Prof.Sambandhamoorthy and venakatamakhi melakarta scheme

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viggop
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Joined: 19 May 2005, 14:09

Post by viggop »

Hi friends
I read that Sri.Sambandhamoorthy was not unhappy with venkatamakhi's melakartha scheme and wanted to change it.He was supported by Maha Vaidyanatha Iyer and Semmangudi.
But MA rejected this.
Is this information true? can anyone give more facts on this

viggop
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Joined: 19 May 2005, 14:09

Post by viggop »

The person is TS.Sambandamoorthy.I do not know who he is but i read it in some website about this.Is this true?

arunk
Posts: 3424
Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41

Post by arunk »

The person is TS.Sambandamoorthy.I do not know who he is but i read it in some website about this.Is this true?
I dont know about the precise details but can take a guess. This most probably has to do with the "elevation" of vivadhi swaras to the same status as non-vivadhi swaras thus resulting in 72 melakartas. Many people felt (and probably feel) that just because some prominent ragas (nattai, varali) used the vivadi swaras, didnt justify making them into valid swarasthanams on equal status to the non-vivadi ones (i.e. perhaps they can be treated as exceptions and special cases?)

To reiterate, this is just my guess.

Arun

arunk
Posts: 3424
Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41

Post by arunk »

The person is TS.Sambandamoorthy.I do not know who he is but i read it in some website about this.Is this true?
I dont know about the precise details but can take a guess. This most probably has to do with the "elevation" of vivadhi swaras to the same status as non-vivadhi swaras thus resulting in 72 melakartas. Many people felt (and probably feel) that just because some prominent ragas (nattai, varali) used the vivadi swaras, didnt justify making them into valid swarasthanams on equal status to the non-vivadi ones (i.e. perhaps they can be treated as exceptions and special cases?)

To reiterate, this is just my guess.

Arun

sangur
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Joined: 23 Mar 2005, 01:04

Post by sangur »

The scheme of 5184 melas is proposed by Prof. P.Sambamoorthy. Of the 5184 melas, 72 are the melas of the Venkitamakhi Scheme (VS). The 5184 melas are as follows:

1. Arohanam of VS-Mela-1 i.e. Kanakangi
Avarohanam of VS-Mela-1

2. Arohanam of VS-Mela-1
Avarohanam of VS-Mela-2 i.e. Ratnangi
......
......
72. Arohanam of VS-Mela-1
Avarohanam of VS-Mela-72 i.e. Rasikapriya

73. Arohanam of VS-Mela-2
Avarohanam of VS-Mela-1
.....
.....

There are 72x72=5184 melas.
--------------------------------
Source: From the book Ragas in Carnatic Music by Dr.S.Bhagyalekshmi

ragam-talam
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Joined: 28 Sep 2006, 02:15

Post by ragam-talam »

Has this concept of 5184 melas been implemented by someone as yet?
By that I mean: are there any compositions and has anyone sung these 'ragas' that mix the aro-ava of the 72 classical mela-ragas as mentioned above?

vasanthakokilam
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Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 00:01

Post by vasanthakokilam »

Some of the bAshAnga ragams can be considered to come from this bigger mela set or can be considered to be a janyAs of those melas.

uday_shankar
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Post by uday_shankar »

Maha Vaidyanatha Iyer died in 1893 or 1894. Prof. Sambamoorthy was born around 1900. So he could not have "supported" the latter.

ragam-talam
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Post by ragam-talam »

I think the original poster was referring to Sambandhamoorthy, not Sambamoorthy. Not sure who the former is.
My question was more around the 5182 'mela' ragas as mentioned by sangur.

uday_shankar
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Joined: 03 Feb 2010, 08:37

Post by uday_shankar »

ragam-talam
Thanks for pointing out that stupidity. Turns out I have been thinking about a well-known but "sambandhame illada moorthy" :).
Did anyone else let their reading skill betray them too ?
Last edited by Guest on 03 Jul 2009, 14:06, edited 1 time in total.

ragam-talam
Posts: 1896
Joined: 28 Sep 2006, 02:15

Post by ragam-talam »

Some of the bAshAnga ragams can be considered to come from this bigger mela set or can be considered to be a janyAs of those melas.
I suppose Mohanakalyani would be an example - although Mohanam is not a sampoorna ragam?

Thinking this thru...using melas 28 & 29:
Imagine aro - Harikambodhi, avaro - Sankarabharanam, we will have Hari-bharanam
and vice versa would be Sankara-kambodhi!

Has anyone tried something like this?
Last edited by ragam-talam on 03 Jul 2009, 19:01, edited 1 time in total.

vasanthakokilam
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Post by vasanthakokilam »

When our musicians can do an order of magnitude more awesome things, that should be child's play. So the crucial question to ask is, where do musical aesthetics and raga bhava come from. It is not from the scales. So mohana kalyani has established itself as a raga with certain identify but not a raga based on the scale: Aro 29 and ava 65.

arasi
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Post by arasi »

I repeat your pertinent question. 'Where do musical aesthetics and rAga bhAvam come from?

ragam-talam
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Joined: 28 Sep 2006, 02:15

Post by ragam-talam »

Good question. But we wouldn't know if these raga combos have aesthetics/bhavam until someone sings them, yes?

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

Or, in some cases, someone does sing them and kill them!

For someone like me who is not well trained in music, it is the feel of a rAgam--the impact of it on me over the years, the discovery of its unknown territories of which I get glimpses of, as I hear a rAgam being explored. The moments of such discoveries make a particular rAgam endearing to me. And it goes on--with another rAgam and another. Is it all about discovery then? No. The sAhityam and the way it is presented is what sustains it.
I am not looking for novelty in a performance. I am looking for a guide who would make her experience of wonder mine too, and create a mood when rAgam, tALam, mELakartA and kaNakku fade away--at least for the time being. It is a space where music reigns, shedding all its particulars.
Does it happen often? No :)

PUNARVASU
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Post by PUNARVASU »

It has to be 'MUSIC TO YOUR EARS'. :)

arasi
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Joined: 22 Jun 2006, 09:30

Post by arasi »

Punarvasu,
And the soul, whatever it is :)

keerthi
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Post by keerthi »

arasi wrote:I repeat your pertinent question. 'Where do musical aesthetics and rAga bhAvam come from?
Bhairavi would be a mELa in this scheme..

North Indian classical music constantly spawns such dual identity rAgas.. basant-bhairav, basant-bahAr come to mind..

for the effective presentation of such combinations of two heptatonics in the carnatic mode, it may be necessary to preface the song/pallavi with a leisurely, elaborate alApana, with more couka kAla singing, than madhyamakAla singing; to establish whatever rAgaswarUpa is possible..

even swarakalpana will be better if more of viLamba-kala avartas are sung...

By singing an expansive AlApana it is possible to establish the trans-scale raga-swarupa of the(se) novel raga(s)... there is a lot of beauty to be found in the M1-p-M2, g2-m1-g3, d1-p-d2 phrases..

A sensitive, aesthete should be able to sing such a rAga for a while, and do a fair job of it...

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