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Archive for பிப்ரவரி, 2020

நேற்று இந்தப் பதிவை எழுதியிருந்தேன்.

அந்தப் பதிவு வானொலி நிலையத்தின் துணை இயக்குநர் திரு.ரகு அவர்களின் பார்வைக்குக் கொண்டு சொல்லப்பட்டுள்ளது. யாரோ உளறியது என்று ஒதுக்கித் தள்ளாமல் அவர் விசாரித்துப் பார்த்துள்ளார்.

முதல் இரண்டு பாடல்கள் ஒரு பதிவிலிருந்தும், மூன்றாவதாக வந்த ராகம் பல்லவி வேறொரு பதிவிலிருந்தும், கடைசியாக வெளியான ரஞ்சனி ராகப்பாடல் வெறொரு பதிவிலிருந்தும் ஒலிபரப்பப்பட்டுள்ளன.

ஒலிபரப்பப்பட்ட அத்தனை பாடல்களும் நாமகிரிப்பேட்டை திரு. கிருஷ்ணன் வாசித்தவைதான்.

கீழுள்ள பதிவைக் கேட்டுப் பாருங்கள்.

வழக்கமான நாகஸ்வர ஒலியில் இல்லாமல் கேட்கிறதா? கூடவே வயல்னும் மிருதங்கமும் சேர்ந்துகொள்ள, பயணத்துக்கு நடுவில் கேட்ட நான் இதை சாக்ஸஃபோன் என்று நினைத்துக் கொண்டேன். தவறு என்னுடையதுதான்.

ஒலிபரப்பிய ஷன்முகப்ரியா ராகம்/பல்லவியில், ராகம் முடிந்ததும் தனி ஆவர்த்தனம் வேறு வந்ததால் நிலையத்தில் நிகழ்ந்த குழப்பம் என்று நினைத்துவிட்டேன்.

அவசரத்தில் விளைந்த சறுக்கல். எனக்கு ஒரு பாடமிது.

என் முந்தைய பதிவுக்கு வருத்தத்தைத் தெரிவித்துக்கொள்கிரேன்.

என் பதிவை ஒதுக்காமல் விசாரித்ததிலிருந்தே வானொலி நிலையத்தினரின் சிரத்தை தெரிகிறது. அப்படிப்பட்டவர்களுக்கு என் பதிவு நிச்சயம் வருத்தமளித்திருக்கும். அதற்காக மன்னிப்புக் கேட்டுக் கொள்கிறேன்.

 

 

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இன்று உலக ரேடியோ தினமாம்.

என் போதாத வேளை இன்று காலையில் ரேடியோவில் நாமகிரிப்பேட்டையாரின் கச்சேரி என்று நண்பர் Alex Pandian டிவிட்டரில் கூறினார்.

கேட்போமே என்று போட்டால் ஆனந்த பைரவி முடிந்து கொண்டிருந்தது. என் காதுகளுக்கு வயலின் கேட்டது. ராஜரத்தினம் பிள்ளை வாய்ப்பாட்டு பாடியது போல, நாமகிரிப்பேட்டையார் வயலின் வாசித்திருப்பரோ என்று நினைக்கையில், அடுத்த பாடல் கல்யாண வசந்தம் என்ற அறிவிப்பு வந்தது.

அறிவிப்பு முடிந்ததும் சாக்ஸஃபோன் ஒலித்தது. நம் நண்பர் நாளைய கச்சேரி பற்றிய ஒலிபரப்பைத் தவறாகக் கேட்டிருப்பார் என்று எண்ணினேன். பாடல் முடிந்ததும், “நீங்கள் கேட்டுக் கொண்டிருப்பது நாமகிரிப்பேட்டை கிருஷ்ணனின் நாகஸ்வர நிகழ்ச்சி” என்று கன்னடத்தில் பெரிய குண்டாய் போட்டார் நிலைய அறிவிப்பாளர்.

Dad's Radio

அடுத்து வருவது ஷண்முகப்ரியா ராகம் தானம் பல்லவி என்றவுடன் அனேகமாய் பாலமுரளிகிருஷ்ணா பாடுவார் என்று நினைத்தேன்.

நல்ல காலம், நாமகிரிப்பேட்டையாரின் நாதக் குழல் ஒலித்தது. ஆலாபனையில் இரண்டு சுற்று முடிந்ததும் தவில் ஒலிக்க ஆரம்பித்தது. ராகத்துக்கு இடையில் ஒலிக்கும் தீர்மானம் என்று நினைத்தால், இரண்டு தவில்களும் மாறி மாறி ஆதி தாளத்தில் தனி வாசிக்கத் துவங்கி இருந்தனர். கண்ட நடையை வெளுத்து வாங்கிய பின், நாகஸ்வரத்தில் பல்லவி ஒலிக்க ஆரம்பித்தது.

கச்சேரி மேடைக்கு இதெல்லாம் புதுமையில்லையென்றாலும் ரேடியோ ஒலிபரப்புக்கு இந்தப் பின்நவீனத்துவமெல்லாம் எப்போது புகுந்தன?

அடுத்து ஒலித்த பாடல் ரஞ்சனி ராகத்தில் அமைந்த ஒன்று. முற்றிலும் வேறு ஸ்ருதியில், வாணி கேஸட் வெளியிட்டு வளையப்பட்டியாருடன் கிருஷ்ணன் வாசித்து வெளியிட்டுள்ள இசைத்தகட்டிலிருந்து ஒரு பாடல் ஒலிபரப்பானது.

ஒருமணி நேர நிகழ்ச்சிக்குள் இத்தனை குழப்பமா?

ஆசிரியர் தினத்தன்று பள்ளியில் ஆசிரியர்கள் பாடம் எடுக்காமல் சீனியர் மாணவர்களை பாடல் எடுக்க வைப்பது போல, ரேடியோ தினத்தன்று ரேடியோ நிலையத்தில் வேலைபார்ப்பவர்களுக்கு விடுப்பு கொடுத்துவிட்டு, பக்கத்து ஓட்டலில் அவியல் செய்யும் கேரள சமையற்காரருக்கு ஒலிபரப்பும் வேலையைக் கொடுத்திருப்பார்கள் போலும்.

வாழ்க ரேடியோ! வளர்க அவியல்.

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This was published in Sruti magazine in 2019.

The name S.Rajam makes me emotional. It reminds me of all the great time I had spent with the man and his benevolence. I can go on for several pages on what a great human being Rajam sir was. However, in this essay I’ll try and present an analytical view of his musical style and his contributions. The prime source of this analysis are the concert recordings and the private recordings that were done during his teaching sessions.

Most of the recordings that are available are after 1980. Some rare younger day recordings of Rajam suggests that he possessed a pleasant and dexterous voice that could produce  high speed phrases  at ease (e.g  NadopasanaiyE rendition based on ‘naada tanumanisham for a film song). Even then later day recordings show that he could comfortably sing in all three octaves. Particularly the volume that he retained in the lower octave (e.g. Chitta Swarams touching the mandhra panchama for the Keeravani Kriti ‘Velava)’ was unique.  His later day recordings also indicate a slight nasal tinge in his voice. Despite his voice being a great asset, he chose not to project it. The focus was always to project the raga or the composition. That perhaps gave his voice the longevity. Even the recordings in his eighties suggest some slowing down due to age but the voice quality remained intact.

5 set

In his own words, he was a never a ‘platform musician’. Thanks to the stability provided by the job in AIR, he was free to pursue and perform what he liked. His concert approach was mostly to enrich the listener’s knowledge and present the uncommon ragas and songs and popularize them. There is a recording of a radio concert, the concert list goes like this:

  1. Anandamrutakarshini – Amrtutavarshini (Dikshitar)
  2. Ninu Vinaye – Shakuntalam (Tirupathi Narayanaswami)
  3. Sri Janaka Tanaye – Kalakanti  (Tyagaraja)
  4. Ika parasuka – Vachaspati (Kotiswara Iyer)

I asked him about this rather unusual selection. He strongly felt, AIR was a particularly useful platform to popularize rare songs.  He also jokingly mentioned, “If I went overboard, the listener always had the luxury of switching off the radio.”

Even in the regular concerts (not lecdems), he would introduce the song and genuinely attempt to throw light on the musical highlights of the song. That probably gave a feel of a lecdem or a music appreciation session than a typical concert experience. That suited his agenda though.

Another popular misconception is Rajam’s music was it was devoid of gamakams. In fact, people who would have heard Rajam speak on this topic might think that he was anti-gamakam. In reality, one can find quite a bit of gamakms used in his renditions, especially for the ragas that are in true carnatic mould. He was definitely against the excessive use of gamakams. On scale-based ragas he preferred dwell on the shudha swaras, rather than oscillating them.

Having listened to several recordings, if there was one element that stands out in his renditions, it is the effortlessness. Be it a raga alapana or kriti rendition or kalpana swaras, there is no restlessness or an excitement driven urge to push the limits. He was able to render even complicated musical elements without losing on  vishranti.

As a youngster, Rajam was greatly inspired by the raga essays of violinist Thiruvalangadu Sundaresa Iyer. He would often remark, “If you want to know what is absolutely necessary for the raga, you should listen to Sundaresa Iyer. There is absolutely no wastage.”  Perhaps that is the reason one hardly finds a raga alapana of Rajam exceeding ten minutes (although a rare recording of a very detailed vasanta raga alapana exists).

The exception to this feature are his AIR RTP recordings. The RTP recordings available are only that of melakartha ragas. The raga is explored over twenty minutes and usually the Pallavi taken is the line from Kotiswara Iyer  kriti with the raga mudhra.

Rajam has gone on record to say that both GNB and Madurai Mani Iyer have inspired his music a lot. One would think that the GNB influence would be in the raga alapana and the MMI influence would be in the swara singing. Interestingly, in Rajam’s case, the exploration through short phrases, focusing on the purity of notes and long sustained kaarvais are striking features of an MMI’s alapana, whereas the vocalisation, crisp sangatis and sarvalaghu swaras of Rajam are more reminiscent of the GNB style.

Rajam’s raga renditions of melakartha ragas including the vivaadhi melas is very well known and doesn’t need elaboration.  He had internalized the swaras so much that he could sing any scale with ease. One of the prime purposes of Rajam’s music was to popularize rare ragas. Hence, one can find that rare ragas that are usually sung only as an outline before the kriti rendition, are taken up for detailed exposition. Some examples would be elaborations in ragas such as Veeravasantam, Shakuntalam, Chenchu Kambhoji, Manoranjani , Shudhdha Vasanta.  His name is associated with vivaadhi ragas and the rare ragas so much that sometimes people wonder if he did render the usually heard ragas at all. With all the recordings available, one can safely say that he had rendered the likes thodi, kalyani,  karaharapriya, kambhoji and bhairavi quite frequently and extensively as well.

Rajam’s greatest passion was to learn kritis from various sources. He had the opportunity of learning songs from very authentic sources (Ambi Dikshitar, Gowri  Ammal, Madras Lalithangi) and in some cases from the composer himself (Muthiah Bhagavathar, Papanasam Sivan). He stayed true to his patantharam in his renditions but never disrespected other sources and variations. He was critical if a rendition was totally against the idea of the composer (e.g. Nagumomu in Abheri) but in general was not critical of improving or embellishment with new sangatis.

He was meticulous in knowing the meaning and the intent of the composer. Compositions that are often suffer from butchering can be found rendered with appropriate splitting of the words (Example Manasuloni Marmamulu). His repertoire of the compositions of the trinity was enormous. But what was amazing was his penchant to learn compositions of his contemporaries and his juniors. Once, when I visited him, he was winding up a class for his student Akshay Padmanabhan. After the student left, he spoke with pride for over ten minutes about the tillana Akshay had composed. he would often remark, “AIR might not have given me a lot of money. But it gave me immense satisfaction to learn and propogate rare songs. The famous Purandara Dasa song “Srikanta Enakishtu” is usually sung in raga Kanada. However, a young girl from Mysore had come for a recital and had sung it in raga Kannada. I learnt from her and rendered in my concerts as well. It was only AIR that gave me such opportunities.”

His most known contributions are the renditions of all the 72 Melakartha Kirtanas of Kotiswara Iyer. His recordings covering the entire Ramayana Story based on Ramanataka Kirtanais, the Nandanar Charithram, special programs on Neelakanta Sivan, 20th century composers and Sadasiva Brahmendra compositions are fortunately archived. In fact, he had sung a radio concert on the day of the Kumbabishekam of Kapaliswarar Temple. He had structured the concert in a way that he had rendered a composition on each of the shrine in the temple complex spanning across various composers. He was one of the few to learn the Thirukkural Kirtanais tuned by Mayuram Viswanatha Sastri and sing them in concerts.

On hindustani raga based pieces, his rendering would include akaara based taans in the middle of a composition. Interestingly, a similar approach is seen in his rendition of Ashtapadi, though the raga rendered is Kosalam.

Another underappreciated facet of Rajam were his tuning for compositions. Rajam had been a part of several programs at the AIR and that provided him an opportunity to tune several songs. He had meticulously maintained two notebooks archiving the programs that were conducted by him. They contained over 600 songs. Most of them were tunes by him and in rare ragas. Noted musician, composer and a famous recording engineer HMV Raghu once recalled a patriotic song tuned by Rajam in raga Vasanta that left a lasting impact on him. In fact, when the first opportunity for composing a devotional album had come to Shri. Raghu, he recalled the Vasanta and set a tune in that raga.  The most popular song tuned by Rajam is in raga Madhuvanti –  Sarvam Brahma Mayam.  Perhaps over time, the world would get to see and appreciate his other tunes as well.

Rajam’s swaras were almost always in the sarvalaghu mode. There is no attempt to sing rhythmic patterns or ending the swaras with a korvai or a makhutam.  He particularly enjoyed singing very long swaras cycles covering the entire scale across octaves in scale-oriented ragas. The renditions are replete with janta and dhatu prayogas.  In the common ragas, the swara renditions are often brief. There are occasions where he takes uncommon places for Kalpana Swarams (e.g. Adhikari nandhi in  Kana KaNkOdi).

Rajam’s later career saw him give more lecdems than concerts. His lecdems were often performed along his students. The lectures were to the point and the musical pieces were rendered to perfection thanks to several rehearsals.  People do refer him as a musicologist. One can say, he wanted to restrict his musicological exploration to “applied carnatic music”.  He would rather analyse  Dikshitar’s and Tyagarajar’s handling of Ramamanohari and Ramapriya than delve into scales mentioned in Brihaddesi. His speech was lucid and frank. He once remarked, “Some people say singing Vivaadhi ragas brings ill luck. Look at me! I’m well past eighty. I’m in good health. I lead a comfortable life. Singing Vivaadhi has not brought any ‘dhosham’, it has only given me santosham.”.

Another important aspect of Rajam’s career is his contributions as a teacher. He was keen on teaching anyone who was interested. It didn’t matter if the student was an aspiring performer or a group at the lady’s club. Although I have not learnt from him, I have been a fly in the wall during several teaching sessions. He would be very encouraging and would even be willing to simplify a sangati that a student would struggle with.  On occasions, especially when demonstrating the manodarma aspects of music, would unveil phrase after phrase that would make people around him speechless. I have heard many students say that there wasn’t a song that they approached him to learn and he had turned them down.  In fact, towards his last days, he gave me a CD with songs recorded during the teaching sessions of Smt. Gomathi. That CD alone contained over 350 songs, including all 72 kirtanas from Kanda Ganamudham.

Having interacted with a lot of musicians in the past sixteen years, I can safely say it is very rare to come across a great musician who is also a great resource person.  Rajam was one rare resource person with a astounding memory till his last days. He would recall readily the singing of Naina Pillai and the playing of Veenai Dhanammal as if it happened a few days back. he had the ability to clearly draw the line between the art and the artist. His opinion on the personal qualities of the artist never came in the way of the musical assessment of artist. He was also one rare person who said he didn’t know when asked about something he was not sure of.

When describing the personality of Rajam, it may create an illusion that he was a recluse or a saintly person. In Reality, he was a fun loving person who lived his life to the fullest. Greatness sat lightly on him. He preferred to stay away from limelight. Perhaps with time, his contributions will be seen and acknowledged widely.

 

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