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Traditional Carnatic Indian Music Compared to the Compositions of Composer John Cage. Presentation by Crystal Garcia. India. Second most populous country with 1.21 billion people as of the 2011 census Largest country in South Asia, covering 3,287,263 square miles
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Traditional Carnatic Indian Music Compared to the Compositions of Composer John Cage Presentation by Crystal Garcia
India • Second most populous country with 1.21 billion people as of the 2011 census • Largest country in South Asia, covering 3,287,263 square miles • Hindu population 80.5%, Islam 13.4%, Christianity 2.3%, Sikhism 1.9% • Official Language is Hindi and English (used more for business) • Indo-Aryan 72%, Dravidian 25%, Mongoloid and other 3% (2000)
Hinduism • 80.5% of the population is Hindu; its impact on culture (including music) is very evident • Has no single founder • Many diverse traditions and dynamic festivals • Hindu sacred texts mostly discuss philosophy, theology, and a way of living
Carnatic Music • Seen as both entertainment and spiritual inspiration • Purandara Dasa is seen as the father of the traditional carnatic style • Carnatic music is believed to have been given to man directly from the Hindu gods • Every December, the city of Chennai in India has its six week long “Music Season,” which has been described as the world's largest cultural event. It is the foundation for most music in South India. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvedtf_mZvU
Carnatic Music • Carnatic music is based on a 22 note scale (swaras) on contrary to the earlier 12 note scale that is used in the western classical music. But in all its practical aspects and purposes, not more than 16 notes are generally used • Usually performed by a small ensemble • Emphasis is on the vocals, and many times instruments are played so that they mimic the characteristics of a voice • Persian and Islamic influences • Inspired by Hinduism
Instruments Commonly Found in Carnatic Music The Tabla -a pair of hand drums varying in size and style The Sitar -long-necked bowl lute The Ghatam -percussion played with all parts of the hand, translated as “water jug” The Tambura -fretless, plucked lute
Sangeetha Devathe • Written by Ambujam Krishna (1917-1989) • Taught music by KaraikkudiGanesan and GanesaBhagavatar • At a young age, she married her cousin • She soon went to Delhi to finish her education and graduated from the Lady Irwin College with a degree in Home Science. • This piece is a Mayamalawagowla Raga • Meant to sooth the listener and evoke a sense of peace • Usually played in the morning, but it can be played at any time http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jy4-NmomB4U
John Cage (1912-1992) • Is considered the founder of Avant-garde 20th century music • Is most famously known for his piece 4’33” • Studied at Pomona College for a few years and then went to study music at UCLA • While at UCLA, he discovered that what he wanted to compose was wildly different from anything that had previously been made • He dropped out and soon worked with Merce Cunningham and painter Robert Rauschenberg • Though his music, he wished to show people that music and sound was everywhere, but widely underappreciated
A Flower • Composed by John Cage in 1950 • Composed for choreography by Louise Lippold • Uses a closed piano that is struck with various parts of the hand and a vocalist • Entire vocal part only uses four different pitches and uses phonemes, no whole words • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qf8Ub1Fj_dM
Comparison Similarities: -Principal performer is vocalist -uses percussion and string instruments -both have inconsistent tempos that are dominated more by emotion than a strict beat -both are considered relaxing Differences: -Cage wanted to provoke listeners into questioning the social concept of music, Krishna wanted to evoke spiritual feelings -Carnatic music is heavily influenced by Hinduism, Cage has no source of religious influence -A Flower uses instruments in unconventional ways, SangeethaDevanthe uses traditional instruments in traditional ways
Sources • http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/episodes/john-cage/about-the-composer/471/ • http://www.karnatik.com/ • http://carnatica.net/origin.htm • http://www.shivkumar.org/music/index.html#a • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qf8Ub1Fj_dM • http://www.carnaticindia.com/carnatic_music.html • http://www.karnatik.com/co1012.shtml • http://sriramv.wordpress.com/2008/11/11/ambujam-krishna/