the old raga apart from the new?

First up, this raga is more scalar and straightforward. Subbarama Dikshitar mentions dhattu phrases like RPMP and vakra phrases like RMDP, SRNDP and PMDMGRS. There is also a RGRS. Other phrases from the kriti of Dikshitar in the SSP and SD's notated raga phrases are DMNDM, DPMPDMMP. Also GRR stands out. R has kampita on it (like it's modern counterpart). SRPMGR, DMGR (both plain and with orikai), DPSN, DPNS, MDPMGR, NN (with the janTa), SNN and even RNDMGRS. In the Dikshitar school, the GRGRSN phrase is absent, although in theory, it could be there via RGRS.

It is also a heavy raga. The M1 and N3 are both capable of long oscillation, featuring gamakas like orikai, nokku and jhArus. SNDPMGRS is indicated with orikai on every note (orikai is a gamaka that goes like S N(S) D(N) P(D) M(P) G(M) R(G) S), touching the upper note as virtual. This even happens in S-P varjya (excluding) phrases.

It is possible, as I suggested in the thread on gauLipantu, that an overly high oscillation of M1 rendered inaccurately might have given rise to it transitioning into M2 - I have the recordings to show it is all too easy. It is also possible that over time, M2 was introduced just for contrast and then it became defacto, but I'm speculating here.

Subbarama Dikshitar calls this rAgA as bhAshAnga, even though it does not have any foreign notes apart from its parent mEla. This labelling has been done for some rAgAs that originally migrated into then CM from other regions and it does not go strictly by the presence of a foreign note.

One characteristic of this raga that seems to have carried over to the present day is that it is middle and lower octave heavy, and does not go beyond upper G in RGRS. So RGRS assumes more importance in the tara sthAyi.

The sole Muthuswami Dikshitar kriti in this raga is krshNananda mukunda murarE (yeah, if that reminds you of someone, it was not MKT who first sang a song with similar lyrics, but MD!!) :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTZvigJpcd4 - R Vedavalli
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3IKwpOFAPco - Mani Krishnaswamy

For a complete SSP baroque version, I am waiting for you, Dr. TRA, when you are done with Thyagaraja (who needs some overdue attention too...) :mrgreen:

In the meantime, I will just post the jnAnArnava project's rendition of this kriti here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASxkJHFcUGw

Phrases like DPMGR, the occasional SNN and SRMPNS and RGRS are common between gaudipantu and gauri, although gauri uses SNN like it's signature phrase, while gauDipantu uses it rarely. The handling of the DPMGR section is similar in both gauDipantu, gauri and sAvEri, so from a musciological point of view, the 3 are part of a family of ragas, with gauLa sharing the SRMPNS with gauri and gauLipantu.

pADi is also rather close, but lacking G, it's phrases are quite different and it is not part of the trio.

There is an older version of Thyagaraja's tera teeyaga rAdA that is still played by the Parur school with shuddha madhyamam. I have shared it in the other thread, but I have felt it deserves it's own spot here. With the additional GRGRSN phrase, this version has almost all the phrases mentioned by Subbarama Dikshitar for gauDipantu, including a NSRGRSN, which is also possible extended from the RGRS phrase.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3lwl9-3NmY&t=51s - tera teeyaga rAdA seems to actually plead with the Lord of the Tirupati hills with the M1, in a way the M2 version simply doesn't. The M2 version by comparison actually feels angry. :mrgreen:

gauDipantu actually should be resurrected on stage again. It is simpler with a lot of scope and it would have been lost in time for good had Subbarama Dikshitar not published the SSP. Originally all the kritis of the trinity were composed in this version of the rAgA. I am not sure about the kshetrayya padams - since we do not know who set them to tune before Dhanammal, one of two possibilities are likely. -- A) They were in another raga called gauripantu (whether this was a separate raga at all is not known) or B) gauLipantu had changed to M2 before these padams were set to their present tunes and gauripantu was just the old name for that version.
Last edited by SrinathK on 18 Jan 2020, 10:17, edited 6 times in total.

SrinathK
Posts: 2477
Joined: 13 Jan 2013, 16:10

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar school

Post by SrinathK »

So enough of serious talk. Here comes an epic joke story on ragas. :twisted:

Q: What happened to gauDipantu and why did he switch to prati madhyama? What was his mid life crisis about?

A : It's quite a story. See, owing to compatibility between them, gauDipantu started out as gauri's husband (pun intended), on the periya katchi side of shuddha madhyama ragas (back then the shuddha madhyama section was 5x bigger than the rather small prati madhyama minority, most of whose members were debutants. It is still sizeably bigger even now). gauri promptly stayed home like a typical wife of those times. Unfortunately this meant she was slowly forgotten by the CM world as the years passed.

One fine day, gauDipantu met and fell for the seductions of a beautiful rAgam from the opposite camp - kAmavardhini :lol:, who true to her name, increased his infatuation for her to the point where he ended up cheating on gauri. That caused a mid life crisis and eventually, tortured by his emotions and madly in love, he decided to go over to kAmavardhini's house, changing his middle note from M1 to M2 and name to gauLipantu and in the process, completely consumed gauripantu out of existence. Probably he had no choice but to convert as gauri found out and packed up and left home, and when his katchi came to know, he was kicked out from the mAyAmALavagauLa tribe and forced to give up his original M1, which only cemented his mid life crisis in melody. :mrgreen:

The chinna katchi side, the prati madhyama camp, eager for more members, and even ready to carry out conversions to fulfill that aim, were the evil brains behind this. :twisted: They had successfully wooed gauDipantu over using kAmavardhini as a temptress and received a shot in the arm. They promptly bestowed an M2 upon him and gave him many concert opportunities until the whole world had forgotten the original history and assumed he had always been part of their tribe.

In the process he not only took away his old compositions with him, he also robbed many of gauri's phrases and one kriti too, and even ended up impersonating her in that composition, while gauri disappeared and was occasionally seen at the Vishwanatha temple in kAshi. I think after that, conversions were banned across camps (although migrations continued to happen within the camps). Unknown to anyone though, the Parur school and Subbarama Dikshitar had given him 2 places to keep his old phrases and his M1 before he left, just in case. And there you are, the story of the rAgA who suffered a literal mid life crisis. gauDipantu. :lol: :lol:

Bringing gauDipantu back in his original swaroopa is therefore effecting a reconciliation with his old house after more than a century. The Parur School and Subbarama Dikshitar's intuition turned out to be right and remarkably far sighted.

Which brings us to the next raga in this series on ragas, a rediscovered jewel from the past, gauri (yeah, she's back)! Coming soon...

cienu
Posts: 2387
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 11:40

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by cienu »

Brilliant Srinath :)
What an amazing treatise juxtaposed with a thriller of a story on this fantastic Raga
Keep them coming.. :)

SrinathK
Posts: 2477
Joined: 13 Jan 2013, 16:10

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by SrinathK »

Credit to go to you @cienu for letting me know about the Parur School version. I would have missed it otherwise.

shankarank
Posts: 4043
Joined: 15 Jun 2009, 07:16

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by shankarank »

Good deal. In the absence of any proof/docs, puranifying in grand scale :lol: . The lost rAgAs will re-incarnate no worries!

SrinathK
Posts: 2477
Joined: 13 Jan 2013, 16:10

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by SrinathK »

I am on record that I am cracking a joke. I may add a disclaimer that any resemblance to any real characters or people is purely coincidental. :lol: :lol:

Sivaramakrishnan
Posts: 1582
Joined: 02 Jan 2010, 08:29

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by Sivaramakrishnan »

The grandest among compositions in Gaulipantu is the padam Kuvalayaakshiro originally rendered by Brinda-Muktha of the Dhanammal school. MSS's recital adhering to the same varnamettu (she learnt it from B-M)is perhaps the 'sweetest demonstration' of this unique raga.

SrinathK
Posts: 2477
Joined: 13 Jan 2013, 16:10

Re: gauDipantu - Dikshitar and others

Post by SrinathK »

You are in the thread for the old version of the raga.

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