The Score Magazine November 2018 issue! | Page 32

SOUVIK CHAKRABORT Y THE VARIOUS PHASES OF RAGA T he Rāga of the Indian music transliterates to the colour or mood. The various modes of the melody emanate from a well researched, evolved and engineered study of the various facets of music, nature and the co relation between the two. It is fascinating to note that the various phases of the raga do not only form a synchronised bon homie with each other but also string together at the same time with the bigger scheme for forming the full fledged melodies of the raga. Alaap is the appetizer which entices the soul for a blanketing comfort, readying the ears in turn for the later tempos of a raga. An alaap is a genteel invocation, a pure form of meditation. Most musicians harp on this section of the raga to up their ante of flaunting the enormity of their talent and dexterity of maintaining the technicalities with the aesthetics. The free flowing rhythms flow like water with a picking tempo of a solo instrument, coupled with the underscores of a tamboura. The unfurling of the notes of the raga one after the other makes for the titillating rapture of the soul right at the inception of the raga. Alaaps are also known to have evolved in time, as from an elaborate affair of two hours it has now relapsed into an affair of only a few engaging minutes. Interestingly, alaap is so open to improvisations that the word 'khayaal' meaning whimsies is often coined with the same. Jor, is another phase of the raga which unlike the alaap is more rhythmic. With all its contrasting features the jor has evolved or rather developed with more variations. Jor in the musician's forte is a characteristic break allowing the tempo structure to gently take off. If the jor is searched and matched around for an equivalent match in the dhrupad style it amounts to nomtom. Jor has pretty simple a pulse but it does not necessarily have a defined rhythmic cycle. 30 The Score Magazine highonscore.com Jhala, comes next after the jor, it is a notch higher with the rhythm increased and the repeated notes of the plectrum filling the core. Jhala is considered to be the climax of the entire structure. It is the striking fast paced ender of a raga. Jhala's tempo and energy is often a consummation of the vigorous striking together of the chikari between notes. The gat, or 'gati' is the last phase of the raga, where for the first time percussion instruments such as the tablas or pakhavajas are introduced. It is to be noted that a gat is a fixed musical figure. It is used usually when the composition is at its full colours or rather at its full swing. The melodic phrases are repeated and recycled over and over again. Thus gat provides the silt rock for the musicians to improvise and reinvent the tonalities and the music. The gat ends with a jihala, it is nothing but a crescendo of repeated notes in quick succession filled and swarmed out by rhythm. The sitar or even the singer can generate melodies to weave intricate counter rhythms making it ethereal. It is important to understand bandish in the lines of gat. A bandish or cheez actually systemizes the fragments of a composition. It is sort of like a glue, like an element of literature, or grammar in the world of music. A bandish is perhaps the most emotional legacy that the gharanas had tried to uphold for ages. Gharanas wanted the bandishes to be known by the indelible signature of their own regime, so efforts have been made with various vocal renditions. On the basis of tempo bandishes can be divided into the following- Vilambit Bandish or the relaxed and slow melodic composition- Madhyalaya Bandish or the one with the medium tempo- Drut Bandish or the one with the fast tempo set beyond the Allegretto speed.