fbpx
Wikipedia

Tala (music)

A tala (IAST tāla) literally means a 'clap, tapping one's hand on one's arm, a musical measure'.[1] It is the term used in Indian classical music similar to musical meter,[2] that is any rhythmic beat or strike that measures musical time.[3] The measure is typically established by hand clapping, waving, touching fingers on thigh or the other hand, verbally, striking of small cymbals, or a percussion instrument in the Indian subcontinental traditions.[4][5] Along with raga which forms the fabric of a melodic structure, the tala forms the life cycle and thereby constitutes one of the two foundational elements of Indian music.[6]

Tala refers to musical meter in classical Indian music. Above: a musician using small cymbals to set the tala.

Tala is an ancient music concept traceable to Vedic era texts of Hinduism, such as the Samaveda and methods for singing the Vedic hymns.[7][8][9] The music traditions of the North and South India, particularly the raga and tala systems, were not considered as distinct till about the 16th century. There on, during the tumultuous period of Islamic rule of the Indian subcontinent, the traditions separated and evolved into distinct forms. The tala system of the north is called Hindustaani, while the south is called Carnaatic.[7] However, the tala system between them continues to have more common features than differences.[10]

Tala in the Indian tradition embraces the time dimension of music, the means by which musical rhythm and form were guided and expressed.[11] While a tala carries the musical meter, it does not necessarily imply a regularly recurring pattern. In the major classical Indian music traditions, the beats are hierarchically arranged based on how the music piece is to be performed.[4] The most widely used tala in the South Indian system is Adi tala.[4] In the North Indian system, the most common tala is teental.[12]

Tala has other contextual meanings in ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism. For example, it means trochee in Sanskrit prosody.[1]

Etymology

Tāļa (ताळ) is a Sanskrit word,[1] which means 'being established'.[13]

Terminology and definitions

According to David Nelson, an ethnomusicology scholar specializing in Carnatic music, a tala in Indian music covers "the whole subject of musical meter".[5] Indian music is composed and performed in a metrical framework, a structure of beats that is a tala. The tala forms the metrical structure that repeats, in a cyclical harmony, from the start to end of any particular song or dance segment, making it conceptually analogous to meters in Western music.[5] However, talas have certain qualitative features that classical European musical meters do not. For example, some talas are much longer than any classical Western meter, such as a framework based on 29 beats whose cycle takes about 45 seconds to complete when performed. Another sophistication in talas is the lack of "strong, weak" beat composition typical of the traditional European meter. In classical Indian traditions, the tala is not restricted to permutations of strong and weak beats, but its flexibility permits the accent of a beat to be decided by the shape of musical phrase.[5]

 
Painting depicting the Vedic sage-musician Narada, with a tala instrument in his left hand

A tala measures musical time in Indian music. However, it does not imply a regular repeating accent pattern, instead its hierarchical arrangement depends on how the musical piece is supposed to be performed.[5] A metric cycle of a tala contains a specific number of beats, which can be as short as 3 beats or as long as 128 beats.[14] The pattern repeats, but the play of accent and empty beats are an integral part of Indian music architecture. Each tala has subunits. In other words, the larger cyclic tala pattern has embedded smaller cyclic patterns, and both of these rhythmic patterns provide the musician and the audience to experience the play of harmonious and discordant patterns at two planes. A musician can choose to intentionally challenge a pattern at the subunit level by contradicting the tala, explore the pattern in exciting ways, then bring the music and audience experience back to the fundamental pattern of cyclical beats.[14]

The tala as the time cycle, and the raga as the melodic framework, are the two foundational elements of classical Indian music.[6] The raga gives an artist the ingredients palette to build the melody from sounds, while the tala provides her with a creative framework for rhythmic improvisation using time.[14][15][16]

The basic rhythmic phrase of a tala when rendered on a percussive instrument such as tabla is called a theka.[17] The beats within each rhythmic cycle are called matras, and the first beat of any rhythmic cycle is called the sam.[18] An empty beat is called khali.[19] The subdivisions of a tala are called vibhagas or khands.[18] In the two major systems of classical Indian music, the first count of any tala is called sam.[12] The cyclic nature of a tala is a major feature of the Indian tradition, and this is termed as avartan. Both raga and tala are open frameworks for creativity and allow theoretically infinite number of possibilities, however, the tradition considers 108 talas as basic.[19]

History

The roots of tala and music in ancient India are found in the Vedic literature of Hinduism. The earliest Indian thought combined three arts, instrumental music (vadya), vocal music (gita) and dance (nrtta).[20] As these fields developed, sangita became a distinct genre of art, in a form equivalent to contemporary music. This likely occurred before the time of Yāska (~500 BCE), since he includes these terms in his nirukta studies, one of the six Vedanga of ancient Indian tradition. Some of the ancient texts of Hinduism such as the Samaveda (~1000 BCE) are structured entirely to melodic themes,[21][22] it is sections of Rigveda set to music.[23]

The Samaveda is organized into two formats. One part is based on the musical meter, another by the aim of the rituals.[24] The text is written with embedded coding, where svaras (octave note) is either shown above or within the text, or the verse is written into parvans (knot or member). These markings identify which units are to be sung in a single breath, each unit based on multiples of one eighth. The hymns of Samaveda contain melodic content, form, rhythm and metric organization.[24] This structure is, however, not unique or limited to Samaveda. The Rigveda embeds the musical meter too, without the kind of elaboration found in the Samaveda. For example, the Gayatri mantra contains three metric lines of exactly eight syllables, with an embedded ternary rhythm.[25]

According to Lewis Rowell, a professor of music specializing in classical Indian music, the need and impulse to develop mathematically precise musical meters in the Vedic era may have been driven by the Indian use of oral tradition for transmitting vast amounts of Vedic literature. Deeply and systematically embedded structure and meters may have enabled the ancient Indians a means to detect and correct any errors of memory or oral transmission from one person or generation to the next.[26] According to Michael Witzel,[27]

The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted, without the use of script, in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalized early on. This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures; it is, in fact, something like a tape-recording.... Not just the actual words, but even the long-lost musical (tonal) accent (as in old Greek or in Japanese) has been preserved up to the present.

The Samaveda also included a system of chironomy, or hand signals to set the recital speed. These were mudras (finger and palm postures) and jatis (finger counts of the beat), a system at the foundation of talas.[28] The chants in the Vedic recital text, associated with rituals, are presented to be measured in matras and its multiples in the invariant ratio of 1:2:3. This system is also the basis of every tala.[29]

 
Five Gandharvas (celestial musicians) from 4th–5th century CE, northwest Indian subcontinent, carrying the four types of musical instruments. Gandharvas are discussed in Vedic era literature.[30]

In the ancient traditions of Hinduism, two musical genre appeared, namely Gandharva (formal, composed, ceremonial music) and Gana (informal, improvised, entertainment music).[31] The Gandharva music also implied celestial, divine associations, while the Gana also implied singing.[31] The Vedic Sanskrit musical tradition had spread widely in the Indian subcontinent, and according to Rowell, the ancient Tamil classics make it "abundantly clear that a cultivated musical tradition existed in South India as early as the last few pre-Christian centuries".[11]

The classic Sanskrit text Natya Shastra is at the foundation of the numerous classical music and dance of India. Before Natyashastra was finalized, the ancient Indian traditions had classified musical instruments into four groups based on their acoustic principle (how they work, rather than the material they are made of).[32] These four categories are accepted as given and are four separate chapters in the Natyashastra, one each on stringed instruments (chordophones), hollow instruments (aerophones), solid instruments (idiophones), and covered instruments (membranophones).[32] Of these, states Rowell, the idiophone in the form of "small bronze cymbals" were used for tala. Almost the entire chapter of Natyashastra on idiophones, by Bharata, is a theoretical treatise on the system of tala.[33] Time keeping with idiophones was considered a separate function than that of percussion (membranophones), in the early Indian thought on music theory.[33]

The early 13th century Sanskrit text Sangitaratnakara (literally 'Ocean of Music and Dance'), by Śārṅgadeva patronized by King Sighana of the Yadava dynasty in Maharashtra, mentions and discusses ragas and talas.[34] He identifies seven tala families, then subdivides them into rhythmic ratios, presenting a methodology for improvisation and composition that continues to inspire modern era Indian musicians.[35] Sangitaratnakara is one of the most complete historic medieval era Hindu treatises on this subject that has survived into the modern era, that relates to the structure, technique and reasoning behind ragas and talas.[36][35]

The centrality and significance of Tala to music in ancient and early medieval India is also expressed in numerous temple reliefs, in both Hinduism and Jainism, such as through the carving of musicians with cymbals at the fifth century Pavaya temple sculpture near Gwalior,[37] and the Ellora Caves.[38][39]

Description

In the South Indian system (Carnatic), a full tala is a group of seven suladi talas. These are cyclic (avartana), with three parts (anga) traditionally written down with laghu, drutam and anudrutam symbols. Each tala is divided in two ways to perfect the musical performance, one is called kala (kind) and the other gati (pulse).[4]

Each repeated cycle of a tala is called an avartan. This is counted additively in sections (vibhag or anga) which roughly correspond to bars or measures but may not have the same number of beats (matra, akshara) and may be marked by accents or rests. So the Hindustani Jhoomra tal has 14 beats, counted 3+4+3+4, which differs from Dhamar tal, also of 14 beats but counted 5+2+3+4. The spacing of the vibhag accents makes them distinct, otherwise, again, since Rupak tal consists of 7 beats, two cycles of it of would be indistinguishable from one cycle of the related Dhamar tal.[40] However the most common Hindustani tala, Teental, is a regularly-divisible cycle of four measures of four beats each.

 
Examples of bol, notation and additive counting in Hindustani classical music

The first beat of any tala, called sam (pronounced as the English word 'sum' and meaning even or equal) is always the most important and heavily emphasised. It is the point of resolution in the rhythm where the percussionist's and soloist's phrases culminate: a soloist has to sound an important note of the raga there, and a North Indian classical dance composition must end there. However, melodies do not always begin on the first beat of the tala but may be offset, for example to suit the words of a composition so that the most accented word falls upon the sam. The term talli, literally 'shift', is used to describe this offset in Tamil. A composition may also start with an anacrusis on one of the last beats of the previous cycle of the tala, called ateeta eduppu in Tamil.

The tāla is indicated visually by using a series of rhythmic hand gestures called kriyas that correspond to the angas or 'limbs', or vibhag of the tāla. These movements define the tala in Carnatic music, and in the Hindustani tradition too, when learning and reciting the tala, the first beat of any vibhag is known as tali ('clap') and is accompanied by a clap of the hands, while an "empty" (khali) vibhag is indicated with a sideways wave of the dominant clapping hand (usually the right) or the placing of the back of the hand upon the base hand's palm instead. But northern definitions of tala rely far more upon specific drum-strokes, known as bols, each with its own name that can be vocalized as well as written. In one common notation the sam is denoted by an 'X' and the khali, which is always the first beat of a particular vibhag, denoted by '0' (zero).[41]

A tala does not have a fixed tempo (laya) and can be played at different speeds. In Hindustani classical music a typical recital of a raga falls into two or three parts categorized by the quickening tempo of the music; Vilambit (delayed, i.e., slow), Madhya (medium tempo) and Drut (fast). Carnatic music adds an extra slow and fast category, categorised by divisions of the pulse; Chauka (one stroke per beat), Vilamba (two strokes per beat), Madhyama (four strokes per beat), Drut (eight strokes per beat) and lastly Adi-drut (16 strokes per beat).

Indian classical music, both northern and southern, have theoretically developed since ancient times numerous tala, though in practice some talas are very common, and some are rare.

In Carnatic music

Carnatic music uses various classification systems of tālas such as the Chapu (four talas), Chanda (108 talas) and Melakarta (72 talas). The Suladi Sapta Tāla system (35 talas) is used here, according to which there are seven families of tāla. A tāla from this system cannot exist without reference to one of five jatis, differentiated by the length in beats of the laghu.[42] Thus, with all the possible combinations of tala types and laghu lengths, there are 5 x 7 = 35 talas having lengths ranging from 3 (Tisra-jati Eka tala) to 29 (sankeerna jati dhruva tala) aksharas. The seven tala families and the number of aksharas for each of the 35 talas are;

Tala Anga notation Tisra (3) Chatusra (4) Khanda (5) Misra (7) Sankeerna (9)
Dhruva lOll 11 14 17 23 29
Matya lOl 8 10 12 16 20
Rupaka Ol 5 6 7 9 11
Jhampa lUO 6 7 8 10 12
Triputa lOO 7 8 9 11 13
Ata llOO 10 12 14 18 22
Eka l 3 4 5 7 9

In practice, only a few talas have compositions set to them. The most common tala is Chaturasra-nadai Chaturasra-jaati Triputa tala, also called Adi tala (Adi meaning primordial in Sanskrit). Nadai is a term which means subdivision of beats. Many kritis and around half of the varnams are set to this tala. Other common talas include:

  • Chaturasra-nadai Chaturasra-jaati Rupaka tala (or simply Rupaka tala).[43] A large body of krtis is set to this tala.
  • Khanda Chapu (a 10-count) and Misra Chapu (a 14-count), both of which do not fit very well into the suladi sapta tala scheme. Many padams are set to Misra Chapu, while there are also krtis set to both the above talas.
  • Chatusra-nadai Khanda-jati Ata tala (or simply Ata tala).[43] Around half of the varnams are set to this tala.
  • Tisra-nadai Chatusra-jati Triputa tala (Adi Tala Tisra-Nadai).[43] A few fast-paced kritis are set to this tala. As this tala is a twenty-four beat cycle, compositions in it can be and sometimes are sung in Rupaka talam.

Strokes

There are six main angas/strokes in talas;

  • Anudhrutam, a single beat, notated 'U', a downward clap of the open hand with the palm facing down.
  • Dhrutam, a pattern of two beats, notated 'O', a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by a second downward clap with the palm facing up.
  • Laghu, a pattern with a variable number of beats, three, four, five, seven or nine, depending on the jati. It is notated 'l' and consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to thumb and back, depending on the jati.
  • Guru, a pattern represented by eight beats. It is notated '8' and consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by circling movement of the right hand with closed fingers in the clockwise direction.
  • Plutham, a pattern of twelve beats notated '3', it consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to the middle finger, a krishya (waving the hand towards the left hand side four times) and a sarpini (waving the hand towards the right four times)
  • Kakapadam, a pattern of sixteen beats notated 'x', it consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to the middle finger, a pathakam (waving the hand upwards four times),a krishya and a sarpini

Jatis

Each tala can incorporate one of the five following jatis.

Jati Number of aksharas
Chaturasra 4
Thisra 3
Khanda 5
Misra 7
Sankeerna 9

Each tala family has a default jati associated with it; the tala name mentioned without qualification refers to the default jati.

  • Dhruva tala is by default chaturasra jati
  • Matya tala is chaturasra jati
  • Rupaka tala is chaturasra jati
  • Jhampa tala is misra jati[43]
  • Triputa tala is tisra jati (chaturasra jati type is also known as Adi tala)
  • Ata tala is kanda jati
  • Eka tala is chaturasra jati
  • For all the 72 melakarta talas and the 108 talas the jathi is mostly chatusram

For example, one cycle of khanda-jati rupaka tala comprises a two-beat dhrutam followed by a five-beat laghu. The cycle is thus seven aksharas long. Chaturasra nadai khanda-jati Rupaka tala has seven aksharam, each of which is four matras long; each avartana of the tala is 4 x 7 = 28 matras long. For Misra nadai Khanda-jati Rupaka tala, it would be 7 x 7 = 49 matra.

Gati (nadai in Tamil, nadaka in Telugu, nade in Kannada)

The number of maatras in an akshara is called the nadai. This number can be three, four, five, seven or nine, and take the same name as the jatis. The default nadai is Chatusram:

Jati Maatras Phonetic representation of beats
Tisra 3 Tha Ki Ta
Chatusra 4 Tha Ka Dhi Mi
Khanda 5 Tha Ka Tha Ki Ta
Misra 7 Tha Ki Ta Tha Ka Dhi Mi
Sankeerna 9 Tha Ka Dhi Mi Tha Ka Tha Ki Ta

Sometimes, pallavis are sung as part of a Ragam Thanam Pallavi exposition in some of the rarer, more complicated talas; such pallavis, if sung in a non-Chatusra-nadai tala, are called nadai pallavis. In addition, pallavis are often sung in chauka kale (slowing the tala cycle by a magnitude of four times), although this trend seems to be slowing.

Kāla

Kāla refers to the change of tempo during a rendition of song, typically doubling up the speed. Onnaam kaalam is first speed, Erandaam kaalam is second speed and so on. Erandaam kaalam fits in twice the number of aksharaas (notes) into the same beat, thus doubling the tempo. Sometimes, Kāla is also used similar to Layā, for example Madhyama Kālam or Chowka Kālam.

In Hindustani music

Talas have a vocalised and therefore recordable form wherein individual beats are expressed as phonetic representations of various strokes played upon the tabla. Various Gharanas (literally 'Houses' which can be inferred to be "styles" – basically styles of the same art with cultivated traditional variances) also have their own preferences. For example, the Kirana Gharana uses Ektaal more frequently for Vilambit Khayal while the Jaipur Gharana uses Trital. Jaipur Gharana is also known to use Ada Trital, a variation of Trital for transitioning from Vilambit to Drut laya.

The Khyal vibhag has no beats on the bayan, i.e. no bass beats this can be seen as a way to enforce the balance between the usage of heavy (bass dominated) and fine (treble) beats or more simply it can be thought of another mnemonic to keep track of the rhythmic cycle (in addition to Sam). The khali is played with a stressed syllable that can easily be picked out from the surrounding beats.

Some rare talas even contain a "half-beat". For example, Dharami is an 11 1/2 beat cycle where the final "Ka" only occupies half the time of the other beats. This tala's sixth beat does not have a played syllable – in western terms it is a "rest".

Common Hindustani talas

Some talas, for example Dhamaar, Ek, Jhoomra and Chau talas, lend themselves better to slow and medium tempos. Others flourish at faster speeds, like Jhap or Rupak talas. Trital or Teental is one of the most popular, since it is as aesthetic at slower tempos as it is at faster speeds.

There are many talas in Hindustani music, some of the more popular ones are:

Name Beats Division Vibhaga
Tintal (or Trital or Teental) 16 4+4+4+4 X 2 0 3
Tilwada 16 4+4+4+4 X 2 0 3
Jhoomra 14 3+4+3+4 X 2 0 3
Ada Chautaal 14
Dhamar 14 5+2+3+4 X 2 0 3
Deepchandi (thumri, film songs) 14
Ektal (and Chautal, in Dhrupad) 12 2+2+2+2+2+2 X 0 2 0 3 4
Jhaptal 10 2+3+2+3 X 2 0 3
Sool Taal (mainly Dhrupad) 10
Keherwa 8 4+4 X 0
Rupak (Mughlai/Roopak)

Carnaric has a 6-beat roopak

7 3+2+2 X 2 3
Tevaraa (used in dhrupad) 7
Dadra 6 3+3 X 0

72 melakarta talas and 108 anga talas

72 melakarta talas

S.No Name of raga Pattern of the symbols of angas Aksharas
1 Kanakaangi 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Laghu 15
2 Rathnaangi 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu 20
3 Ganamurthi 1 Laghu, 2 Anudhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha 22
4 Vanaspathi 1 Laghu, 2 Anudhruthas, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 22
5 Maanavathi 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 20
6 Dhanarupi 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhritha 15
7 Senaavathi 1 Gurus, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 25
8 Hanumathodi 1 Guru, 2 Anudhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu 34
9 Dhenuka 1 Pluta, 2 Anudhruthas, 1 Dhrutha 16
10 Natakapriya 3 Dhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 12
11 Kokilapriya 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha, 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha 21
12 Rupaavathi 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 19
13 Gayakapriya 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 2 Dhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 15
14 Vagula bharanam 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 2 Dhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 28
15 Maya malava goulam 1 Laghu, 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Anudhrutha 31
16 Chakravaham 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 24
17 Suryakantham 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Pluta 33
18 Haata kambari 1 Guru, 2 Dhruthas, 1 Guru, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 27
19 Jankaradh wani 1 Pluta, 3 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Anudhrutha 36
20 Nata bhairavi 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha 19
21 Keeravani 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 18
22 Karahara priya 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 24
23 Gowri manohari 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha, 2 Gurus, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 37
24 Varuna priya 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 20
25 Maara ranjani 1 Laghu, 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 2 Gurus, 2 Anudhruthas 28
26 Charukesi 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 22
27 Sarasaangi 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu 29
28 Harikamboji 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Pluta, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha 41
29 Dheera sankara bharanam 1 Guru, 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Dhrutha, 2 Laghus, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 50
30 Nagaa nandhini 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 2 Anudhruthas 23
31 Yagapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha 13
32 Raga vardhini 3 Laghus, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Anudhrutha 24
33 Gangeya bhushani 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 38
34 Vaga dheeshwari 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, Dhrutha, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 34
35 Soolini 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha 12
36 Chala Naata 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 2 Dhruthas 15
37 Chalagam 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha 22
38 Jalaarnavam 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 2 Gurus, 1 Dhrutha 32
39 Jaalavarali 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 2 Laghus, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha 25
40 Navaneetham 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 15
41 Paavani 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 2 Anudhruthas 9
42 Raghupriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 14
43 Kavaambothi 1 Laghu, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Pluta, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha 36
44 Bhavapriya 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 16
45 Subha panthuvarali 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha 35
46 Shadvitha maargini 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 44
47 Swarnaangi 1 Guru, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu 32
48 Divyamani 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 27
49 Davalaambari 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 28
50 Naama narayani 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 2 Dhruthas, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 22
51 Kaamavartha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Pluta, 1 Anudhrutha 27
52 Raamapriya 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 16
53 Gamanashrama 2 Laghus, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 17
54 Viswambari 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 27
55 Syamalangi 1 Guru, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu 25
56 Shanmukha priya 1 Pluta, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 27
57 Simhendra madhyamam 1 Guru, 1 Kakapada, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 69
58 Hemaavathi 1 Pluta, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 30
59 Dharmavathi 1 Pluta, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 30
60 Neethimathi 1Dhrutha, 1Laghu, 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 22
61 Kaanthamani 2 Gurus, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 28
62 Rishabhapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 21
63 Lathaangi 1 Laghu, 1 Pluta, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu 21
64 Vachaspathi 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 29
65 Mecha Kalyani 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 30
66 Chithraambari 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Pluta, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 29
67 Sucharithra 1 Guru, 1 Laghu, 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams, 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha 27
68 Jyothi swarupini 1 Kakapada, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Pluta, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 48
69 Dathuvardhani 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Anudhrutha, 1 Pluta, 1 Anudhrutha 36
70 Naasikha bhushani 1 Dhrutha, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 32
71 Kosalam 1 Guru, 1 Anudhrutha, 2 Gurus, 1 Anudhruthas 26
72 Rasikapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Guru, 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam, 1 Laghu, 1 Dhrutha 20

7 Saptangachakram (7 angas)

Anga Symbol Aksharakala
Anudrutam U 1
Druta O 2
Druta-virama UO 3
Laghu (Chatusra-jati) l 4
Guru 8 8
Plutam 3 12
Kakapadam x 16

Shodashangachakram (16 angas)

Anga Symbol Aksharakala
Anudrutam U 1
Druta O 2
Druta-virama UO 3
Laghu (Chatusra-jati) l 4
Laghu-virama Ul 5
Laghu-druta Ol 6
Laghu-druta-virama UOl
7
Guru 8 8
Guru-virama U8 9
Guru-druta O8 10
Guru-druta-virama UO8 11
Plutam 3 12
Pluta-virana U3 13
Pluta-druta O3 14
Pluta-druta-virama UO3 15
Kakapadam x 16

Compositions are rare in the 108 lengthy anga talas. They are mostly used in performing the Pallavi of Ragam Thanam Pallavis. Some examples of anga talas are:

Sarabhanandana tala

8 O l l O U U)
O O O U O) OU) U) O
U O U O U) O (OU) O)

Simhanandana tala : It is the longest tala.

8 8 l ) l 8 O O
8 8 l ) l ) 8 l
l x

Another type of tala is the chhanda tala. These are talas set to the lyrics of the Thirupugazh by the Tamil composer Arunagirinathar. He is said to have written 16,000 hymns each in a different chhanda tala. Of these, only 1500–2000 are available.

Rarer Hindustani talas

Name Beats Division Vibhaga
Adachoutal 14 2+2+2+2+2+2+2 X 2 0 3 0 4 0
Brahmtal 28 2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2 X 0 2 3 0 4 5 6 0 7 8 9 10 0
Dipchandi 14 3+4+3+4 X 2 0 3
Shikar 17 6+6+2+3 X 0 3 4
Sultal 10 2+2+2+2+2 x 0 2 3 0
Ussole e Fakhta 5 1+1+1+1+1 x 3
Farodast 14 3+4+3+4 X 2 0 3

References

  1. ^ a b c Monier-Williams 1899, p. 444.
  2. ^ Nettl et al. 1998, p. 138.
  3. ^ Randel 2003, p. 816.
  4. ^ a b c d Randel 2003, pp. 816–817.
  5. ^ a b c d e Nettl et al. 1998, pp. 138–139.
  6. ^ a b Sorrell & Narayan 1980, pp. 1–3.
  7. ^ a b Sorrell & Narayan 1980, pp. 3–4.
  8. ^ Guy L. Beck (2012). Sonic Liturgy: Ritual and Music in Hindu Tradition. University of South Carolina Press. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-1-61117-108-2.
  9. ^ William Alves (2013). Music of the Peoples of the World. Cengage Learning. p. 266. ISBN 978-1-133-71230-5.
  10. ^ Sorrell & Narayan 1980, pp. 4–5.
  11. ^ a b Rowell 2015, pp. 12–13.
  12. ^ a b Ellen Koskoff (2013). The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 2. Routledge. pp. 938–939. ISBN 978-1-136-09602-0.
  13. ^ Caudhurī 2000, p. 130.
  14. ^ a b c Nettl 2010.
  15. ^ James B. Robinson (2009). Hinduism. Infobase Publishing. pp. 104–106. ISBN 978-1-4381-0641-0.
  16. ^ Vijaya Moorthy (2001). Romance of the Raga. Abhinav Publications. pp. 45–48, 53, 56–58. ISBN 978-81-7017-382-3.
  17. ^ Nettl et al. 1998, p. 124.
  18. ^ a b Gangolli 2007, p. 56.
  19. ^ a b Rao, Suvarnalata; Rao, Preeti (2014). "An Overview of Hindustani Music in the Context of Computational Musicology". Journal of New Music Research. 43 (1): 26–28. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.645.9188. doi:10.1080/09298215.2013.831109. S2CID 36631020.
  20. ^ Rowell 2015, p. 9.
  21. ^ William Forde Thompson (2014). Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. pp. 1693–1694. ISBN 978-1-4833-6558-9.
  22. ^ Guy Beck (1993), Sonic Theology: Hinduism and Sacred Sound, University of South Carolina Press, ISBN 978-0872498556, pp. 107–108
  23. ^ Frits Staal (2009), Discovering the Vedas: Origins, Mantras, Rituals, Insights, Penguin, ISBN 978-0143099864, pp. 4–5
  24. ^ a b Rowell 2015, p. 59-61.
  25. ^ Rowell 2015, p. 62-63.
  26. ^ Rowell 2015, p. 64-65.
  27. ^ Witzel, Michael (2003). "Vedas and Upaniṣads". In Flood, Gavin (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 68–71. ISBN 1-4051-3251-5.
  28. ^ Rowell 2015, p. 66-67.
  29. ^ Rowell 2015, p. 67-68.
  30. ^ Rowell 2015, pp. 11–14.
  31. ^ a b Rowell 2015, pp. 11–12.
  32. ^ a b Rowell 2015, pp. 13–14.
  33. ^ a b Rowell 2015, p. 14.
  34. ^ S. S. Sastri (1943), Sangitaratnakara of Sarngadeva, Adyar Library Press, ISBN 0-8356-7330-8, pp. v–vi, ix–x (English), for talas discussion see pp. 169-274 (Sanskrit)
  35. ^ a b Rens Bod (2013). A New History of the Humanities: The Search for Principles and Patterns from Antiquity to the Present. Oxford University Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-19-164294-4.
  36. ^ Rowell 2015, pp. 12–14.
  37. ^ Nettl et al. 1998, p. 299.
  38. ^ Lisa Owen (2012). Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora. BRILL Academic. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-90-04-20629-8.
  39. ^ Madhukar Keshav Dhavalikar (2003). Ellora. Oxford University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-19-565458-5.
  40. ^ Kaufmann 1968.
  41. ^ Chandrakantha Music of India http://chandrakantha.com/faq/tala_thalam.html
  42. ^ "What is Suladi Sapta Tala and Why is it Important in Carnatic Music?". Kafqa Academy. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  43. ^ a b c d A practical course in Karnatik music by Prof. P. Sambamurthy, Book II, The Indian Music Publishing House, Madras

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Daniélou, Alain (1949). Northern Indian Music, Volume 1. Theory & technique; Volume 2. The main rāgǎs. London: C. Johnson. OCLC 851080.
  • Humble, M. (2002): The Development of Rhythmic Organization in Indian Classical Music, MA dissertation, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
  • Jairazbhoy, Nazir Ali (1995). The Rāgs of North Indian Music: Their Structure & Evolution (1st revised Indian ed.). Bombay: Popular Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-7154-395-3.
  • Junius, Manfred: Die Tālas der nordindischen Musik [The Talas of North Indian Music], Munich, Salzburg: Katzbichler, 1983.
  • Martinez, José Luiz (2001). Semiosis in Hindustani Music. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1801-9.
  • Mehta, Tarla (1995). Sanskrit Play Production in Ancient India. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1057-0.
  • Montfort, Matthew. Ancient Traditions – Future Possibilities: Rhythmic Training Through the Traditions of Africa, Bali and India, Mill Valley: Panoramic Press, 1985. ISBN 0-937879-00-2
  • Sargeant, Winthrop; Lahiri, Sarat (October 1931). "A Study in East Indian Rhythm". The Musical Quarterly. XVII (4): 427–438. doi:10.1093/mq/XVII.4.427.
  • Te Nijenhuis, Emmie (1974). Indian Music: History and Structure. BRILL Academic. ISBN 978-90-04-03978-0.

External links

  • A Visual Introduction to Rhythms (taal) in Hindustani Classical Music
  • Colvin Russell: Tala Primer – A basic introduction to tabla and tala
  • KKSongs Talamala: Recordings of Tabla Bols, database for Hindustani Talas
  • Ancient Future: MIDI files of the common (major) Hindustani Talas

tala, music, this, article, about, meter, classical, indian, music, other, uses, tala, disambiguation, tala, iast, tāla, literally, means, clap, tapping, hand, musical, measure, term, used, indian, classical, music, similar, musical, meter, that, rhythmic, bea. This article is about meter in classical Indian music For other uses see Tala disambiguation A tala IAST tala literally means a clap tapping one s hand on one s arm a musical measure 1 It is the term used in Indian classical music similar to musical meter 2 that is any rhythmic beat or strike that measures musical time 3 The measure is typically established by hand clapping waving touching fingers on thigh or the other hand verbally striking of small cymbals or a percussion instrument in the Indian subcontinental traditions 4 5 Along with raga which forms the fabric of a melodic structure the tala forms the life cycle and thereby constitutes one of the two foundational elements of Indian music 6 Tala refers to musical meter in classical Indian music Above a musician using small cymbals to set the tala This article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why November 2021 Tala is an ancient music concept traceable to Vedic era texts of Hinduism such as the Samaveda and methods for singing the Vedic hymns 7 8 9 The music traditions of the North and South India particularly the raga and tala systems were not considered as distinct till about the 16th century There on during the tumultuous period of Islamic rule of the Indian subcontinent the traditions separated and evolved into distinct forms The tala system of the north is called Hindustaani while the south is called Carnaatic 7 However the tala system between them continues to have more common features than differences 10 Tala in the Indian tradition embraces the time dimension of music the means by which musical rhythm and form were guided and expressed 11 While a tala carries the musical meter it does not necessarily imply a regularly recurring pattern In the major classical Indian music traditions the beats are hierarchically arranged based on how the music piece is to be performed 4 The most widely used tala in the South Indian system is Adi tala 4 In the North Indian system the most common tala is teental 12 Tala has other contextual meanings in ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism For example it means trochee in Sanskrit prosody 1 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Terminology and definitions 3 History 4 Description 5 In Carnatic music 5 1 Strokes 5 2 Jatis 5 3 Gati nadai in Tamil nadaka in Telugu nade in Kannada 5 4 Kala 6 In Hindustani music 6 1 Common Hindustani talas 7 72 melakarta talas and 108 anga talas 7 1 72 melakarta talas 7 2 7 Saptangachakram 7 angas 7 3 Shodashangachakram 16 angas 8 Rarer Hindustani talas 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology EditTala त ळ is a Sanskrit word 1 which means being established 13 Terminology and definitions EditAccording to David Nelson an ethnomusicology scholar specializing in Carnatic music a tala in Indian music covers the whole subject of musical meter 5 Indian music is composed and performed in a metrical framework a structure of beats that is a tala The tala forms the metrical structure that repeats in a cyclical harmony from the start to end of any particular song or dance segment making it conceptually analogous to meters in Western music 5 However talas have certain qualitative features that classical European musical meters do not For example some talas are much longer than any classical Western meter such as a framework based on 29 beats whose cycle takes about 45 seconds to complete when performed Another sophistication in talas is the lack of strong weak beat composition typical of the traditional European meter In classical Indian traditions the tala is not restricted to permutations of strong and weak beats but its flexibility permits the accent of a beat to be decided by the shape of musical phrase 5 Painting depicting the Vedic sage musician Narada with a tala instrument in his left hand A tala measures musical time in Indian music However it does not imply a regular repeating accent pattern instead its hierarchical arrangement depends on how the musical piece is supposed to be performed 5 A metric cycle of a tala contains a specific number of beats which can be as short as 3 beats or as long as 128 beats 14 The pattern repeats but the play of accent and empty beats are an integral part of Indian music architecture Each tala has subunits In other words the larger cyclic tala pattern has embedded smaller cyclic patterns and both of these rhythmic patterns provide the musician and the audience to experience the play of harmonious and discordant patterns at two planes A musician can choose to intentionally challenge a pattern at the subunit level by contradicting the tala explore the pattern in exciting ways then bring the music and audience experience back to the fundamental pattern of cyclical beats 14 The tala as the time cycle and the raga as the melodic framework are the two foundational elements of classical Indian music 6 The raga gives an artist the ingredients palette to build the melody from sounds while the tala provides her with a creative framework for rhythmic improvisation using time 14 15 16 The basic rhythmic phrase of a tala when rendered on a percussive instrument such as tabla is called a theka 17 The beats within each rhythmic cycle are called matras and the first beat of any rhythmic cycle is called the sam 18 An empty beat is called khali 19 The subdivisions of a tala are called vibhagas or khands 18 In the two major systems of classical Indian music the first count of any tala is called sam 12 The cyclic nature of a tala is a major feature of the Indian tradition and this is termed as avartan Both raga and tala are open frameworks for creativity and allow theoretically infinite number of possibilities however the tradition considers 108 talas as basic 19 History EditThe roots of tala and music in ancient India are found in the Vedic literature of Hinduism The earliest Indian thought combined three arts instrumental music vadya vocal music gita and dance nrtta 20 As these fields developed sangita became a distinct genre of art in a form equivalent to contemporary music This likely occurred before the time of Yaska 500 BCE since he includes these terms in his nirukta studies one of the six Vedanga of ancient Indian tradition Some of the ancient texts of Hinduism such as the Samaveda 1000 BCE are structured entirely to melodic themes 21 22 it is sections of Rigveda set to music 23 The Samaveda is organized into two formats One part is based on the musical meter another by the aim of the rituals 24 The text is written with embedded coding where svaras octave note is either shown above or within the text or the verse is written into parvans knot or member These markings identify which units are to be sung in a single breath each unit based on multiples of one eighth The hymns of Samaveda contain melodic content form rhythm and metric organization 24 This structure is however not unique or limited to Samaveda The Rigveda embeds the musical meter too without the kind of elaboration found in the Samaveda For example the Gayatri mantra contains three metric lines of exactly eight syllables with an embedded ternary rhythm 25 According to Lewis Rowell a professor of music specializing in classical Indian music the need and impulse to develop mathematically precise musical meters in the Vedic era may have been driven by the Indian use of oral tradition for transmitting vast amounts of Vedic literature Deeply and systematically embedded structure and meters may have enabled the ancient Indians a means to detect and correct any errors of memory or oral transmission from one person or generation to the next 26 According to Michael Witzel 27 The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted without the use of script in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalized early on This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures it is in fact something like a tape recording Not just the actual words but even the long lost musical tonal accent as in old Greek or in Japanese has been preserved up to the present The Samaveda also included a system of chironomy or hand signals to set the recital speed These were mudras finger and palm postures and jatis finger counts of the beat a system at the foundation of talas 28 The chants in the Vedic recital text associated with rituals are presented to be measured in matras and its multiples in the invariant ratio of 1 2 3 This system is also the basis of every tala 29 Five Gandharvas celestial musicians from 4th 5th century CE northwest Indian subcontinent carrying the four types of musical instruments Gandharvas are discussed in Vedic era literature 30 In the ancient traditions of Hinduism two musical genre appeared namely Gandharva formal composed ceremonial music and Gana informal improvised entertainment music 31 The Gandharva music also implied celestial divine associations while the Gana also implied singing 31 The Vedic Sanskrit musical tradition had spread widely in the Indian subcontinent and according to Rowell the ancient Tamil classics make it abundantly clear that a cultivated musical tradition existed in South India as early as the last few pre Christian centuries 11 The classic Sanskrit text Natya Shastra is at the foundation of the numerous classical music and dance of India Before Natyashastra was finalized the ancient Indian traditions had classified musical instruments into four groups based on their acoustic principle how they work rather than the material they are made of 32 These four categories are accepted as given and are four separate chapters in the Natyashastra one each on stringed instruments chordophones hollow instruments aerophones solid instruments idiophones and covered instruments membranophones 32 Of these states Rowell the idiophone in the form of small bronze cymbals were used for tala Almost the entire chapter of Natyashastra on idiophones by Bharata is a theoretical treatise on the system of tala 33 Time keeping with idiophones was considered a separate function than that of percussion membranophones in the early Indian thought on music theory 33 The early 13th century Sanskrit text Sangitaratnakara literally Ocean of Music and Dance by Sarṅgadeva patronized by King Sighana of the Yadava dynasty in Maharashtra mentions and discusses ragas and talas 34 He identifies seven tala families then subdivides them into rhythmic ratios presenting a methodology for improvisation and composition that continues to inspire modern era Indian musicians 35 Sangitaratnakara is one of the most complete historic medieval era Hindu treatises on this subject that has survived into the modern era that relates to the structure technique and reasoning behind ragas and talas 36 35 The centrality and significance of Tala to music in ancient and early medieval India is also expressed in numerous temple reliefs in both Hinduism and Jainism such as through the carving of musicians with cymbals at the fifth century Pavaya temple sculpture near Gwalior 37 and the Ellora Caves 38 39 Description EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the South Indian system Carnatic a full tala is a group of seven suladi talas These are cyclic avartana with three parts anga traditionally written down with laghu drutam and anudrutam symbols Each tala is divided in two ways to perfect the musical performance one is called kala kind and the other gati pulse 4 Each repeated cycle of a tala is called an avartan This is counted additively in sections vibhag or anga which roughly correspond to bars or measures but may not have the same number of beats matra akshara and may be marked by accents or rests So the Hindustani Jhoomra tal has 14 beats counted 3 4 3 4 which differs from Dhamar tal also of 14 beats but counted 5 2 3 4 The spacing of the vibhag accents makes them distinct otherwise again since Rupak tal consists of 7 beats two cycles of it of would be indistinguishable from one cycle of the related Dhamar tal 40 However the most common Hindustani tala Teental is a regularly divisible cycle of four measures of four beats each Examples of bol notation and additive counting in Hindustani classical music The first beat of any tala called sam pronounced as the English word sum and meaning even or equal is always the most important and heavily emphasised It is the point of resolution in the rhythm where the percussionist s and soloist s phrases culminate a soloist has to sound an important note of the raga there and a North Indian classical dance composition must end there However melodies do not always begin on the first beat of the tala but may be offset for example to suit the words of a composition so that the most accented word falls upon the sam The term talli literally shift is used to describe this offset in Tamil A composition may also start with an anacrusis on one of the last beats of the previous cycle of the tala called ateeta eduppu in Tamil The tala is indicated visually by using a series of rhythmic hand gestures called kriyas that correspond to the angas or limbs or vibhag of the tala These movements define the tala in Carnatic music and in the Hindustani tradition too when learning and reciting the tala the first beat of any vibhag is known as tali clap and is accompanied by a clap of the hands while an empty khali vibhag is indicated with a sideways wave of the dominant clapping hand usually the right or the placing of the back of the hand upon the base hand s palm instead But northern definitions of tala rely far more upon specific drum strokes known as bols each with its own name that can be vocalized as well as written In one common notation the sam is denoted by an X and the khali which is always the first beat of a particular vibhag denoted by 0 zero 41 A tala does not have a fixed tempo laya and can be played at different speeds In Hindustani classical music a typical recital of a raga falls into two or three parts categorized by the quickening tempo of the music Vilambit delayed i e slow Madhya medium tempo and Drut fast Carnatic music adds an extra slow and fast category categorised by divisions of the pulse Chauka one stroke per beat Vilamba two strokes per beat Madhyama four strokes per beat Drut eight strokes per beat and lastly Adi drut 16 strokes per beat Indian classical music both northern and southern have theoretically developed since ancient times numerous tala though in practice some talas are very common and some are rare In Carnatic music EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Carnatic music uses various classification systems of talas such as the Chapu four talas Chanda 108 talas and Melakarta 72 talas The Suladi Sapta Tala system 35 talas is used here according to which there are seven families of tala A tala from this system cannot exist without reference to one of five jatis differentiated by the length in beats of the laghu 42 Thus with all the possible combinations of tala types and laghu lengths there are 5 x 7 35 talas having lengths ranging from 3 Tisra jati Eka tala to 29 sankeerna jati dhruva tala aksharas The seven tala families and the number of aksharas for each of the 35 talas are Tala Anga notation Tisra 3 Chatusra 4 Khanda 5 Misra 7 Sankeerna 9 Dhruva lOll 11 14 17 23 29Matya lOl 8 10 12 16 20Rupaka Ol 5 6 7 9 11Jhampa lUO 6 7 8 10 12Triputa lOO 7 8 9 11 13Ata llOO 10 12 14 18 22Eka l 3 4 5 7 9In practice only a few talas have compositions set to them The most common tala is Chaturasra nadai Chaturasra jaati Triputa tala also called Adi tala Adi meaning primordial in Sanskrit Nadai is a term which means subdivision of beats Many kritis and around half of the varnams are set to this tala Other common talas include Chaturasra nadai Chaturasra jaati Rupaka tala or simply Rupaka tala 43 A large body of krtis is set to this tala Khanda Chapu a 10 count and Misra Chapu a 14 count both of which do not fit very well into the suladi sapta tala scheme Many padams are set to Misra Chapu while there are also krtis set to both the above talas Chatusra nadai Khanda jati Ata tala or simply Ata tala 43 Around half of the varnams are set to this tala Tisra nadai Chatusra jati Triputa tala Adi Tala Tisra Nadai 43 A few fast paced kritis are set to this tala As this tala is a twenty four beat cycle compositions in it can be and sometimes are sung in Rupaka talam Strokes Edit There are six main angas strokes in talas Anudhrutam a single beat notated U a downward clap of the open hand with the palm facing down Dhrutam a pattern of two beats notated O a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by a second downward clap with the palm facing up Laghu a pattern with a variable number of beats three four five seven or nine depending on the jati It is notated l and consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to thumb and back depending on the jati Guru a pattern represented by eight beats It is notated 8 and consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by circling movement of the right hand with closed fingers in the clockwise direction Plutham a pattern of twelve beats notated 3 it consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to the middle finger a krishya waving the hand towards the left hand side four times and a sarpini waving the hand towards the right four times Kakapadam a pattern of sixteen beats notated x it consists of a downward clap with the palm facing down followed by counting from little finger to the middle finger a pathakam waving the hand upwards four times a krishya and a sarpiniJatis Edit Each tala can incorporate one of the five following jatis Jati Number of aksharasChaturasra 4Thisra 3Khanda 5Misra 7Sankeerna 9Each tala family has a default jatiassociated with it the tala name mentioned without qualification refers to the default jati Dhruva tala is by default chaturasra jati Matya tala is chaturasra jati Rupaka tala is chaturasra jati Jhampa tala is misra jati 43 Triputa tala is tisra jati chaturasra jati type is also known as Adi tala Ata tala is kanda jati Eka tala is chaturasra jati For all the 72 melakarta talas and the 108 talas the jathi is mostly chatusramFor example one cycle of khanda jati rupaka tala comprises a two beat dhrutam followed by a five beat laghu The cycle is thus seven aksharas long Chaturasra nadai khanda jati Rupaka tala has seven aksharam each of which is four matras long each avartana of the tala is 4 x 7 28 matras long For Misra nadai Khanda jati Rupaka tala it would be 7 x 7 49 matra Gati nadai in Tamil nadaka in Telugu nade in Kannada Edit The number of maatras in an akshara is called the nadai This number can be three four five seven or nine and take the same name as the jatis The default nadai is Chatusram Jati Maatras Phonetic representation of beatsTisra 3 Tha Ki TaChatusra 4 Tha Ka Dhi MiKhanda 5 Tha Ka Tha Ki TaMisra 7 Tha Ki Ta Tha Ka Dhi MiSankeerna 9 Tha Ka Dhi Mi Tha Ka Tha Ki TaSometimes pallavis are sung as part of a Ragam Thanam Pallavi exposition in some of the rarer more complicated talas such pallavis if sung in a non Chatusra nadai tala are called nadai pallavis In addition pallavis are often sung in chauka kale slowing the tala cycle by a magnitude of four times although this trend seems to be slowing Kala Edit Kala refers to the change of tempo during a rendition of song typically doubling up the speed Onnaam kaalam is first speed Erandaam kaalam is second speed and so on Erandaam kaalam fits in twice the number of aksharaas notes into the same beat thus doubling the tempo Sometimes Kala is also used similar to Laya for example Madhyama Kalam or Chowka Kalam In Hindustani music EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Talas have a vocalised and therefore recordable form wherein individual beats are expressed as phonetic representations of various strokes played upon the tabla Various Gharanas literally Houses which can be inferred to be styles basically styles of the same art with cultivated traditional variances also have their own preferences For example the Kirana Gharana uses Ektaal more frequently for Vilambit Khayal while the Jaipur Gharana uses Trital Jaipur Gharana is also known to use Ada Trital a variation of Trital for transitioning from Vilambit to Drut laya The Khyal vibhag has no beats on the bayan i e no bass beats this can be seen as a way to enforce the balance between the usage of heavy bass dominated and fine treble beats or more simply it can be thought of another mnemonic to keep track of the rhythmic cycle in addition to Sam The khali is played with a stressed syllable that can easily be picked out from the surrounding beats Some rare talas even contain a half beat For example Dharami is an 11 1 2 beat cycle where the final Ka only occupies half the time of the other beats This tala s sixth beat does not have a played syllable in western terms it is a rest Common Hindustani talas Edit Some talas for example Dhamaar Ek Jhoomra and Chau talas lend themselves better to slow and medium tempos Others flourish at faster speeds like Jhap or Rupak talas Trital or Teental is one of the most popular since it is as aesthetic at slower tempos as it is at faster speeds There are many talas in Hindustani music some of the more popular ones are Name Beats Division VibhagaTintal or Trital or Teental 16 4 4 4 4 X 2 0 3Tilwada 16 4 4 4 4 X 2 0 3Jhoomra 14 3 4 3 4 X 2 0 3Ada Chautaal 14Dhamar 14 5 2 3 4 X 2 0 3Deepchandi thumri film songs 14Ektal and Chautal in Dhrupad 12 2 2 2 2 2 2 X 0 2 0 3 4Jhaptal 10 2 3 2 3 X 2 0 3Sool Taal mainly Dhrupad 10Keherwa 8 4 4 X 0Rupak Mughlai Roopak Carnaric has a 6 beat roopak 7 3 2 2 X 2 3Tevaraa used in dhrupad 7Dadra 6 3 3 X 072 melakarta talas and 108 anga talas EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message 72 melakarta talas Edit S No Name of raga Pattern of the symbols of angas Aksharas1 Kanakaangi 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 1 Laghu 152 Rathnaangi 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 203 Ganamurthi 1 Laghu 2 Anudhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 224 Vanaspathi 1 Laghu 2 Anudhruthas 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 225 Maanavathi 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 206 Dhanarupi 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhritha 157 Senaavathi 1 Gurus 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 258 Hanumathodi 1 Guru 2 Anudhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 349 Dhenuka 1 Pluta 2 Anudhruthas 1 Dhrutha 1610 Natakapriya 3 Dhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1211 Kokilapriya 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 2112 Rupaavathi 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1913 Gayakapriya 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 2 Dhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1514 Vagula bharanam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 2 Dhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2815 Maya malava goulam 1 Laghu 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Anudhrutha 3116 Chakravaham 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2417 Suryakantham 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 1 Pluta 3318 Haata kambari 1 Guru 2 Dhruthas 1 Guru 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2719 Jankaradh wani 1 Pluta 3 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha 1 Anudhrutha 3620 Nata bhairavi 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1921 Keeravani 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1822 Karahara priya 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2423 Gowri manohari 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 2 Gurus 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 3724 Varuna priya 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2025 Maara ranjani 1 Laghu 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 2 Gurus 2 Anudhruthas 2826 Charukesi 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2227 Sarasaangi 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 2928 Harikamboji 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Pluta 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 4129 Dheera sankara bharanam 1 Guru 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Dhrutha 2 Laghus 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 5030 Nagaa nandhini 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 2 Anudhruthas 2331 Yagapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 1332 Raga vardhini 3 Laghus 1 Anudhrutha 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha 1 Anudhrutha 2433 Gangeya bhushani 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 3834 Vaga dheeshwari 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru Dhrutha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 3435 Soolini 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1236 Chala Naata 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 2 Dhruthas 1537 Chalagam 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 2238 Jalaarnavam 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 2 Gurus 1 Dhrutha 3239 Jaalavarali 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2 Laghus 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 2540 Navaneetham 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1541 Paavani 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 2 Anudhruthas 942 Raghupriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1443 Kavaambothi 1 Laghu 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Pluta 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 3644 Bhavapriya 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1645 Subha panthuvarali 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 3546 Shadvitha maargini 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 4447 Swarnaangi 1 Guru 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 3248 Divyamani 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2749 Davalaambari 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2850 Naama narayani 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 2 Dhruthas 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2251 Kaamavartha 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Pluta 1 Anudhrutha 2752 Raamapriya 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1653 Gamanashrama 2 Laghus 1 Dhrutha 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1754 Viswambari 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2755 Syamalangi 1 Guru 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 2556 Shanmukha priya 1 Pluta 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2757 Simhendra madhyamam 1 Guru 1 Kakapada 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 6958 Hemaavathi 1 Pluta 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 3059 Dharmavathi 1 Pluta 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 3060 Neethimathi 1Dhrutha 1Laghu 1Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2261 Kaanthamani 2 Gurus 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2862 Rishabhapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 2163 Lathaangi 1 Laghu 1 Pluta 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 2164 Vachaspathi 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2965 Mecha Kalyani 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 3066 Chithraambari 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Pluta 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 2967 Sucharithra 1 Guru 1 Laghu 2 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamams 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 2768 Jyothi swarupini 1 Kakapada 1 Anudhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Pluta 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 4869 Dathuvardhani 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Anudhrutha 1 Pluta 1 Anudhrutha 3670 Naasikha bhushani 1 Dhrutha 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 3271 Kosalam 1 Guru 1 Anudhrutha 2 Gurus 1 Anudhruthas 2672 Rasikapriya 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Guru 1 Dhrutha Sekara Viraamam 1 Laghu 1 Dhrutha 207 Saptangachakram 7 angas Edit Anga Symbol AksharakalaAnudrutam U 1Druta O 2Druta virama UO 3Laghu Chatusra jati l 4Guru 8 8Plutam 3 12Kakapadam x 16Shodashangachakram 16 angas Edit Anga Symbol AksharakalaAnudrutam U 1Druta O 2Druta virama UO 3Laghu Chatusra jati l 4Laghu virama Ul 5Laghu druta Ol 6Laghu druta virama UOl 7Guru 8 8Guru virama U8 9Guru druta O8 10Guru druta virama UO8 11Plutam 3 12Pluta virana U3 13Pluta druta O3 14Pluta druta virama UO3 15Kakapadam x 16Compositions are rare in the 108 lengthy anga talas They are mostly used in performing the Pallavi of Ragam Thanam Pallavis Some examples of anga talas are Sarabhanandana tala 8 O l l O U U O O O U O OU U OU O U O U O OU O Simhanandana tala It is the longest tala 8 8 l l 8 O O8 8 l l 8 ll xAnother type of tala is the chhanda tala These are talas set to the lyrics of theThirupugazhby the Tamil composer Arunagirinathar He is said to have written 16 000 hymns each in a different chhanda tala Of these only 1500 2000 are available Rarer Hindustani talas EditName Beats Division VibhagaAdachoutal 14 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 X 2 0 3 0 4 0Brahmtal 28 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 X 0 2 3 0 4 5 6 0 7 8 9 10 0Dipchandi 14 3 4 3 4 X 2 0 3Shikar 17 6 6 2 3 X 0 3 4Sultal 10 2 2 2 2 2 x 0 2 3 0Ussole e Fakhta 5 1 1 1 1 1 x 3Farodast 14 3 4 3 4 X 2 0 3References Edit a b c Monier Williams 1899 p 444 Nettl et al 1998 p 138 Randel 2003 p 816 a b c d Randel 2003 pp 816 817 a b c d e Nettl et al 1998 pp 138 139 a b Sorrell amp Narayan 1980 pp 1 3 a b Sorrell amp Narayan 1980 pp 3 4 Guy L Beck 2012 Sonic Liturgy Ritual and Music in Hindu Tradition University of South Carolina Press pp 63 64 ISBN 978 1 61117 108 2 William Alves 2013 Music of the Peoples of the World Cengage Learning p 266 ISBN 978 1 133 71230 5 Sorrell amp Narayan 1980 pp 4 5 a b Rowell 2015 pp 12 13 a b Ellen Koskoff 2013 The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Volume 2 Routledge pp 938 939 ISBN 978 1 136 09602 0 Caudhuri 2000 p 130 a b c Nettl 2010 James B Robinson 2009 Hinduism Infobase Publishing pp 104 106 ISBN 978 1 4381 0641 0 Vijaya Moorthy 2001 Romance of the Raga Abhinav Publications pp 45 48 53 56 58 ISBN 978 81 7017 382 3 Nettl et al 1998 p 124 a b Gangolli 2007 p 56 a b Rao Suvarnalata Rao Preeti 2014 An Overview of Hindustani Music in the Context of Computational Musicology Journal of New Music Research 43 1 26 28 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 645 9188 doi 10 1080 09298215 2013 831109 S2CID 36631020 Rowell 2015 p 9 William Forde Thompson 2014 Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences An Encyclopedia SAGE Publications pp 1693 1694 ISBN 978 1 4833 6558 9 Guy Beck 1993 Sonic Theology Hinduism and Sacred Sound University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 0872498556 pp 107 108 Frits Staal 2009 Discovering the Vedas Origins Mantras Rituals Insights Penguin ISBN 978 0143099864 pp 4 5 a b Rowell 2015 p 59 61 Rowell 2015 p 62 63 Rowell 2015 p 64 65 Witzel Michael 2003 Vedas and Upaniṣads In Flood Gavin ed The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism Blackwell Publishing pp 68 71 ISBN 1 4051 3251 5 Rowell 2015 p 66 67 Rowell 2015 p 67 68 Rowell 2015 pp 11 14 a b Rowell 2015 pp 11 12 a b Rowell 2015 pp 13 14 a b Rowell 2015 p 14 S S Sastri 1943 Sangitaratnakara of Sarngadeva Adyar Library Press ISBN 0 8356 7330 8 pp v vi ix x English for talas discussion see pp 169 274 Sanskrit a b Rens Bod 2013 A New History of the Humanities The Search for Principles and Patterns from Antiquity to the Present Oxford University Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 19 164294 4 Rowell 2015 pp 12 14 Nettl et al 1998 p 299 Lisa Owen 2012 Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora BRILL Academic pp 76 77 ISBN 978 90 04 20629 8 Madhukar Keshav Dhavalikar 2003 Ellora Oxford University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 19 565458 5 Kaufmann 1968 Chandrakantha Music of India http chandrakantha com faq tala thalam html What is Suladi Sapta Tala and Why is it Important in Carnatic Music Kafqa Academy Retrieved 24 November 2022 a b c d A practical course in Karnatik music by Prof P Sambamurthy Book II The Indian Music Publishing House Madras Bibliography Edit Caudhuri Vimalakanta Roya 2000 The Dictionary of Hindustani Classical Music Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1708 1 Gangolli Ramesh Summer 2007 Music and Mathematics Perspectives of New Music 45 2 51 56 doi 10 1353 pnm 2007 0001 JSTOR 25164656 Kaufmann Walter 1968 The Ragas of North India Oxford amp Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253347800 OCLC 11369 Monier Williams Monier 1899 A Sanskrit English Dictionary London Oxford University Press Nettl Bruno Ruth M Stone James Porter Timothy Rice 1998 The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music South Asia the Indian subcontinent Routledge ISBN 978 0 8240 4946 1 Nettl Bruno 2010 Tala Music Encyclopaedia Britannica Randel Don Michael 2003 The Harvard Dictionary of Music 4th ed Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01163 2 Rowell Lewis 2015 Music and Musical Thought in Early India University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 73034 9 Sorrell Neil Narayan Ram 1980 Indian Music in Performance A Practical Introduction Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0756 9 Further reading EditDanielou Alain 1949 Northern Indian Music Volume 1 Theory amp technique Volume 2 The main ragǎs London C Johnson OCLC 851080 Humble M 2002 The Development of Rhythmic Organization in Indian Classical Music MA dissertation School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Jairazbhoy Nazir Ali 1995 The Rags of North Indian Music Their Structure amp Evolution 1st revised Indian ed Bombay Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 81 7154 395 3 Junius Manfred Die Talas der nordindischen Musik The Talas of North Indian Music Munich Salzburg Katzbichler 1983 Martinez Jose Luiz 2001 Semiosis in Hindustani Music Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1801 9 Mehta Tarla 1995 Sanskrit Play Production in Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1057 0 Montfort Matthew Ancient Traditions Future Possibilities Rhythmic Training Through the Traditions of Africa Bali and India Mill Valley Panoramic Press 1985 ISBN 0 937879 00 2 Sargeant Winthrop Lahiri Sarat October 1931 A Study in East Indian Rhythm The Musical Quarterly XVII 4 427 438 doi 10 1093 mq XVII 4 427 Te Nijenhuis Emmie 1974 Indian Music History and Structure BRILL Academic ISBN 978 90 04 03978 0 External links EditA Visual Introduction to Rhythms taal in Hindustani Classical Music Colvin Russell Tala Primer A basic introduction to tabla and tala KKSongs Talamala Recordings of Tabla Bols database for Hindustani Talas Ancient Future MIDI files of the common major Hindustani Talas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tala music amp oldid 1145998567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.