THILLANAS
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I love listening to thillAnAs: they are so uplifting and wonderful for visual imagery, to close your eyes and imagine movement across the stage. Are there others who feel this way?
I have uploaded a thillAnA in mAyAmALavagowlai by Vidwan Madurai N. Krishnan. In this composition he very cleverly uses swaras and the sounds: 'thath', 'dhiht', 'thOm' and 'num'. While these swaras in mAyAmALavagowLai are the basis of most music (lessons), the four sounds are supposed to be the basis of the rhythm in the world. Legend has it that as shivA was dancing in his ambalam, a small bell from his anklet was losened and it fell: streaking across the sky as a meteor, it struck fear in the hearts of all. When devotees prayed to him, shivA agreed to absorb the impact of its fall. He allowed it to fall on his locks, when it made the sound 'thath', and then it bounced off his right shoulder making the sound 'dhith', and fell on his right knee creating the sound 'thOm', and finally, it made the sound 'num' when it hit his right ankle before rolling harmlessly on to the ground. These sounds, thath, dhith, thOm, and num then went on to form the basis of all the rhythms, not just in dance, but of all life itself. Or so, the myth says.
Hope you can download and enjoy this thillAnA.
Ravi
I have uploaded a thillAnA in mAyAmALavagowlai by Vidwan Madurai N. Krishnan. In this composition he very cleverly uses swaras and the sounds: 'thath', 'dhiht', 'thOm' and 'num'. While these swaras in mAyAmALavagowLai are the basis of most music (lessons), the four sounds are supposed to be the basis of the rhythm in the world. Legend has it that as shivA was dancing in his ambalam, a small bell from his anklet was losened and it fell: streaking across the sky as a meteor, it struck fear in the hearts of all. When devotees prayed to him, shivA agreed to absorb the impact of its fall. He allowed it to fall on his locks, when it made the sound 'thath', and then it bounced off his right shoulder making the sound 'dhith', and fell on his right knee creating the sound 'thOm', and finally, it made the sound 'num' when it hit his right ankle before rolling harmlessly on to the ground. These sounds, thath, dhith, thOm, and num then went on to form the basis of all the rhythms, not just in dance, but of all life itself. Or so, the myth says.
Hope you can download and enjoy this thillAnA.
Ravi
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- Posts: 13754
- Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 22:26
I think you can go to http://plus.xdrive.com and sign in and then launch the xdrive and look for the different songs you can download. This one is under a folder called 'My Music'.
I can see it there...
Ravi
I can see it there...
Ravi
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- Joined: 02 Feb 2010, 22:26
Thanks to Meenaji and Poogavurji for bringing that to my attention. Apparently I need permission to post into the other folders. While I figure that out, I have uploaded the same on rapidshare, and here is the link. I am SORRY for the inconvinience!
http://rapidshare.de/files/2709907/01_t ... i.m4a.html
http://rapidshare.de/files/2709907/01_t ... i.m4a.html
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You are welcome: Madurai N. Krishnan is an extrodinarily erudite composer. If I remember correctly, he is one of the co-founders of Sudharani Raghupathy's school of Dance, and he has composed many beautiful thillAnAs, and padha varNams. krishNadAsan is his mudra. I love the charaNams of his thillAnAs.
Ravi
Ravi
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- Joined: 18 Jan 2009, 21:13
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- Joined: 18 Jan 2009, 21:13
thankyou rshankar. i will definataly chek that out. but iam looking for some thing i can readily use for dancing. pls let me know if you coem across anything like that. infact i was thinking there should be forum to share such bharatanatyam music as well. it will be so helpful to people like me. one cd costs around 150/- this is the minimum charge and one often doesnt use all the contents of the cassette. if i take it from my teacher, my teacher would charge not less than 1000/- for just copying the song, add the class fees. only becoz the teacher is good one continues. i hope u understand.
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You can also try musicindiaonline.com, hummaa.com, and itunes. They all have some Bharatanatyam albums. You can stream every song in its entirety (except itunes- only 30 seconds), but you must purchase each song or a complete album in order to download.
The reason why many people won't be willing to freely share dance music is of course that studio recordings are very expensive and people want to get back some of the money they spent making them (hence the Rs. 1000 your teacher charges just for one song). It sounds like a lot, but you're probably aware that these recordings cost tens of thousands of rupees, so I understand where these teachers are coming from. However, if you don't mind dancing to commercially released dance music (the cd's you buy for Rs. 150), then that is your best bet. Or make good friends with some musicians!!
The reason why many people won't be willing to freely share dance music is of course that studio recordings are very expensive and people want to get back some of the money they spent making them (hence the Rs. 1000 your teacher charges just for one song). It sounds like a lot, but you're probably aware that these recordings cost tens of thousands of rupees, so I understand where these teachers are coming from. However, if you don't mind dancing to commercially released dance music (the cd's you buy for Rs. 150), then that is your best bet. Or make good friends with some musicians!!
Last edited by Umesh on 20 Jan 2009, 08:32, edited 1 time in total.
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