Sankari Sanguru in Saveri

Miscellaneous topics on Carnatic music
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sshankar_1970
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Joined: 22 Oct 2007, 10:28

Post by sshankar_1970 »

Hi

I am anewcomer to this site .. Recently I happened to see a CD whwerein Syama Sastri's Saveri composition "Sankari Sanguru" was listed as set to Rupaka Tala . I was always under the impression that it was Adi Tala Tisra Nadai .. Can someone tell me which is coreect . Or can it be sung in both talas

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

Shankar you coudl browse through other threads (i think in technical discussions) where this has been discussed. One avartha of tisra adi is equivalent to 3 avarthas of rupakam. Krithis in Tisra Adi like Sankari Shamkuru, Himadrisuthe are often taught in Rupakam to beginners.

In short it can be sung on both thalas but the rhtyhm of the song corresponds to Tisra Adi rather than rupakam

sramaswamy
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Joined: 24 May 2006, 22:29

Post by sramaswamy »

Should that not be 4 avarthas of rupakam ( 4x6 = 24) = one avartha of tisra nadai adi ( 3*8)?

sureshvv
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Post by sureshvv »

correct. i would say 4 * 3 = 1.5 * 8 :)

mohan
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Post by mohan »

Although Adi-Tisra Nadai and Rupaka tala are permutations of each other, I feel that the rhythmic effect created by Tisra Nadai is lost when Rupaka is used.

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

Yes it should be 4, not 3...my apologies for the confusion. I also agree with Mohan on the rhythm. Most krithis in tisra adi(especially SS') are quite clearly aligned to Tisra nadai

vijay
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Joined: 27 Feb 2006, 16:06

Post by vijay »

To clarify the equivalence adding to Suresh's post:
6 matras * 8 beats * 1 avartha (Adi Tisram) = 4 matras * 3 beats * 4 avarthas (Chatushra Rupakam)

If you take the textbook version of rupakam (6 beats) the equivalence would be:
6 matras * 8 beats * 1 avartha (Adi Tisram) = 4 matras * 6 beats * 2 avarthas (Chatushra Rupakam)

arunk
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Post by arunk »

vijay wrote:Yes it should be 4, not 3...my apologies for the confusion. I also agree with Mohan on the rhythm. Most krithis in tisra adi(especially SS') are quite clearly aligned to Tisra nadai
Can you explain this in more detail? In case of both Sankari Sankuru and karuNAnidhi ilalo, I am unable to comprehend this. For Sankari Sankuru, particularly for the opening line of pallavi the words seem to divide ok in rUpaka.

Arun
Last edited by arunk on 23 Oct 2007, 21:59, edited 1 time in total.

vijay
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Post by vijay »

Arun, you got me as far as SAnkari Sankuru is concerned! But Himadri Suthe Pahimam, the solkattu very clearly follows the Tisra Nadai patters "Madri" (2nd), "Suthe" (3rd) and "Pahi"(4th) follow the ta-ki-ta pattern as does "Vathe, Hi" (1st)...I am sure there are other good examples but can't think of any at the moment!

uday_shankar
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Post by uday_shankar »

Arun
If you remember the tune with the right kalapramanam, try splitting it like this (each division below has 3 mathras as in tha-ki-ta):
Shanka | riSham | kuruCha | nDramu | Khi,, | , Akhi | lande | eshwari |

As for karunanidhi, I avoid TN politics altogether :-).

arunk
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Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41

Post by arunk »

:)

No i meant - i do know how it spreads acrosss 1 avartanam of Adi tisra naDai. But if we take the same across rUpaka (cApu) doesnt it become:

Sankari | Sankuru | candramu || khi | AkhilAN | DESwari ||

The words seem to split nicely here - dont they?

Arun

mohan
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Post by mohan »

arunk wrote::)

Sankari | Sankuru | candramu || khi | AkhilAN | DESwari ||
Arun this seems to be 2-kalai rupakam.

In 1-kalai rupakam the splitting would be across four avartanams:

San | kari | Sank ||
uru | chan | dra mu||
khi | , | Akhi||
lAn | dES |wari ||

In Tisra-Adi, no word is split between avartanams of the tala.

arunk
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Joined: 07 Feb 2010, 21:41

Post by arunk »

Mohan,

ok - I was just putting what seemed natural. But does that really change things? I think the case for tisra-Adi is not simply because no word is split across avarthana (as just 1-kalai catusra rUpaka would do the same) - but perhaps ALSO that the arudhi of khi... is at half-point. But then both 2-kalai rUpakam and 2-kalai tisra-eka will fit. In fact for karuNAnidhi ilalO, I have seen references to Adi tisra gati, but Smt. Vidya Sankar's book has it as 2-kalai tisra-eka.

I think the more intriguing question for me is whether there is an inherent tisra gati feel to the way the melody spreads across the tala - or more important must it for a song to be in tisra gati? The words in pallavi here do seem to split in groups of 2 or 4s i.e. like in catusra gati. Hence, in this case, I am unable to perceive this "tisra gatiness" and I would like more insight into it

Arun
Last edited by arunk on 24 Oct 2007, 06:58, edited 1 time in total.

bhaktha
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Post by bhaktha »

That was indeed Sri Sastry's specialty- the existence of a dwi-gati. Shankari actually is set to Adi Tisram whereas it gives the feel of a song in catustra gati adi/rupaka tala. Sheer Genius!
-bhaktha

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