Wednesday, 3 January 2018

Indian Music- Importance of Tala

Importance of Tala in Indian Music 

Music is an art of sound in time that expresses ideas and sensations in various forms through the elements of melody, cadences, harmony, color. It arises from a fusion of various natural and vocal entities that perform beautiful sound in an extrinsic way. It is the sort that can't be explained in its way as it is today. A kind of music that is a compound of facial and balanced gestures. It notes which is developed from droplets of water on trees, bushes, shrubs. Musical ideas are directed by vocal and instrumental sound forms a pretty tuneful sound that bounced upon from one flower to other flowers.



History 

The origin of tala and music in ancient India are found in the Vedic literature of Hinduism. Earlier Indian thought was divided into three arts, syllabic recital(Nevada), melos(Gita) and dance(nritta). It has an origin in Samvada which is governed by musical ideas, that was written around ~ 1000 B.C. Samveda is partitioned into two formats, first part is of the musical meter, another by the aim of rituals. The text is written into embedded coding where svaras are shown above or within the text. The verses of  Samveda contain melodic content, form, rhythm, and metric organization. Natyashastra which is a book written by Bharatmuni is the origin of various Indian classical music and dance. The early Sanskrit text Sangitaratnakara written by Samgadeva patronized by King Sighana of Yadava Dynasty, in Maharashtra mentions about ragas and talas.

Description

Tala is the fundamental aspect of Indian traditional music which is included in terms of cycles. It is subdivided as South Indian System as  Carnatic Tala and North Indian System Hindustani Tala. South Indian Tala is a full tala group of seven suladi talas. These are cyclic(avartana) with three parts(anga) traditionally written down in laghu, drutam, and ariudrtam symbols. Each tala is divided into two ways to perfect musical performance as Kala(kind) and other gati(pulse). Each repeated cycle of tala is called avartan. The First bit of tala is called sam. The tala which is indicated visually by using a series of hand gestures called kriyas that corresponds to angas(limbs) or vibag of tala. A tala does not have a fixed tempo(laya) and can be performed at different speeds. Talas in Carnatic music can be divided into chapu(4 talas), Chanda(108 talas), melkrata(72 talas). Talas in Hindustani music can be divided into trital, jhoomra, ek, Chau.      
         

1 comment:

shruti saxena said...

Hii
Nice Blog
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