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Thaat

A Thaat (IAST: thāṭ) is a "Parent scale" in North Indian or Hindustani music. It is the Hindustani equivalent of the term Melakartha raga of Carnatic Music. [1][2] The concept of the thaat is not exactly equivalent to the western musical scale because the primary function of a thaat is not as a tool for music composition, but rather as a basis for classification of ragas.[2] There is not necessarily strict compliance between a raga and its parent thaat; a raga said to 'belong' to a certain thaat need not allow all the notes of the thaat, and might allow other notes. Thaats are generally accepted to be heptatonic by definition.

The term thaat is also used to refer to the frets of stringed instruments like the sitar and the veena.[3] It is also used to denote the posture adopted by a Kathak dancer at the beginning of their performance.[4]

History Edit

The modern thaat system was created by Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande (1860–1936), an influential musicologist in the field of classical music in the early decades of the twentieth century.[5][6] Bhatkhande modelled his system after the Carnatic melakarta classification, devised around 1640 by the musicologist Vidwan Venkatamakhin. Bhatkhande visited many of the gharanas (schools) of classical music, conducting a detailed analysis of ragas. His research led him to a system of thirty-two thaats, each named after a prominent raga associated with it. Out of those thirty-two thaats, more than a dozen thaats were popular during his time; however, he chose to highlight only ten such thaats.

According to Bhatkhande, each one of the several traditional ragas is based on, or is a variation of, ten basic thaats, or musical scales or frameworks. The ten thaats are Bilawal, Kalyan, Khamaj, Bhairav, Poorvi, Marwa, Kafi, Asavari, Bhairavi and Todi; if one were to pick a raga at random, in theory it should be possible to classify it into one of these thaats. For instance, the ragas Shree and Puriya Dhanashree are based on the Poorvi thaats, Malkauns on the Bhairavi thaat, and Darbari Kanada on the Asavari thaat.[7]

System Edit

In Indian classical music, musical notes are called swaras. The seven basic swaras of the scale are named shadja, rishabh, gandhar, madhyam, pancham, dhaivat and nishad, and are abbreviated to Sa, Ri (Carnatic) or Re (Hindustani), Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, and Ni and written S, R, G, M, P, D, N. Collectively these notes are known as the sargam (the word is an acronym of the consonants of the first four swaras). Sargam is the Indian equivalent to solfège, a technique for the teaching of sight-singing. The tone Sa is not associated with any particular pitch. As in Western moveable solfège, Sa refers to the tonic of a piece or scale rather than to any particular pitch.

In Bhatkhande's system, the basic mode of reference is that which is equivalent to the Western Ionian mode or major scale (called Bilawal thaat in Hindustani music, Dheerasankarabharanam in Carnatic). The flattening or sharpening of pitches always occurs with reference to the interval pattern in Bilawal thaat. Each thaat contains a different combination of altered (vikrt) and natural (shuddha) notes with respect to the Bilawal thaat. In any seven-tone scale (starting with S), R, G, D, and N can be natural (shuddha, lit. "pure") or flat (komal, lit. "soft") but never sharp, whereas the M can be natural or sharp (tivra, lit. "fast") but never flat, making twelve notes as in the Western chromatic scale. The sharp or flat tones are called vikrt swara (vikrt, lit. "altered"). Selecting seven tones in ascending order, where S and P are always natural whereas five other tones (R, G, M, D, N) can assume only one of its two possible forms, results in 25 = 32 possible modes which are known as thaats. Out of these thirty-two possibilities, Bhatkhande chose to highlight only ten thaats prominent in his days.

In effect only heptatonic scales are called thaats.[8] Bhatkhande applied the term thaats only to scales that fulfil the following rules:

  • A thaat must have seven tones out of the twelve tones [seven natural, four flat (Re, Ga, Dha, Ni), one sharp (Ma)]
  • The tones must be in ascending sequence: Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni
  • A thaat cannot contain both the natural and altered versions of a note
  • A thaat, unlike a raga, does not have separate ascending and descending lines
  • A thaat has no emotional quality (which ragas, by definition, do have)
  • Thaats are not sung but the ragas produced from the thaats are sung

One can arbitrarily designate any pitch as Sa (the tonic) and build the series from there. While all thaats contain seven notes, many ragas (of the audav and shadav type) contain fewer than seven and some use more. A raga need not to use every tone in a given thaat; the assignment is made according to whatever notes the raga does contain (but see note 5). The relatively small number of thaats reflects Bhatkhande's compromise between accuracy and efficiency: the degree of fit between a raga and its thaat is balanced with the desire to keep the number of basic thaats small. Ambiguities inevitably arise. For example, Raga Hindol, assigned to Kalyan thaat, uses the notes S G M D N, which are also found in Marwa thaat. Jaijaiwanti contains both shuddha Ni and komal Ni (and sometimes both versions of Ga as well), which by definition corresponds to no thaat. Bhatkande resolved such cases "by an ad hoc consideration, appealing to musical performance practice" (see Ramesh Gangolli's article, cited in note 4 above).[9]

Note that thaats only give a rough structure of the raga and do not give an idea of how the raga should be sung. It is pakad of the raga that gives the chalan or way of singing of the raga.[10]

Basic thaats Edit

Bhatkhande named his thaats after the prominent ragas associated with those thaats. Ragas on which the thaats are named are called Janak raga of that thaat.[10] For example, Bilaval Thaat is named after the raga Alhaiya Bilaval. Alhaiya Bilaval raga is therefore Janak raga of Bilaval thaat. Ragas other than the Janak raga of a thaat are called Janya raga.[10]

Many thaats correspond to one or other of the European church modes. The thaats are listed here according to their pitches. Lower pitches (komal or flat) are represented with lowercase letters and natural pitches (shuddha or natural) with uppercase letters. A raised pitch (tivra or sharp) is represented by a letter followed by a single quote (i.e. M'). The upper octave is italicized.

Thaat Eponymous raga[11] Notes[11] Western Carnatic mela[11] Distinguishing factor[11]
Bilaval Bilaval S R G M P D N S Ionian 29th, Sankarabharanam All Shuddha Svaras
Kalyan Yaman
(earlier known as Kalyan)
S R G M' P D N S Lydian 65th, (Mecha) Kalyani Teevra M
Khamaj Khamaj S R G M P D n S Mixolydian 28th, Harikambhoji Komal n
Bhairav Bhairav S r G M P d N S Double Harmonic 15th, Mayamalavagowla Komal r, Komal d
Kafi Kafi S R g M P D n S Dorian 22nd, Kharaharapriya Komal n, Komal g
Asavari Asavari S R g M P d n S Aeolian 20th, Natabhairavi Komal n, Komal g, Komal d
Bhairavi Bhairavi S r g M P d n S Phrygian 8th, Hanumatodi Komal n, Komal g, Komal d, Komal r
Poorvi Poorvi S r G M' P d N S - 51st, Kamavardhani Teevra M, Komal r, Komal d
Marva Marva S r G M' P D N S Lydian b2 53rd, Gamanashrama Teevra M, Komal r
Todi Miyan ki Todi S r g M' P d N S - 45th, Shubhapantuvarali Teevra M, Komal r, Komal g, Komal d

Ragas that don't fall in thaat system Edit

There are many ragas that don't fall in Thaat system. Some ragas have been derived from Carnatic Music and hence do not fall under Hindustani Classical Thaat System. Some of them are:

1. Kirvani 2. Nat Bhairav 3. Charukeshi 4. Madhuvanti 5. Ahir Bhairav

Time of performance Edit

Ragas are normally ascribed to certain periods of the day and night (See Samayā). Narada's Sangita-Makaranda, written sometime between the 7th and 11th century, gives warnings to musicians against playing ragas at the incorrect time of day. Traditionally, disastrous consequences are to be expected.[12][page needed] Bhatkhande claimed that the correct time to play a raga had a relation to its thaat (and to its vadi).

However, the author of Nai Vaigyanik Paddhati says that the time of a Raga has no importance, especially during meditation by music or during learning or teaching as practiced by the music scholars. Also, it is clear in Bhatkhande Sangeet Shastra at various places that the time do not have any importance while reciting a raga.


References Edit

  1. ^ Benward and Saker (2003). Music: In Theory and Practice, Vol. I, p.39. Boston: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  2. ^ a b Castellano, Mary A.; Bharucha, J. J.; Krumhansl, Carol L. (1984). "Tonal hierarchies in the music of North India". Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 113 (3): 394–412. doi:10.1037/0096-3445.113.3.394. ISSN 1939-2222. PMID 6237169.
  3. ^ Saṅgīt Mahābhāratī. "Thāṭ (Instrumental)". The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India. ISBN 978-0-19-565098-3. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  4. ^ Saṅgīt Mahābhāratī. "Thāṭ (Kathak)". The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India. ISBN 978-0-19-565098-3. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  5. ^ Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande (1909–1932). Hindustani Sangeet Paddhati. Sangeet Karyalaya (1990 reprint). ISBN 81-85057-35-4. This is the four-volume work in which Bhatkhande, after thorough analysis, makes the case for the ten thaats. Originally written in Marathi, it has been widely translated.
  6. ^ Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande (1974). A Short Historical Survey of the Music of Upper India. Indian Musicological Society.
  7. ^ "ITC Sangeet Research Academy :: Thaat". www.itcsra.org. Retrieved 2018-12-03.
  8. ^ Jairazbhoy 1995.
  9. ^ Ramesh Gangolli (1992-12-23). "Chatura Pandit : V.N.Bhatkhande". Retrieved 2007-04-11.
  10. ^ a b c "What are Thaat and Pakad of ragas". Learn Hindustani Classical Music Online!!. 2019-09-01. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  11. ^ a b c d GMO.
  12. ^ Kaufmann 1968.

Bibliography Edit

  • Jairazbhoy, N.A. (1995). The Rags of North Indian Music: Their Structure and Evolution. Bombay: Popular Prakashan.
  • Kaufmann, Walter (1968). The Ragas of North India. Calcutta, New Delhi, Bombay: Oxford and IBH Publishing Company.
  • Saṅgīt Mahābhāratī. "Thāṭ (of Rāgas)". The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India. ISBN 978-0-19-565098-3. Retrieved 5 September 2018.

thaat, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, bangla, june, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations, transl. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Bangla June 2020 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Bangla Wikipedia article at bn ঠ ট see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated bn ঠ ট to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation A Thaat IAST thaṭ is a Parent scale in North Indian or Hindustani music It is the Hindustani equivalent of the term Melakartha raga of Carnatic Music 1 2 The concept of the thaat is not exactly equivalent to the western musical scale because the primary function of a thaat is not as a tool for music composition but rather as a basis for classification of ragas 2 There is not necessarily strict compliance between a raga and its parent thaat a raga said to belong to a certain thaat need not allow all the notes of the thaat and might allow other notes Thaats are generally accepted to be heptatonic by definition The term thaat is also used to refer to the frets of stringed instruments like the sitar and the veena 3 It is also used to denote the posture adopted by a Kathak dancer at the beginning of their performance 4 Contents 1 History 2 System 3 Basic thaats 4 Ragas that don t fall in thaat system 5 Time of performance 6 References 7 BibliographyHistory EditThe modern thaat system was created by Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande 1860 1936 an influential musicologist in the field of classical music in the early decades of the twentieth century 5 6 Bhatkhande modelled his system after the Carnatic melakarta classification devised around 1640 by the musicologist Vidwan Venkatamakhin Bhatkhande visited many of the gharanas schools of classical music conducting a detailed analysis of ragas His research led him to a system of thirty two thaats each named after a prominent raga associated with it Out of those thirty two thaats more than a dozen thaats were popular during his time however he chose to highlight only ten such thaats According to Bhatkhande each one of the several traditional ragas is based on or is a variation of ten basic thaats or musical scales or frameworks The ten thaats are Bilawal Kalyan Khamaj Bhairav Poorvi Marwa Kafi Asavari Bhairavi and Todi if one were to pick a raga at random in theory it should be possible to classify it into one of these thaats For instance the ragas Shree and Puriya Dhanashree are based on the Poorvi thaats Malkauns on the Bhairavi thaat and Darbari Kanada on the Asavari thaat 7 System EditIn Indian classical music musical notes are called swaras The seven basic swaras of the scale are named shadja rishabh gandhar madhyam pancham dhaivat and nishad and are abbreviated to Sa Ri Carnatic or Re Hindustani Ga Ma Pa Dha and Ni and written S R G M P D N Collectively these notes are known as the sargam the word is an acronym of the consonants of the first four swaras Sargam is the Indian equivalent to solfege a technique for the teaching of sight singing The tone Sa is not associated with any particular pitch As in Western moveable solfege Sa refers to the tonic of a piece or scale rather than to any particular pitch In Bhatkhande s system the basic mode of reference is that which is equivalent to the Western Ionian mode or major scale called Bilawal thaat in Hindustani music Dheerasankarabharanam in Carnatic The flattening or sharpening of pitches always occurs with reference to the interval pattern in Bilawal thaat Each thaat contains a different combination of altered vikrt and natural shuddha notes with respect to the Bilawal thaat In any seven tone scale starting with S R G D and N can be natural shuddha lit pure or flat komal lit soft but never sharp whereas the M can be natural or sharp tivra lit fast but never flat making twelve notes as in the Western chromatic scale The sharp or flat tones are called vikrt swara vikrt lit altered Selecting seven tones in ascending order where S and P are always natural whereas five other tones R G M D N can assume only one of its two possible forms results in 25 32 possible modes which are known as thaats Out of these thirty two possibilities Bhatkhande chose to highlight only ten thaats prominent in his days In effect only heptatonic scales are called thaats 8 Bhatkhande applied the term thaats only to scales that fulfil the following rules A thaat must have seven tones out of the twelve tones seven natural four flat Re Ga Dha Ni one sharp Ma The tones must be in ascending sequence Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni A thaat cannot contain both the natural and altered versions of a note A thaat unlike a raga does not have separate ascending and descending lines A thaat has no emotional quality which ragas by definition do have Thaats are not sung but the ragas produced from the thaats are sungOne can arbitrarily designate any pitch as Sa the tonic and build the series from there While all thaats contain seven notes many ragas of the audav and shadav type contain fewer than seven and some use more A raga need not to use every tone in a given thaat the assignment is made according to whatever notes the raga does contain but see note 5 The relatively small number of thaats reflects Bhatkhande s compromise between accuracy and efficiency the degree of fit between a raga and its thaat is balanced with the desire to keep the number of basic thaats small Ambiguities inevitably arise For example Raga Hindol assigned to Kalyan thaat uses the notes S G M D N which are also found in Marwa thaat Jaijaiwanti contains both shuddha Ni and komal Ni and sometimes both versions of Ga as well which by definition corresponds to no thaat Bhatkande resolved such cases by an ad hoc consideration appealing to musical performance practice see Ramesh Gangolli s article cited in note 4 above 9 Note that thaats only give a rough structure of the raga and do not give an idea of how the raga should be sung It is pakad of the raga that gives the chalan or way of singing of the raga 10 Basic thaats EditBhatkhande named his thaats after the prominent ragas associated with those thaats Ragas on which the thaats are named are called Janak raga of that thaat 10 For example Bilaval Thaat is named after the raga Alhaiya Bilaval Alhaiya Bilaval raga is therefore Janak raga of Bilaval thaat Ragas other than the Janak raga of a thaat are called Janya raga 10 Many thaats correspond to one or other of the European church modes The thaats are listed here according to their pitches Lower pitches komal or flat are represented with lowercase letters and natural pitches shuddha or natural with uppercase letters A raised pitch tivra or sharp is represented by a letter followed by a single quote i e M The upper octave is italicized Thaat Eponymous raga 11 Notes 11 Western Carnatic mela 11 Distinguishing factor 11 Bilaval Bilaval S R G M P D N S Ionian 29th Sankarabharanam All Shuddha SvarasKalyan Yaman earlier known as Kalyan S R G M P D N S Lydian 65th Mecha Kalyani Teevra MKhamaj Khamaj S R G M P D n S Mixolydian 28th Harikambhoji Komal nBhairav Bhairav S r G M P d N S Double Harmonic 15th Mayamalavagowla Komal r Komal dKafi Kafi S R g M P D n S Dorian 22nd Kharaharapriya Komal n Komal gAsavari Asavari S R g M P d n S Aeolian 20th Natabhairavi Komal n Komal g Komal dBhairavi Bhairavi S r g M P d n S Phrygian 8th Hanumatodi Komal n Komal g Komal d Komal rPoorvi Poorvi S r G M P d N S 51st Kamavardhani Teevra M Komal r Komal dMarva Marva S r G M P D N S Lydian b2 53rd Gamanashrama Teevra M Komal rTodi Miyan ki Todi S r g M P d N S 45th Shubhapantuvarali Teevra M Komal r Komal g Komal dRagas that don t fall in thaat system EditThere are many ragas that don t fall in Thaat system Some ragas have been derived from Carnatic Music and hence do not fall under Hindustani Classical Thaat System Some of them are 1 Kirvani 2 Nat Bhairav 3 Charukeshi 4 Madhuvanti 5 Ahir BhairavTime of performance EditRagas are normally ascribed to certain periods of the day and night See Samaya Narada s Sangita Makaranda written sometime between the 7th and 11th century gives warnings to musicians against playing ragas at the incorrect time of day Traditionally disastrous consequences are to be expected 12 page needed Bhatkhande claimed that the correct time to play a raga had a relation to its thaat and to its vadi However the author of Nai Vaigyanik Paddhati says that the time of a Raga has no importance especially during meditation by music or during learning or teaching as practiced by the music scholars Also it is clear in Bhatkhande Sangeet Shastra at various places that the time do not have any importance while reciting a raga References Edit Benward and Saker 2003 Music In Theory and Practice Vol I p 39 Boston McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 294262 0 a b Castellano Mary A Bharucha J J Krumhansl Carol L 1984 Tonal hierarchies in the music of North India Journal of Experimental Psychology General 113 3 394 412 doi 10 1037 0096 3445 113 3 394 ISSN 1939 2222 PMID 6237169 Saṅgit Mahabharati Thaṭ Instrumental The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India ISBN 978 0 19 565098 3 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Saṅgit Mahabharati Thaṭ Kathak The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India ISBN 978 0 19 565098 3 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande 1909 1932 Hindustani Sangeet Paddhati Sangeet Karyalaya 1990 reprint ISBN 81 85057 35 4 This is the four volume work in which Bhatkhande after thorough analysis makes the case for the ten thaats Originally written in Marathi it has been widely translated Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande 1974 A Short Historical Survey of the Music of Upper India Indian Musicological Society ITC Sangeet Research Academy Thaat www itcsra org Retrieved 2018 12 03 Jairazbhoy 1995 Ramesh Gangolli 1992 12 23 Chatura Pandit V N Bhatkhande Retrieved 2007 04 11 a b c What are Thaat and Pakad of ragas Learn Hindustani Classical Music Online 2019 09 01 Retrieved 2019 09 05 a b c d GMO Kaufmann 1968 Bibliography EditJairazbhoy N A 1995 The Rags of North Indian Music Their Structure and Evolution Bombay Popular Prakashan Kaufmann Walter 1968 The Ragas of North India Calcutta New Delhi Bombay Oxford and IBH Publishing Company Saṅgit Mahabharati Thaṭ of Ragas The Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India ISBN 978 0 19 565098 3 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thaat amp oldid 1149869014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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