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HomeA Gentle Introduction to South Indian Classical Music: By Ramesh Mahadevan (Part I of IV)
A GENTLE INTRODUCTION TO
SOUTH INDIAN CLASSICAL (KARNATIC)
MUSIC
PART I of IV
BY MAHADEVAN
RAMESH
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I owe a tremendous amount of gratitude to my music teachers,
Prof. T. R. Subramaniam and Prof. Prabhakara Varma and to friends like Surya
Prabha, Srikanth Chary and Prof. R. Pichumani (University of Connecticut) for
teaching me the fundamentals. A big thanks to Ilayaraja (no, I dont know him
personally) for many wonderful Karnatic music-based film songs, which presented
an entirely different angle to Karnatic music. Finally, I owe it all to my
friend K. S. Balaji for introducing me to Karnatic music.
I am also fortunate to be friends with several folks who are very
knowledgeable about music. I learnt a lot from them and many of them have been
active on the music bboards one time or another. (Some are still active). A
short list of these people includes Prof. S. Mahadevan and Monica (Vanderbilt
University), Prof. Venkatasubramaniam and Vyju (Purdue), Mukund Srinivasan,
Chandramouli (A. T and T), Prof. V. Krishnan (University of Texas), Srinivasan
Gopalaswamy (Carnegie Mellon), Srinivasan Pichumani and Kannikeswaran. And it
is always a pleasure to acknowledge how much I benefited from Rajan Parrikar
and his immense knowledge of almost every aspect of Indian music.
WHAT IS THE FOCUS OF THIS PRIMER?
Many of us have grown up in India, where we were exposed to
Indian classical music in one form or another. However, if you are not from a
musically inclined family, the odds are that you perceived classical music to
be something esoteric that only a selected few could understand and appreciate.
An occassional devotional song or a 'classically tuned' film song would have
made you stop and take note. Your curiosity could have been aroused. But, you
may have quickly ignored the instinct and made a beeline for the usual pursuits
in life. Even if you were interested enough to find out about classical music,
you did not know what books to read or who to talk to. Even if you managed to
talk to someone, it is likely that the person made you feel inadequate about
your lack of musical abilities or proceeded to give you a long lecture about
music with a million buzzwords that confused you and weaned you off your
curiosity. It is unfortunate that there is an almost total lack of simple,
readable, introductary texts on Indian classical music, especially when
compared to volumes and volumes of elementary books available on Western
Classical music. No wonder an average college-educated person in the USA is at
least mildly knowledgeable about Western classical music whereas an average
Indian is by and large ignorant about the technicalities of Indian classical
music. This primer is a feeble attempt to introduce Karnatic music in a gentle
way, in a language presumably we all can understand. I want to be able to
rekindle your interest and help you discover some of the 'method' and grammar
of Karnatic music. Even though these notes are aimed at introducing Karnatic
music, a lot of of what I have to say also apply to Hindustani Classical music.
This primer is obviously not meant for experts. I have intentionally kept
this text simple. The idea is to introduce the richness of Karnatic music and
not to write an encyclopedia. Some of what I will be saying may not be entirely
accurate, but the simplicity is more important than dictionary definition of
terms. This primer is only intended to get you started and once you are on your
own, there are many, many texts you can refer to for all kinds of information.
These notes are also not meant to be complete, because I will be using only a
minimum of technical terms. I won't even attempt to discuss the
'vaadhi-vivaadhi -samvaadhi' kind of technicalities and lose my reader.
So, lets get started!
SOUND AND MUSIC
Music is an extremely subjective, aural experience. Some
sounds are perceived by us as pleasant and some others as unpleasant. What is
considered pleasant or unpleasant can be quite personal, based on our specific
culture, exposure to particular kinds of music and perhaps even on what our
parents told us. A song could be a major hit in one country and could be
completely disliked and ignored in some other country. Our musical tastes are
indeed developed. As we grow up, and discover music from other cultures or
newer musical styles, our tastes too change. Sometimes, we even discover a
pleasant piece of music purely by accident - because it simply happened to
resonate with our inner sensibilities. Oh, nothing like self discovery !
So how do we make sense of sound and music ? Let us try to answer this by
examining some simple concepts first. Our high school physics tells us that
sound has several features - such as pitch, intensity, quality and duration.
The pitch is just the frequency of the sound vibration - given in hertz or
cycles. The musical term for frequency is 'tone'. The audible frequency range
extends from about 25 Hz to around eight or ten thousand hertz, although it
depends entirely on the individual. Children can hear much higher frequencies.
At the lower end of the range, even if we may not 'hear' ultralow frequencies,
we may 'feel' the vibrations as a tactile sensation.
The intensity is the same as loudness and it is related to the amplitude of
the sound wave. One should learn to not confuse the intensity with the
frequency. For example, try to recite the nursery rhyme 'Baa baa black sheep,
Have you any wool ?' When you come to the syllable 'bl' in the phrase 'black
sheep' (or 'woo' in the word 'wool') you are hitting a higher 'tone' compared
to 'Baa baa'. This is the effect of frequency. Now, you can either whisper this
nursery rhyme or shout your guts out. In each case, you are simply changing the
intensity.
The other attribute of sound - duration - is self-explanatory. It is simply
the time during which the specific frequency or 'tone' lasts. The term
'quality' is more difficult to understand. It is simply a signature of the
source of the sound. It is a term which explains why a violin sounds like a
violin and a drum sounds like a drum. This attribute is precisely the reason
you can make out your mother's voice over the phone even if she has a horrible
cold. The bottomline is, when you or an instrument produce sound, you not only
produce one frequency, but also produce a spectrum consisting of several
'overtones'. This is variously referred to as 'timbre' or 'tone color'. This
constitutes the 'Quality' of that sound.
Just to explain this concept some more, let us say you try to produce a
single frequency with your voice - one way to 'produce' a single frequency is
to get a keyboard and keep pressing one of its keys and you hum along till you
resonate. If you actually analyzed the waveform you produced, you will see not
only a significant amount of the frequency you were trying to produce but also
see small amounts of other frequencies - which are the overtones. The exact
composition of overtones you produced is in some sense the signature of your
voice and constitutes its quality.
This should also set you thinking. Just how in the world do you perceive
sounds ? How do you identify your friend's voice ? Clearly you are not
decomposing it into frequency components (Fourier analysis). How do you
sometimes make out which song it is simply by listening to a few notes ? How is
it that you can mentally 'visualize' (!) someone's voice, laughter, sounds,
some past conversations, songs ? Basically, when you hear sounds and music, you
are simply doing a 'pattern recognition' against what you already know. Over
the years, your brain has stored a certain number of 'primitives' - this list
is a dynamic one and primitives are added or lost as you grow older - and you
have an intrinsic capability to match a freshly heard sound impulse to the
basic database. If you hear a strange sound that does not produce a match,
sometimes you load it up as a primitive.
An equally interesting exercise - think of five songs you really like. Can
you explain why you like them or what is in common with all of them ? Can you
'explain' and define your musical taste ? Unfortunately, however much analysis
one does, in terms of frequencies and so forth, it finally boils down to
psychological factors when it comes to music and taste. Analysis is merely a
tool to understand some of its structure. It can never explain why some musical
sounds are deemed 'romantic' or 'harsh' or why some Ragam is an evening Ragam
(if you believe in such things). Such mystique about music will come back to
haunt us and will forever prevent us from understanding its totality in an
objective manner.
This is just a simple stab at the psychology of sound perception. Let us get
back to the business on hand!
WESTERN MUSIC, INDIAN MUSIC AND THE KEYBOARD
Let us examine the frequency aspect of music first. This is
perhaps the most studied aspect as well. We mentioned that all music is
produced in the audible frequency range, a range which varies from person to
person. Although human ears cannot tell very high 'tones', musical instruments
can produce frequencies (overtones) even beyond the threshold of human hearing.
Music is sometimes described technically as 'tonal' or 'chromatic', both terms
simply mean that we use a whole spectrum of frequencies to produce music.
The audible range is divided into 'octaves'. An octave is really a frequency
range from a frequency f1 to f2 such that f2 is twice that of f1 in terms of
cycles or hertz. For some physiological reason, the human ear is logarithmic
and is sensitive to frequency octaves. The audible frequency is then comprised of
many, many octaves. We can choose any number to be our f1 (and f2 of course is
2 times f1) - we can define an octave from 10 Hz to 20 Hz or equally well
another one, say from 15 Hz to 30 Hz.
In terms of sound production, a typical human voice can produce several
frequencies, although it is usually limited to about three or four octaves -
even if we have a drum-like, groggy 'morning voice' at the low end of the range
and a shrill, ear-piercing shriek at the high end. Only the exceptionally
gifted people can produce a wide spectrum of vocal sounds spanning several
octaves. (Of course, there are those female Indian movie playback singers who
can produce ultra high frequencies which only dogs can hear clearly !) By the
way, here we are only talking about 'primary' frequencies and not overtones
associated with the 'quality' of our voices - remember, overtones are higher
frequency components, but produced in much lower intensities.
A piano or a keyboard is a typical Western musical instrument. All we see is
a bunch of keys, some in black and some in white. However, upon a closer look,
we see that there is a periodicity. As we go from the left of the keyboard to
the right (and here I am assuming you know how to sit in front of a keyboard)
the keys produce higher and higher frequencies. In fact, the key frequencies
are arranged in such a manner that they are in a geometric series. That is, the
frequency between any key and the key immediately to its left (irrespective of
the color of the key) is a constant, the constant being equal to the twelfth
root of two or 1.059. For example, typically, there is a white key in the
keyboard set to 240 Hz. Then the adjacent key on the right, a black one as a
matter of fact, is set to 240 X 1.059 = 254 Hertz.
By the specific choice of this ratio (twelfth root of two) we see that by
the time we reached the thirteenth key, we have doubled our frequency and thus
spanned a whole octave. In fact, if you look at the keyboard you see that the
key pattern repeats every twelve keys. If you chose the white key at 240 Hz,
then the thirteenth key will be at 480 Hz and your octave ranged from 240 to
480 Hz. Equally well, you could have started counting from the black key at 254
Hz and twelve keys later you would have still spanned an octave, except that
this time your octave ranged from 254 to 508 Hz.
This division of the octave into twelve 'tones' which have specific ratio
between adjacent keys (the ratio equalling 1.059) is peculiar to Western music.
This geometric arrangement of frequencies of the keys in an octave is called an
'Equally tempered' arrangement. And besides the keyboard, most Western musical
instruments are also tuned to such an arrangement.
Even though there is a degree of freedom about what you want to be the range
of an octave (whether it is from 240 to 480 Hz or 254 to 508 Hz etc.) the
Western music defines a standard octave called the 'Middle C octave' (also
called the Middle C scale etc) starting from the white key set to 240 Hz. The
entire octave (the twelve key pattern, that is) is shown in Fig. 1. On your
keyboard, this octave is located somewhere near the middle. Once you figured
out where this octave is, you can quickly identify the first key of this octave
(set to 240 Hz). And because we know the ratio of the key frequencies now we
can pretty much compute the frequency generated by ANY key. You will also
notice that the keyboard has about three to four octaves (between 36 to 48
keys, depending on how much you paid for it) The upper octave, starting from
480 Hz is the Upper C octave and the lower octave starting at 120 Hz is the
Lower C octave etc.
From Table I given below, we notice that the keys in the octave have labels
for identification. Of the white keys - and there are seven of them in an
octave - the first one is called C (and hence the name 'Middle C' octave) and
then we progress alphabetically to G and then back to A and B, after which, the
present octave ends and the C key of the next octave begins. The same labeling
system is repeated for the keys in the other octaves as well. If you noticed,
the five black keys have ambiguous labels, because each one of them has two
labels. The first black key, for example, is called 'C sharp' (C #) or 'D flat'
(Db) - it is obvious that 'sharpening' essentially is a technical term for
being 'one key higher' and similarly 'flattening' is one key lower in frequency
than the white key in the prefix. The labels, frequencies etc of all the twelve
keys in the Middle C octave are provided in Table I.
Table I
Arrangement of keys in a keyboard
Key #Key colorFrequency (Hz)Name
1White240C
2Black254C # (D b)
3White269D
4Black285D # (E b)
5White302E
6White320F
7Black338.5F # (G b)
8White358.5G
9Black380G # (A b)
10White402A
11Black426A # (B b)
12White451B
Now here is a set of bizarre technical terms - by definition, each key is
supposed to be a 'semitone' or 'half tone' apart from its adjacent key. Thus,
keys which are second nearest neighbors are considered a 'whole tone' apart.
(Note that the sense in which we use the word 'tone' here is quite different
from our earlier usage of it to mean frequency). For example, the first white
key ('C' key) and the first black key ('C sharp') are a 'semitone' apart,
whereas the first white key ('C key') and the second white key ('D key') are a
full tone (whole tone) apart. And the 'C sharp' and 'D' keys are a semitone
apart, as well.
Yet another aside: All keyboards are not necessarily tuned to the middle C key
(which is set to 240 Hz). You can build keyboards which have a different
reference point. Fixing the middle A key to a particular frequency (440 Hz) is
a common alternative.
You can play with the keys and produce music. The keys and the 'tones' they
produce are the basic building blocks of music. You can even press the same key
twice or stay on one key for an extended period of time. You will also notice
that although some 'melodies' are pleasant to the senses, some other sequences
are not. If it is the very first time you are tinkering with a keyboard, the
odds are that whatever melody you produce sounds 'musical' to you and of
course, extremely unpleasant to the others around you. If you increase the
volume on the electric keyboard, you are changing the intensity. If you choose
different 'instruments' the modern day keyboards simulate, you are then
changing the 'quality'. Basically, you now know how to manipulate the
essentials of music, namely the pitch, intensity, duration and quality.
Having said all this, we should also realize that there is nothing
inherently scientific or sacred about this 'Equally tempered, twelve key per
octave' Western music system, where an arbitrary set point is created at 240
Hz. There are other alternate systems and creative musicians are always
experimenting with unconventional systems - in music it is 'cool' to break
tradition ! For example, there is no need to have just twelve keys in an
octave. In fact, the traditional Indian music system over thousands of years is
based on a 22 key per octave system. Even if you chose twelve keys to fill in
an octave, there is no reason to tune them in a geometric progression. In other
words, you don't have to have an 'Equally tempered scale'. You can locate your
frequencies based on some other non-geometric criteria which might 'sound' even
better. Such scales in fact, exist and they are called 'Just tempered scales'.
In fact, the Indian musical system uses one such scale. And in the final
analysis, there is no need to even stick to the concept of octaves when
producing music. In short, to produce music, there is no need for a grammar and
rules ! If it sounds pleasnt, you are on. However, let us first learn the
established grammar and tradition, before we attempt to break them!
Even though Indian musical systems are very different from the traditional
Western Music system, we can still get a lot of insight into Indian music using
the Equally tempered, twelve keys per octave methodology - essentially because
it makes things simple. (Also, the keyboard is probably one of the easiest
instruments to play). This has always been a bone of contention between the
traditional Indian musicologists and the 'quick and dirty' folks like us. The
Indian traditionalist will argue that we are compromising by limiting ourselves
to just twelve 'tones' per octave, when tradition, dating back thousands of
years, categorically spells out twenty two 'tones' per octave. The twenty two
'sruti' for the middle C octave is given in Table III. By the way, the Indian word
for frequency or pitch or 'tone' is 'Sruti. A word of caution though - the term
'Sruti' has several other interpretations and meanings. We will come across
some of them later.
Why, some Indian schools of thought even propose that there are infinite frequencies
in an octave. The basic reason for such demands for more than twelve 'srutis'
per octave is that Indian music, (not just Karnatic music) seems to 'flow'
through the frequencies, whereas a Western song seems 'jumpy'. Take for
example, 'Baa baa black sheep' and compare it to an Indian song, say, a movie
song like 'Roop tera mastaana'. The Indian song seems to involve a lot of vocal
acrobatics and nuances and not just go through piano-like jumps. This is the
main difference between the Indian and Western music and we will return to this
point again and again in this primer.
This is the reason why Indian classical music cannot be played effectively
in a twelve key per octave instrument like a piano. Of course, several Western
instruments have been 'adapted' with a little modification here and there, to
play Indian classical music - violin, mandolin and guitar, for example. Some
other instruments have been simply 'used', without modification, such as the
harmonium and its latest cousin, the keyboard. Indian purists abhor such
blatant use of Western, 'equally tempered' instruments. Expert harmonium
player, Rajan Parrikar, points out that 'Just tempered' harmoniums, harmoniums
with 22 tones per octave, even over 50 tones per octave etc have been built by
various people.
Now let us come back to this basic difference between the Western and the
Indian classical music system. We noted that in Indian music it is not enough
to produce just twelve or even twenty two 'tones' in an octave. One ought to
produce even the intermediate frequencies. These intermediate frequencies,
which do not have any keys to produce them, are called 'microtones'. The Indian
word for the 'microtone' is 'gamakam'. (of course, 'gamak' in hindi) It is
often very difficult to explain this concept clearly and precisely. If the C
key produces 240 Hz and the C# key produces 254 Hz what intermediate
frequencies are we talking about ? Does Indian music use sounds produced at 247
Hz ? Treatises have been written in India about such microtonal apects of
music. Suffice it to say that microtones or gamakams tend to be clustered
around the primary key frequency, although this need not always be the case.
Note that if you postulate that an Indian music octave has twenty two or two
hundred keys or infinity per octave, then what used to be a 'microtone' in a
twelve-key system could now very well be a key. Of course, you can make a piano
with such large number of tones per octave. It may be a long piano and you will
need a superhuman dexterity to play it. But the positive side of it is that you
will be able to play Indian music on it. The bottomline is, the piano produces
just twelve frequencies in one octave and that is enough to compose a lot of
Western songs. Whereas, to make Indian music, twelve keys are not enough in an
octave.
Let us talk some more about microtones or gamakams. The vocal gliding and
rolling in Indian music, (Remember Kishore Kumar's yodelling ?) whether it
sounds good or not, are again examples of microtone usage. In fact, the microtones
add variety to the Indian classical music - an extra dimension. From movie
songs to folk music to classical music, the very heart of Indian music is this
'continuous flow' or 'gliding through a continuum of frequencies' or gamakam or
microtonal excursions. Thus it is often said that Indian music is
'melody-based'. Since microtones are so important in Karnatic and Hindustani
music and very few instruments can produce all the frequencies in an octave,
the best enunciation of Indian classical music is in vocal singing. Many
instruments like the violin, Gottuvadhyam (called Chitra Veena these days) and
even the simple bamboo flute can produce a lot of gamakams, of course.
Just to drag the concept a little farther - some of you who have grown up in
India may have developed a taste for Indian music, be it movie songs or highly
classical songs. When you were exposed to Western rock and roll music you may
have been drawn toward the numbers rich in gamakams (The Beatles, Simon and
Garfunkel et al have produced many such pieces) rather than the rhythm oriented
heavy metal numbers.
In the same breath, people say that the Western music is 'harmony-based',
which brings out yet another difference between the two systems. 'Harmony' is
produced when several instruments play different melodies or pieces
simultaneously like in an orchestra. Harmony is also produced when more than
one tone is produced at the same time. In the Western Music, 'harmony' is an
important element.
Orchestration and 'harmony' are absent in Indian classical music. People
have tried out orchestration of Indian classical music time and time again with
limited success. (and there have been probably as many Western attempts to
compose and play 'Indian style' melody based classical music) There is not much
of a market for such 'Fusion' music, except perhaps among the fringe elements
of the immigrant Indian community :-) Even if there is a 'Jugal bandhi' - a
standard fare in Hindustani classical music where two instruments (or even two
vocalists) are featured together, the musicians usually follow the same melodic
pattern one after another with minor variation rather than play different
melodies simultaneously.
There are a number of other differences as well between the two systems of
music. Indian classical music, for example, does not use what are called
chords, or pressing more than one key simultaneously. Chords are a major aspect
of Western music and producing harmony via chords is a natural consequence of
the Equally tempered (geometric series) arrangement of the keys. If keys were
arranged in a Just tempered sequence, pressing more than one key at a given
time might produce an unpleasant sound pattern resulting in what is called
'Besur' (in Hindustani music) or 'Abaswaram' (in Karnatic music). By the way,
one more advantage of Equal temperment of pianos and keyboards is that it makes
it easier to 'tune' them, (they go out of tune every once in a while and need
to be tuned periodically) since each key is harmonically related to the other
keys. In case of Just tempered arrangement, since the key ratio between
adjacent keys is not a constant, most keys will have to be tuned individually.
Also absent is 'polyphony' - where several instruments (melodies) come and
go asynchronously instead of at periodically predictable times. Also, the
Western scales are standardized. The middle C octave ranges from 240 to 480 Hz.
There is no reason to stick to these frequencies. In fact, in Indian music, you
have the freedom to choose the frequency range of the octave from anywhere to
twice anywhere. You can start at 230 Hz, if you wish. Also, in Western
classical music, most musicians have music notated on sheets of paper and
'read' it when performing. Indian music is always played by 'ear'.
Just to summarize, the essential differences between Indian classical music
system and the Western music are (a) the Western keyboard is 'Equally tempered'
whereas the Indian keyboard ideally should be 'Just tempered' (b) Only twelve
keys per octave are used in the West, whereas to play Indian music one needs to
produce several intermediate microtones, not represented by a conventional
keyboard - This is the most major difference (c) Harmony, chords, polyphony etc
are absent in Indian classical music (d) In Indian music, there is no need to
standardize an octave to begin at 240 Hz.
We have enunciated again and again that we need many, many microtones to
produce Indian music. Still, in this chapter, we are going to use a
conventional, Western keyboard to learn about Indian music. It is almost like
the Indian music is an analog entity and we are trying to quantize or digitize
it into twelve keys, knowing fully well that we will have something akin to
truncation (approximation) errors.
But before we begin, let us define one more term - the 'note'. The 'note' is
just a primitive element of a musical phrase. An analogy will be the concept of
a 'syllable' in a spoken word or a letter in a written word.
For example, in the nursery rhyme 'Baa baa black sheep' there are four
'notes', namely 'baa', 'baa', 'black' and 'sheep'. By a curious coincidence,
this line also has four syllables - and we have managed to make a 'note' for
each syllable. The concept of a note is so simple that even if you know nothing
about music, you may be able to tell how many notes there are in a (simple)
melodic pattern.
On the other hand, consider 'Roop tera mastana, pyaar meraa...' When spoken,
the word 'roop' has only one syllable. However, when sung, it is distorted to
sound like 'roo - pu' and uses TWO 'notes'. Similarly, when the singer goes
'pyaar meraaaa', he glides the end of the word 'meraaaa' into several 'notes'.
The term 'note' and 'tone' are different and make sure you understand it. The
word 'tone' is essentially a frequency, whereas the 'note' is the smallest part
of a melody and could last one 'tone' plus possible microtones. The Indian word
for 'note' is 'Swaram' or 'sur'. Now we are ready to get more technical and
tinker with any commercially available keyboard to learn about Indian classical
music. A diagram showing a typical keyboard octave is given in Table II, except
that now we have labeled the keys with Indian names. Onceagain, eight out of
the twelve keys have unique labels, whereas four of the remaining keys - keys
3, 4, 10 and 11 - have ambiguous (two possible) names. Unlike the Western
notation, the keys with ambiguous labels are both black and white (two of
each).
In the Indian system, we do not use alphabets to label keys. Instead, we use
short, meaningless (please don't beat me to death on this - I know there are
etymological reasons for choosing these set of syllables) syllables which go -
Sa ri ga ma pa dha ni. These seven syllables are actually mnemonics to
represent the 'notes' or 'Swarams' in Indian music. They are referred to as the
'Saptha Swarams' or 'Seven Swarams'. So, confusing as it may sound, in Indian
music, we use the 'notes' to represent the 'tones'. Upon looking at Table II
some more, we see that some THREE keys can be designated as 'ri', (even though
they are designated as ri 1, ri 2 etc, they are all 'called' ri) three keys as
'ga', two as 'ma', three as 'dha' and three as 'ni'. However, there is no
ambiguity when we want to press the keys corresponding to 'Sa' or 'Pa' - they
are unique.
This notation (and this set of seven 'notes') is also called the 'Solfege
notation' (in the West). Remember, even in the West, there is a solfege
notation which goes do, re, me, soh etc. Basically, the solfege notation is a
'singable' set of syllables which helps us describe a musical melody. It will
sound quite ridiculous to sing out words like 'C, C sharp, E flat' - instead of
'do fa la' when we hit the keyboard keys.
(An aside: The complete names of the Indian notation are as follows: Shadjam
for Sa, Rishabham for ri, Gandhaaram for ga, Madhyamam for Ma, Panchamam for
pa, Dhaivatam for dha and Nishaadham for ni - This information is provided just
so that you don't get too zapped when someone uses these full names)
Even in case of Indian music, we can extend our labeling of the keys to
other octaves, much like in the Western system. In Indian music, the main
octave is called 'Madhya stayi', the octave above it (higher) is called 'tara
stayi' and the octave just below the Madhya stayi is called 'Mandra stayi'
(based on the way 'mantras' were chanted in low frequencies in the centuries
past). In terms of notation, the keys in the higher octave are labeled with a
dot on TOP of the notes. The keys in the Mandra (lower) stayi are identified
with dots BELOW the solfege notes.
Many good Indian musicians have voices spanning the entire three octaves,
although most Indian compositions use up just the complete Madhya stayi scale
and the top half of the Mandra stayi (only half an octave below) and the bottom
half of the Tara stayi (just half an octave above the Madhya stayi).
We also see that the twelve keys of the octave divide into two halves. The
four keys which are designated as ri and ga are called the 'bottom tetrachord'
(in Indian terminology, 'Poorvaangam') and similarly the four keys corresponding
to dha and ni are called the 'upper tetrachord' or 'Uttaraangam'. There is some
kind of a symmetry between the bottom and the top tetrachords and key label
assignment.
Just when you thought you had seen enough of the buzzwords, here is one more
! The starting frequency of your personalized octave relative to a 'standard'
octave determines the 'pitch' of your voice. Your signature 'pitch' or 'sruti'
(here we are using the word 'sruti' to mean 'the starting frequency of 'your'
octave') is measured in a weird sounding unit called 'kattai'. Half a 'kattai'
is a semitone and a full kattai is a 'whole tone'. If your octave happens to
start at 240 Hz then you have a 'four kattai sruti', by definition. If your
voice is very low pitched then you can have lower than four kattai as in case
of many males. Women and children are high pitched and can have higher than
four (even six) kattai srutis and their octave will start at frequencies higher
than 240 Hz. An approximate Western equivalent of this is called 'Register'. In
Indian classical music, the octaves are 'free floating', varying from person to
person. The starting points are not pegged at 240 Hz.
Table II
Karnatic names for keys in a keyboard
Key #Western nameKarnaticKarnatic
(Notation 1)(Notation 2)
1CSaS
2C # (D b)Ri 1R1
3DRi 2 (Ga 1)R2 (G1)
4D # (E b)Ri 3 (Ga 2)R3 (G2)
5EGa 3G3
6FMa 1M1
7F # (G b)Ma 2M2
8GPaP1
9G # (A b)Dha 1D1
10ADha 2 (Ni 1)D2 (N1)
11A # (B b)Dha 3 (Ni 2)D3 (N2)
12BNi 3N3
It is also common to abbreviate the seven notes sa, ri, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni
to letters S, R, G, M, P, D and N. The way to use this table is to realize that
when you hit the first key of the octave (the C key) you will sing out 'Sa'.
When you hit the first black key (C sharp) you will sing out 'Ri'. On the third
key, you will sing out 'Ri' or perhaps a 'Ga' depending on the context. More
about this 'context' later.