Carnatic Music exponent T.M. Krishna was in the room, not singing yet, and still the audience was riveted. Because, he was sharing an incredible bit of history about Muthuswami Dikshitar (1775-1835) at a recent event to release his rendition of the poet composer’s Nottusvara Sahitya.
The Sahityas came about when Dikshitar lived for a while near Madras at Manali. Strains of martial music reached his ears from the English Garrisons stationed nearby – Irish Airs, Scotch Snaps and Highland Flings played by the fiddlers, drummers and pipers amongst the troops. Diskhitar, says Krishna, emptied these of English lyrics and replaced them with Sanskrit Sahitya. This was early fusion they fitted the foreign melody like a dream.
Children of Vidya Vanam School in Anaikatti and from Dr. Sudha Raja’s choir, Sargam, sang the Nottusvarams along with Krishna on the occasion. Their singing was punctuated with snatches of the original Western songs to give the audience an idea of how similar they sounded and how beautifully Dikshitar had made them his own.
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Sudha Raja along with V. Chithra, a music teacher at Vidya Vanam, had trained the children to sing. Krishna sang along too. He pointed out how he still needed the lyrics on a piece of paper in order to sing while the children held forth fluently from memory. It was exciting to learn that the first information about 12 nottusvaras was in a manuscript called
Krishna has recorded 36 of them. “It was exciting to recreate the Nottusvaram as Muthuswami Dikshitar must have conceptualised them,” he said.
The CD is available onhttp://www.kalakendra.com/
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