RĀGAM-TĀNAM-PALLAVI

rāgam \rAgam\ / ālāpana: indicates an extensive development of the melodic materials of the rāga. Rāgam is quite different from Hindustani ālāp in its emphasis on ornamentation and its juxtaposition of slow and fast passages. 
  ākiptikā \AkShiptikA\ [Sanskrit, "thrown out"]. Beginning section in which the performer presents the most important melodic phrases of the rāga in both the purvānga and uttarānga. for consideration. This might or might not be followed by other sections. [The Telegu word for this same passage is āyittam (Ayittam).]
  rāgavardhanī \rAgavardhanI\ [Sanskrit, "rāga expansion"] is the principal part of the rāgam / ālāpana. Rāgavardhani phrases first explore the purvānga and then the uttarānga.
  sthāyī-makarini-vartani \sthAyI-makarini-vartani\ the section that often concludes a rāgam / ālāpana. This section may have three subsections: descending-ascending passages (sthāyī), ascending-descending passages (makarini), and rapid scale patterns (vartani).
tānam \tAnam\ is distinguished by a pulsing sensation achieved through the rhythmic use of non-lexical syllables such as "-nam, ka nam, a nan dam" etc. Tānam are usually composed of sections at sequentially higher registral levels, each section separated by a brief passage of ālāpana-like material. Commonly, tānam are cadenced by stating a musical phrase in tānam style successively at roughly the upper sa, pa, and lower sa and concluded by another short ālāpana-like phrase focused on the lower sa.
pallavi has been previously described under kriti. In rāgam-tānam-pallavi, a selected kriti pallavi is accompanied by several pre-composed variations (sangati), just as in a performance of kriti. The pallavi theme is the basis for two types of improvisation: niraval and svara kalpana. After this, rāgam-tānam-pallavi often concludes with an improvised percussion ensemble section (tani or tani avartam).
  niraval [\niraval\ Sanskrit, "filling up"] specifically refers to an improvisatory, elaborative technique in which the original text of the pallavi or a portion of it and much of its rhythmic structure remain the same while the melody changes. [The same variation technique often occurs in the carana of a kriti.]  However, niraval often refers to a section of the pallavi, pallavi in this case refering to that part of the performance governed by tāla. Other rhythmic practices within niraval are anuloma and tiśram (roughly similar to the bolbant of dhrupad). These take the original pallavi theme at double and quadruple speeds (anuloma) and sometimes at triple speed (tiśram).
  svara kalpana [\svara kalpana\ Sanskrit, "art [of] notes"]. Performers will commonly focus improvisations on the melodic expansion of the rāga using the pallavi theme as its starting point. In one important technique, performers gradually increase the length of phrases and diminish the rhythmic subdivision of the tāla so that the notes come more quickly without an actual tempo increase. In vocal performances the singer uses the sargam syllables.
  Performers keep a model of the pallavi theme going in the back of their mind and return to it in a precise way. The euppu \eTuppu\ (or graha \graha\) is the consistent prescribed point in a pallavi theme to which svara kalpana phrases arrive.
  One of the most common ways to end an improvisation in South Asian music is to play a phrase three times and have it end at a cadentially important point in time (usually beat one). In Karnatak sangīt, a mōrā \mOrA\ is an elaborate three-fold cadential sequence often closing particularly important sections.
  tani āvartam \tani Avartam\ [Sanskrit "cyclic variations"]. A common concluding feature of a performance of rāgam-tānam-pallavi is a, sometimes refered to more simply as tani], a mrdangam solo or a percussion ensemble improvisation which often concludes a performance of rāgam-tānam-pallavi. Generally, these are concluded by a restatement of the pallavi theme with, perhaps, one or two sangati or improvisations in niraval and svara kalpana style.
 

 

Schematic of Rāgam-Tānam-Pallavi

Rāgam Tānam Pallavi
aksaptika pallavi
rāgavardhani niraval
sthāyi-makarini-vartani svara kalpana
tani avartam
pallavi

 

Selected Performance

Ramnad Krishnan, "Tamarasadala Netri . . . ."

 
Kriti Outline Pancaragam
 
28-Feb-2017