Notes of nostalgia

Both youthful exuberance and veterans’ experience were on stage to delight Delhi’s Carnatic music aficionados

August 30, 2012 07:48 pm | Updated 07:48 pm IST

Nisha Rajagopalan. Photo: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar

Nisha Rajagopalan. Photo: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar

The Vishnu Sahasranama Satsangam, R.K. Puram, of late, has been including full-fledged Carnatic music concerts of youngsters in their religious programmes. Recently, the Satsangam organised a vocal concert of the Chennai-based Nisha Rajagopalan as part of the one-day deepa puja and Lalitha Sahasranama parayanam. Nisha, justifying fully the organisation’s choice of young talents, revealed the depth of heir musical talents and delighted the devotees and music lovers with some well-presented songs.

The very first presentation, an Adi tala varnam in raga Kedaragowla, which Nisha presented in two speeds with a riveting kalaparamanam (tempo), was indicative that many more delightful songs would be coming up. Nisha lived up to expectations.

While presenting Tyagaraja’s “Rama nine” in raga Huseni, Nisha brought out the emotive contents of the lyrics. From then onwards emphasis was on the improvisation techniques. All the songs in her main session were preceded by raga alapana or viruttam.

Nisha’s creative talents came to the fore when she presented a fine delineation of ragas Bhairavi (for Tyagaraja’s “Upacharamulanu”, which was the main item of the recital), Saveri (for Shyama Sastri’s “Durusuga”), Hamsanadam (for Tyagaraja’s “Bantu riti”) and also while handling the other improvisation techniques, like neraval (for the main item) and swaraprastaras.

Delhi’s VSK Chakrapani on the violin, K.N. Padmanabhan on the mridangam and K. Ramamurthy on the ghatam provided excellent and supportive accompaniment. Chakrapani’s sketches of Hamsanadam, Saveri and Bhairavi were enjoyable. So was the tani avartanam (percussion solo) which percussionists Padmanabhan and Ramamurthy played in Adi tala.

Mani Iyer centenary

In another event, to mark the birth centenary celebrations of the legendary late Madurai Mani Iyer, Shanmukhananda Sangeetha Sabha in association with the Delhi Tamil Sangam organised a concert of T.V. Sankaranarayanan, nephew and disciple of Mani Iyer. Sankaranarayanan, keeping in view the specific purpose of the concert, thoughtfully rendered songs that were sung and popularised by Mani Iyer. Kavimani Desika Vinayagam Pillai’s “Inda paramugam” in raga Poorvikalyani, Ootukadu Venkata Kavi’s “Thaye Yashoda” in Todi and Periyasami Tooran’s “Puniyam oru kodi” in Keeravani, Gopalakrishna Bharati’s “Yeppa varuvaro” in raga Jaunpuri and the “Western Note” that formed part of his recital brought nostalgic memories to old-timers.

Sankaranarayanan started his concert with Papanasam Sivan’s “Tatvamariya Tarama” in raga Reetigowla, which was preceded by a shloka on Lord Ganesha in the form of a scintillating viruttam. Tyagaraja’s “Entavedukondu” in raga Saraswati Manohari too came in for elaborate treatment with neraval and swaraprastaras. As expected, his miscellaneous session contained ragamalika viruttams.

Sankaranarayanan’s son and disciple Mahadevan Sankaranarayanan provided good vocal support. Delhi P. Sundararajan on the violin, Umayalapuram Mali on the mridangam and Alathur Rajaganesh on the kanjira too provided good support to the veteran. While Sundararajan played a good alapana of ragas Todi and Keeravani, Mali and Rajaganesh played a riveting tani avartanam in Adi tala.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.