sureshvv wrote:tilt wrote:Question: What makes carnatic musicians different from an other type of entertainer,
*snip*
I think carnatic musicians are different from other types of entertainers - because their primary goal is not entertainment. *snip* pleasing the audience was not the primary purpsose of his performances.
In a way carnatic musicians are custodians and evangelists of traditional Indian culture and its values.
Thanks for the response Suresh.
I agree that pleasing the audience is not the primary purpose of his performance. My philosophy is the same. When I perform, I do it for me and not for the audience. I need to be pleased, to be impressed (yes, I do impress myself quite often

) and I do it for my own enjoyment. If I am able to succeed in that, it so happens that the audience is also pleased and I am grateful for that side-effect.
Now, at the risk of incurring the wrath of the senior members of this thread and of taking the thread off-topic I shall address the other issue you brought up in response to my question:
As to being custodians and evangelists of traditional Indian culture and values, I am afraid that is a totally different can of worms, worthy of a thread in itself. The culture and values that we claim to be ours unfortunately is not so traditional. This "morality" is quite recent (in the big scheme of things). Do not forget that our myths are full of our gods getting drunk on "amrutham" and cavorting with "apsaras" and stuff.
Hell, we even flirted with homosexuality and gay marriage (not to mention Vishnu's cross-dressing) in the story of Lord Ayyappan, with Shiva and Vishnu having sex and miraculously Ayyappan was brought into existence. I even remember reading that we used to be omnivorous until Agastya famously ate his son Nala by mistake and had to teach him the manthram of bringing people back from the dead and therefore famously declared that Brahimins shall no longer eat meat. Pretty selfish I must say

Just because he did not watch what he ate we all get penalised
Therefore, I am not so sure that our "traditional" culture was indeed as moral as we here claim it to be. Remember that it is we who wrote the definitive book on sex in all its deviant forms - Kamasutra. And now we claim to be oh-so-holy and chaste.
I am sure all of you will consider me a blasphemer to talk like this. I do not consider myself so. I do believe in God, I light the lamp every day, I go to the temple whenever I can, and I also drink and smoke and I used to smoke pot when I was younger and am not exactly inexperienced when it comes to women.
At the same time I also believe in speaking the truth even if it is detrimental to me, I believe in helping people to the best of my ability, I treat people well, I respect people irrespective of age or gender, I do not cheat on anything and I believe in being fair. Plus, I do not mince words, I call a spade a spade without couching it in flowery language.
Cheers