The Score Magazine July 2019 issue | Page 32

SOUVIK CHAKRABORT Y THE MUSIC OF MONSOON The monsoons are known to be the catalysts for evoking the emotions and the passion within the deep down crevices of the human hearts. The classical music of India has an innate and pure relationship with the monsoons of our land. While some of the rhythms are believed to have inspired the rain itself, some have been inspired by the rhythm of rain itself. For eons the beauty around the clouds, rains and the wet soil has been the muse of numerous poets, from a Kalidasa of 5th Century to the classical singers of the Mughal era. The nectar in the rain has been the food for the thirsty soul of a musician. Even the Holy Scriptures like the Rig Veda often contain verses in which prayers are offered to the Parjyana, or the God and harbinger of rain and nourishment. It is only fitting that the Hindustani classical music boasts of a rich and soul-stirring cluster of music called the Raga Malhar. This raga is like an invoking voice of the resounding thunderbolts in the sky coupled with the symphony of the raindrops falling on the dry and longing earth. It is believed that, when Tansen had lit several lamps through his Raag Deepak, his daughter Saraswati sang the very famous Megh Malhar and brought the showers, which extinguished the flames that Tansen had manages to produce. The variety of monsoon ragas that are chronicled in a book called ‘Raga Malhar Darshan’ amount to at least 30 in number. While the ragas like ‘Mian ki Malhar’ is associated with incessant rains, the ones like ‘Surdasi Malhar’ is for the end of the season, which largely reflects upon the cosmic play between the Sun and the atmosphere around the world. While a raag like the ‘Gaud Malhar’ is for a much intense form of the interplay between the raindrops itself. However, it is definitely the 'Mian ki Malhar’ raag which 30 The Score Magazine highonscore.com had managed to attract the maximum limelight amongst the rest. It is said that if the rhythmic movements on a tabla or a pakhawaj is coupled with the deep voice of a singer, it can produce the much- desired effect of rain and thunder within the soundscape of a raag. If the monsoons were not so rare and far between, the music of our deserts would have been very different. The Manganiar community of Rajasthan boastfully holds one of the richest heritage of monsoon music in our country. The Malhar based raagas of the Hindustani classical music finds a lot of variations, through the folk songs of Rajasthan. But that is not all, the monsoon raagas range beyond the usual and can foray into beautiful renditions like a Sorath, Sarang or a Desh and Mallari. The music of Rajasthan is different in essence than the rest of the Indian monsoon music. Unlike the music of the mountains and the rivers, the Rajasthani music does not digress to the beauty of the topography so much. Rather the focus is mostly on the symbiosis between earth, water, and air. A rendition of Baalam Ji Mhaara in a typical monsoon song of Rajasthan reflects more than just the longing for rain. It poignantly poses the plight of women waiting for their husband, an echoing semblance to the rain that never satiates the thirst of the burning soil. It is interesting to note that the Indian style of music formation in these ragas have predominantly been an exercise of generating a family of an intensely thick atmosphere which is based upon the cadence of various tones, as opposed to the play of balance in harmony, often used in the Western music. Thus, the music of monsoon in India will ring forever like the music of the raindrops..