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Hindustani Classical
Hindustani classical is the North Indian branch of the Indian classical tradition, centered on the concepts of raga (melodic framework) and tala (cyclical rhythm). It emphasizes improvisation within strict aesthetic and grammatical boundaries, unfolding a raga through a gradual, architected performance arc from free-rhythm exploration to metrically grounded elaboration. Performances typically proceed through an alap (slow, non-metrical exposition), jor and jhala (rhythmic intensification on plucked instruments), and a composed piece—bandish or gat—set to a tala cycle, followed by improvisations (vistar, tans, bol-bant) that resolve emphatically on the sam (first beat). Signature ornaments such as meend (glides), gamak (oscillation), and andolan (slow vibrato) articulate microtonal nuance (shruti). The style encompasses vocal genres like dhrupad and khyal, and instrumental idioms on sitar, sarod, sarangi, bansuri, and shehnai, supported by a sustaining drone (tanpura) and tabla or pakhawaj accompaniment. Beyond the concert hall, Hindustani classical has deeply informed sub-classical and popular forms across South Asia and, through mid-20th-century cultural exchange, popular and art music worldwide.
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Indian Classical
Indian classical music (Shastriya Sangeet / Mārga Sangeet) is the art-music tradition of the Indian subcontinent, organized around melodic frameworks called raga and cyclical meters called tala. It has two major streams: Hindustani music in the North, which foregrounds extended improvisation and raga exploration, and Carnatic music in the South, which is composition-centric with structured but highly sophisticated improvisation. A related eastern tradition is Odissi (from present-day Odisha), whose classical lineage spans roughly two millennia. Despite regional distinctions, these systems share common theoretical roots, performance aesthetics, and a spiritual-philosophical view of music as a vehicle for rasa (embodied aesthetic emotion).
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Thumri
Thumri is a North Indian (Hindustani) light-classical vocal genre known for its expressive, romantic character and flexible approach to raga and text. It typically sets short, evocative lyrics—often in Braj Bhasha, Hindi, or Urdu—on themes of shṛngāra (love), viraha (separation), and Krishna devotion, prioritizing emotional nuance over strict raga orthodoxy. Musically, thumri is associated with slow-to-medium tempi, lilting rhythmic cycles such as Dadra (6), Keherwa (8), Rupak (7), Deepchandi (14), and Addha, and a palette of “mishra” (mixed) ragas like Khamaj, Kafi, Bhairavi, and Pilu. Ornamentation is central: meend (glides), murki (grace turns), andolan (gentle oscillation), bol-banāo (word-based elaboration), and delicate taans color the line. Historically linked to tawaif (courtesan) culture and kathak dance, thumri matured in 19th‑century Lucknow and later flourished in Benares (Varanasi), evolving two principal styles: bandish-ki-thumri (more rhythmic and dance-oriented) and bol-banaav thumri (slow, lyrical, and text-centered).
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Tabla
Tabla is a North Indian hand-drum tradition and performance practice centered on a pair of tuned drums: the treble dayan (tabla) and the bass bayan. It serves both as a solo art and as the principal rhythmic accompaniment in Hindustani classical, light-classical, and many popular and devotional styles. The music of tabla is encoded in a spoken mnemonic language called bols (e.g., "dha dhin na tin ta ge ke"), organized into cyclic meters (tāl) such as Teentāl (16 beats), Jhaptāl (10), Rupak (7), Ektāl (12), and Deepchandi (14). Performers elaborate the basic groove (thekā) through composed forms—peshkār, qāyda/kāydā, relā, gats, tukrā, and chakradār—and through improvisation and cadential tihais. Distinct stylistic lineages (gharanas)—Delhi, Ajrada, Lucknow, Farrukhabad, Benares (Banaras), and Punjab—shape technique, repertoire, tone production, and aesthetic priorities. Beyond the concert stage, tabla’s timbre and vocabulary have permeated film scores, ghazal and thumri salons, Sufi ensembles, Indian pop, and global fusion, making it one of the world’s most recognizable percussion traditions.
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Artists
Nag, Manilal
Samrat Pandit
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