Bhajan is a devotional song tradition from India associated with the Hindu Bhakti movement, in which singers express personal love, praise, and surrender to deities such as Krishna, Rama, Shiva, and the Divine Mother.
Musically, bhajans are raga-informed but typically simpler than classical concert pieces, favoring singable melodies, cyclic talas (often Keherva/Keherwa 8-beat and Dadra 6-beat), and steady drone from the tanpura. Common instrumentation includes harmonium, dholak or tabla, manjira/kartal (hand cymbals), and clapping; in folk contexts, ektara and simple percussion are frequent.
Texts are usually in accessible vernaculars (e.g., Hindi, Braj Bhasha, Awadhi, Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali), drawing on the poetry of saint-poets like Mirabai, Surdas, Tulsidas, and Kabir. Performances occur in temples, homes, satsangs, and community gatherings, often featuring call-and-response, refrains, and congregational participation.