I think my subject is self-explanatory

Thanks!
Such cross-rhythms is my understanding of chatusra tisram as well. There have been some other discussion about this elsewhere. ( Essentially nothing changes at a fundamental level )arunk wrote:I may be wrong. This is basically singing a song that is set in catusra gati, in tisra gati while keeping regular catusra gati tala. Applies to varnams and pallavis.
Arun
I think that is aniloma and pratiloma, which two words I have probably mangled, and quite likely got the wrong way around --- not nadai change. Can both come under gati?1. Melody remains same (i.e. lengths in time of swaras/notes that make up the melody remains same), but tala keeping (i.e. length in time of avarthana) changes.
2. Tala keeping remains same (i.e. length in time of an avarthana remains same) but melody changes
vk - Leave alone the Chaturashra-trisram, but in Khanda-triputa carrying 9 Kriyas, each Avarta in Mishram arrives at the total of 9 x 7 = 63. But I am unable to arrive at a total of 81. I am also confused. Of course, our birth right is to make others confused or to become ourselves confused. Then only people think us stalwarts as per our tradition. But, I am still more surprised to know when did you learn my Talaprastara even without my knowledge and got this little number ‘104.14285714285714285714285714286’ to make me still more confused. amsharmavasanthakokilam wrote:FYI, in the above example for Khada-Triputa, each avartha in Misram consisting of 81 misra swaras will fall on 104.14285714285714285714285714286 th sankeerna swara.
Dear brother-member, mridhangam, If you have to spell out four-trisra-breaks, ‘thakita thakita thakita thakita’, in one avartanam of Rupaka-tala taking it to 12, it is only Chaturashra-gati divided into four-trisra-breaks. Later, in place of these four-trisra-breaks, if you have to again accommodate four ‘thakadimi thakajonu thakadimi thakajonu’ they are Chaturashra-breaks. Some are used to make a difference between Gathi and Nadai that while the units running in each Kriya should be called Gathi the units running in each break should be called Nadai. Even though this is not agreeable to one and all and even if this is applied here, this should be called Chaturashra-gati-trisra-nadai-chaturashra-nadai as there are three steps of usage in this kind of rendering. But, how any one can justify in calling it as Chaturashra-trisram I do not understand. There is nothing wrong in doing any kind of acrobatics but one kind of discipline should always be maintained and, more over, it should properly be defined in every respect without any ambiguity for the posterity. Due to some flenatics (fenatics+lunatics) our kids have already been sufferring a lot in this respect and it is the duty of each and every individual to fully stop it at one point or other even for the sake of our kids. amsharmamridhangam wrote:take Rupaka Talam and say thakita thakita thakita thakita for one avartanam taking it to 12. Change each thakita to thakadimi thakajonu thakadimi thakajonu ..it is chatusra tisram.
This does open up a number of possibilities. Do you know of compositions where such variations have been explicitly coded, or is this purely a pallavi/ musician's performance thing? The reason I ask is we can imagine a long and complicated pattern of such changes, with multiple levels etc., that add up to a musical effect in a way that is difficult to pull off ex tempore. (And with the composition fixed, I can further imagine some interesting cross-rhythm games will be played by the musicians, compulsively creative as they are.)sr_iyer wrote:Another option is to sing 'chaturashra tishram' once, followed by a single iteration of double-speed rendition of pallavi (this double speed or second kAla would account for 0.5 Avartana). This 1.5 + 0.5 avartanams yields back an integral number of cycles. For added effect, the pallavi can be rendered thrice in the double speed, yielding 1.5+0.5+0.5+0.5 again yielding the integral number of cycles. (I must add that these formulations have been used by master performers)
I think "double speed" is indeed what sr_iyer is referring to. If we take the (base) arohanam and then apply "chatusra tisram" it will take up 1.5 avartanas. Then if you take the (base) avarohanam and double the speed, it will take up 0.5 avartanas. The notation clarifies this, I think.vasanthakokilam wrote:When you wrote "to get a feel of chaturas'ra tis'ram + double speed,", did you actually mean to say "to get a feel of chaturas'ra tis'ram + triple speed"? Triple with respect to the starting point which was one solfa syllable per beat to that 1/4th avartha being in 4 solfa syllables per beat.