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alankar: ornament;
or a specific type of melodic ornament worked out with permutations
of the notes. Also see palta.
alap: the introductory movement of a rag without drums. The
first section in the formal performance of a raga, played without
rhythmic accompaniment, wherein the notes and phrases of the raga
are introduced and explored. The word alap can also be extended
to include the jor and jhala of a raga performance.
andolin: A kind of ornament, characterized by a slow up and
down oscillation.
antara: The second, higher part of a composition, showing
the upper register.
aroh-avroh or arohi-avarohi: The ascending and descending
note pattern of a raga.
asthai or sthai: The first or main part of a composition
using only the notes up to Ni.
avartan or avarta: One complete cycle of tal, made
up of vibhags (measures) which in turn are made up of matras (beats).
bandish: A fixed melodic composition within a raga, usually
with reference to vocal music or khyal.
bansuri: The North Indian bamboo flute.
barhat or badhat: Refers to the note by note development
of a raga.
baya or bayan: means "left". The larger,
left hand, usually metal drum of the tabla set.
bhajan: Devotional song.
bols or bol: means "word" or "speak".
All instrumentalists, drummers, and dancers
learn to recite bols and keep tal. The bols, i.e., the language
of each discipline, is slightly different from one another. The
bols refer specifically to the syllables for a drum composition,
as well as to the drum strokes themselves. There are different bols,
as well as different strokes for different drums: tabla bols, pakhawaj
bols, etc. The word bols also refers specifically to the right hand
strokes for a composition on a stringed instrument.
Brahmin: a Hindu priest, the highest of the Hindu castes
chakradar: A drum composition which repeats three times and
ends each section with a tihai (which also repeats three times,
i.e. nine times in all).
chalan: The heart of the raga. The chalan is a distinctive
phrase, played again and
again throughout a raga. It is useful, as a means of identifying
a raga, to know and listen for its chalan. Also called pakar.
chhand or chand: The rhythm pattern in its relative
speed over the laya. Laya refers
both to tempo and to the ratio of speed between the pattern (chand)
and the beat (matra). Chand can also refer to the accent pattern,
etc. With reference to the tabla, chand is a kind of composition.
chikari: The high drone strings on instruments such as the
sitar or sarod. They are used for rhythmic articulation, especially
in the jhala.
darbar: court
dholak: double-headed drum
dhrupad: An early style of North Indian classical vocal music
characterized by compositions using a set pattern: asthai, antara,
sanchari and abhog. Its mood is usually one of solemnity.
drut: Fast (tempo)
Durga: Puja Hindu festival
gaab: The black spot on the heads of the tabla.
gajara: The braid around the outside of the tabla heads which
is hit lightly with a
hammer to tune the drums.
gamak: "Grace". Gamak is, at times, used as the
general term for vocal ornamentation. Also, gamak specifically means
attacking or rapidly repeating a note using its upper or lower neighbor
note.
gat: Pronounced "gut", is a fixed composition in
the instrumental style which usually follows the alap, jor and jhala,
and is the signal for the tabla player to join the performance.
The term gat is also used in a different context to describe a specific
type of composition played on the tabla.
gat kari: to vary the gat
gharana: A musical family, school or tradition. Most musicians
are trained within a specific gharana, i.e., a distinctive tradition.
guru: a master teacher
jati: "Caste" or "type". Jati has many
meanings. However, it is usually used at the Ali Akbar College of
Music to refer to ragas differentiated according to the number of
notes they use, i.e., a five-note raga is referred to as being in
aurav jati; a six-note raga, sharav jati; a seven-note raga, sampurna
jati. Jatis can also be combined to make misra (mixed) ragas, thus
creating a total of nine jatis.
java or jaba: a plectrum or finger pick made from
a coconut shell
jhala: Usually the last section played by the instrumentalist
before the tabla enters a raga performance. It is also, at times,
included as the last and fastest part of alap or gat. It is played
with rapid chikari strokes in a fast rhythm.
jor: The second part of a raga performance included in or
succeeding the alap.
It is usually in rhythm, but without fixed meter.
jugalbandi: A style of presentation with more than one instrumentalist.
kayda or kaida: A medium speed theme and variation
tabla composition. In a tabla solo, kayda is usually preceded by
peshkar and succeeded by rela.
khali: The empty or unstressed vibhag(s) (division) of a
rhythm cycle. It is marked visually by a wave of the hand, instead
of a clap, and marked aurally by the absence of the bass notes of
the baya.
khyal: The most prevalent style of vocal music today. It
retains the basic structure of
dhrupad, but is less rigid and, as the name (meaning "imagination")
implies,
gives greater scope to the musician for elaboration.
kinar: The outer circle of skin on the tabla heads.
lari: a technique to extend the duration of a note
laya: Tempo, also the relative speed of the chand against
the beat (matra).
madya or madhya: Medium (tempo).
Maharajah: a Hindu king
Maharani: a Hindu queen
matra: A single beat. Vibhags (measures) are made up of matras.
meend: sliding from one note to another
misra: mixture or to mix
mridangam: double-headed drum
murchhanas: Exercises which start with the next higher (or
lower) note each time a scale
is sung while retaining the tones of the original scale.
nada Brahma: Na = prana = life; da = agni = fire; Brahma
= the omnipotent manifestation of Brahman, the creative energy that
motivates the universe. Music is considered nada Brahma, the language
of God.
North Indian classical music: The tradition of music taught
at the Ali Akbar College of Music. It is also, at times, called
Hindustani music, as distinguished from South Indian or Karnatic
music.
paltas: a general term for exercises
pakar: The heart of the raga. The pakar is a distinctive
phrase, played again and again throughout a raga. It is useful,
as a means of identifying a raga, to know and listen for its pakar.
Also called chalan.
pakhawaj: Pronounced pa-khaw-aj. The two-headed drum
closely associated with dhrupad which, for the most part, has been
succeeded by the tabla in North Indian classical music.
paltas: a general word for exercises (or tans), especially
those in alankar style. (lit.:
turn)
peshkar: A slow speed theme and variation composition for
the tabla somewhat akin to the alap in a raga performance. In peshkar,
the themes to be developed in a tabla solo are introduced and explored.
It is usually followed by kayda and rela.
raga or raga or raag: Pronounced "raag".
It is the basic form in Indian classical music and a very difficult
concept to define. It is said, "one does not learn to define
raga, but to play it." A raga can be characterized by a specific
ascen-ding and descending pattern of notes.
rasa or ras: "Juice." The concept of rasa
implies a strong connection between
music and the emotions it evokes. The nine rasas, or moods that
are used in connection with Indian classical music are as follows:
1) Shringara - divine or human love
2) Hasya - humor
3) Karuna - sadness or compassion
4) Raudra - anger or fury
5) Veera or Vir - heroism or majesty
6) Bhayanaka - fear
7) Vibhatsa - disgust
8) Adbhuta - wonder or surprise
9) Shanta - peace and tranquillity
At times Bhakti - devotion is spoken of as the tenth rasa, but bhakti
is in fact at the very basis of raga, for raga originated in the
singing of the Vedic chants.
rela: Fast speed theme and variation tabla composition, usually
preceded by
peshkar and kayda in a drum solo.
sam: Pronounced "sum", literally means "equal,
together, balance." It is the first
and most important beat of the tala cycle, where the melodic phrase
of the instrumentalist or vocalist and the rhythmic phrase of the
tablaist come together.
samvadi: The "prime minister note". The second
most important note in a raga.
saptak: Octave or register. The three most commonly used
saptaks are:
Mandra (bass) from low Sa to low Ni this saptak is written
with a dot under each svara:

Madhya (middle) from middle Sa to Ni, the most commonly used of
all the saptaks its svaras are simply written:

Tara (high) from high Sa to high Ni this saptak is written
with a dot above each svara:

The komal and tivra notes in the mandra or tara saptaks are also
dotted above or below. Extremely high or low saptaks, used mostly
in instrumental music, are written with two dots above or below
for ati-mandar or ati-tara and for the even higher or lower saptaks,
three dots indicate ati-ati-mandar or ati-ati-tara.
sarangi: A multi-stringed instrument played with a bow, previously
used only as an accompanying instrument for vocal music, but which
is now often played as a solo instrument.
sargam: The seven notes (svaras) of the scale or saptak (Sa
Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni). Also exercising using sargam or a composition
in which the note names are sung.
sarod or sarode: A twenty-five string instrument which
is plucked with a coconut shell plectrum. Its body is made of wood;
the fingerboard is a smooth fretless steel plate. Its belly is covered
with goat skin which gives the sarod a mellow, resonant sound. Four
strings carry the melody, three are resonating jawari strings, three
are chikari strings, and fifteen are taraf strings which provide
sympathetic resonance.
sastras: The sastras, in music, refer to theories first set
down in the Natyasastra, a treatise of the 4th century attributed
to Bharata, i.e. knowledge founded on tradition.
sitar: A North Indian plucked stringed instrument made from
a seasoned gourd with a toun or teakwood fingerboard. It has sixteen
to twenty movable frets. Its five to seven main strings, including
the chikari strings, are played with a wire plectrum fitted over
the forefinger. Eleven to thirteen resonating strings, tuned to
the notes of the raga being played and running beneath the frets,
help to produce the characteristic shimmering sound of the sitar.
The main strings are usually tuned to Ma Sa Pa Sa; the chikari strings
are tuned to Pa, Sa, Sa.
sruti or shruti: A microtone, or microtonal interval.
The number of srutis is
often given as twenty-two to a saptak (octave).
sthayi: See asthai.
sur: means tone, pitch or note. Also, sur refers to the skin
area between the
gaab and the kinar on the tabla heads. In drumming, a stroke on
sur represents the tonic, i.e. the pitch of the drum.
svaras: The notes of the sargam (scale).
tabla: Pronounced "tubla". A set of two drums,
the smaller, right hand drum, the dayan, is often referred to, individually,
as the tabla. Its body is usually made of rosewood. The larger left
hand, bass drum, the baya, is usually made of metal. Both drums
together are referred to as the tabla. The head of each drum is
covered with skins and is composed of sections called, the gaab,
the sur, the kinar, and the gajara.
tala or tal: The tals are the rhythmic cycles usually
played on the drums. Tala (rhythm) along with raga (melody) are
the two most important aspects of Indian music. The most common
tal in Indian music is tintal. Other frequently heard tals include
jhaptal, rupak, kaharwa, dhammar, ektal.
tali: A clap or division within a rhythm cycle or theka.
Tali literally means
"clap".
tan: Tan(s) (pronounced "taans") can be used in
a general sense to refer to the
many kinds of variations on a melodic composition or to one particular
kind of variation.
tanpura or tampura or tanbura: A stringed instrument
with a resonating gourd base and a long neck of wood. It somewhat
resembles the sitar in appearance, but it has no frets, and far
fewer strings. Its four or five strings are tuned to the tonic,
the fifth and the octave. They are plucked with the sides of the
finger-tips. The tanpura provides the third essential component,
i.e. the drone (reference tone) in a performance of Indian classical
music. The other components are raga (melodic structure) provided
by vocalist or instrumentalist and tala (rhythm) provided by the
tabla player.
tarana: A usually fast-moving, highly rhythmic section of
a vocal composition using syllables based on drumming or dance bols
such as "ta" and "na", or nom-tom syllables.
that: That (pronounce "tot") means "skeleton
or framework". The ten thats refer to the organization of ragas
into a system of scales. The ten thats classification system was
developed by Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande (1860-1936) of Bombay. There,
each scale has all seven notes, the aroh-avaroh (ascending-descending
pattern) are the same, and only one form of a note is included in
a scale. Of the thirty-two possible basic permutations in altered
note combinations, he chose ten and named them after the ragas which
they resemble. Bhatkandes ten thats are:

Five of the thats have the names of morning ragas: Asawari, Bhairav,
Bhairavi, Bilaval, Todi. The other five are evening ragas: Kafi,
Kalyan, Khammaj, Marwa, Purvi.
The thats are one of several systems of raga classification in use
today. Two other systems frequently mentioned are the melkarta system
and the parivar or raga-ragini system.
theka: The basic pattern of tabla bols or the signature line
that identifies each tal.
For example, the theka of rupaktal is: tin tin na&Mac189;dhi na&Mac189;dhi
na, and it is unusual in that the first matra / vibhag is both sum
and khali.
thumri: A light classical vocal style.
tihai: A rhythmic cadence repeated three times.
tintal: The most common tal used in North Indian classical
music. Sixteen beats, divided 4+4+4+4. The bols of its theka:
dha dhin dhin dha
dha dhin dhin dha
dha tin tin na
tete dhin dhin dha.
tukra: A short, lively, fixed tabla composition.
vadi: The "king note" of a raga, i.e. the most
important note in a raga.
vibhag: One measure. A vibhag is made up of matras; several
vibhags make up
an avarta. An avarta is one cycle of a tal.
vilambit: Slow (tempo).
*this page
funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts*
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