The making of Rama Natakam

How Arunachala Kavi came up with his immortal opera

April 11, 2019 03:48 pm | Updated 03:48 pm IST

190410_Arunachala kavirayar -En paLLi kondeerayya…’ Friday page

190410_Arunachala kavirayar -En paLLi kondeerayya…’ Friday page

In the world of Carnatic Music, the Rama Natakam of Arunachala Kavi (1711-1779) is special. Simple in language and high in emotional content, they exert a universal appeal. Some of the songs from the opera have made it as independent concert pieces as well.

Arunachala Kavi’s life history was published in what is arguably the first edition of his work — brought out by ST Reddiar at the Vidyabhivardhini Press, Kollam, Travancore in the Malayalam year 1083, which corresponds to 1908 in the Gregorian calendar. Certain interesting facts emerge from it. Nallathambi Pillai, the poet’s father, who was from Thillaiyadi near Tarangampadi, was of the Jain faith initially and later became a staunch Shaivite. Married to Valliammal, he had four sons of whom Arunachala was the youngest.

Initiated into education at the age of five, he proved precocious and mastered whatever was there to offer. Losing his parents by the time he was 12, Arunachala became a student in residence at the Dharmapuram Adhinam where he learnt Sanskrit and Tamil to a high degree of proficiency. By the time he was 18, he had come to the notice of the pontiff. An offer was made to initiate him into monkhood with the premise that he would eventually take over as head of the Math. Arunachala felt that it was his duty to become a householder before considering renunciation.

He eventually went back to Thillayadi where he married at the age of 30. Domestic life meant the necessity to earn and so he set himself up as a goldsmith. The purchase of precious metals necessitated travel to Pondicherry frequently and he invariably broke journey at the Dharmapuram Adheenam in Sirkali. On one occasion, he completed a verse that had been taxing other scholars and not bothering to find out its reception, went on his way. When he returned he was informed that the work had so impressed the Math officials that they built a house for him in Sirkali and what’s more, brought his family from Thillaiyadi and settled them there! He therefore stayed on and became known as Sirkali Arunachala Kavi. Together with Marimutha Pillai and Muthuthandavar, he would eventually form the Sirkali Moovar.

It was in Sirkali that he composed Ajomukhinatakam, an opera, the Sirkali Sthala Puranam and the Sirkali Kovai. Venkataramayyar and Kothandaramayyar, two musicians of the neighbouring village of Sattanathapuram approached him with a request to compose the Ramayana as an opera. Arunachala Kavi took up the challenge, basing his work largely on Kamba Ramayanam. The early biographies credit the music to the two disciples.

Rama Natakam begins with an invocation to Ganesha. The second song is on Anjaneya. Then follows the Avaiadakkam, which song expresses the inability of the composer when compared to great scholars of the past. Describing himself as a mosquito that dares fly in the path taken by poets who were like the mighty Garuda, Arunchala Kavi says his attempt is like a canal trying to maintain its flow against an ocean. The work was broadly complete when the composer desired to premier it at Srirangam rather in the manner of Kamban. Divine permission came when the Kavi composed En Pallikondir Ayya. The Lord it is said commanded him, just as he had asked Kamban to sing in praise of Nammalwar as a prelude, to compose a piece of his Alwars and other close devotees. Arunachala Kavi created a Todayam that praises the Nityasuris, Vishvakesana, the five divine weapons, the Alwars and the Acharyas.

The disciples took the opera far and wide. Ananda Ranga Pillai, the dubash of Joseph Francois Dupleix, the Governor of Pondicherry, referred them to Manali Muthukrishna Mudali, then dubash of the East India Company in Madras. The opera was such a success in the city that the two disciples came back wealthy, married and settled down. Their feedback encouraged Arunachala Kavi to add around 50 songs to the work and complete it in its present form. He turned 60 just as he finished the opera.

It was his desire that Raja Tulajai II of Tanjore heard the work but in 1773, Madar Ul Mulk, the second son of the Nawab of Arcot laid siege to that town. The Kavi therefore decided to come to Madras where he met Muthukrishna Mudali.

The dubash showered Arunachala Kavi with gold. A similar honour was given by Tepperumal Chetty, the son of Lingi Chetty. Arunachala Kavi spent his last years in Sirkali.

The ragas and tunes underwent considerable changes after his time.

The Kavi wrote a viruttam as prelude to each of his songs and these remain consigned to the books. The tunes are attributed to Ariyakkudi Ramanuja Iyengar, who published some of them with notation in the Swadesamitran in 1948.

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