(India) The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad Vol. 1-10 [1994-2004]
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- Audio > Music
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- 122
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- 1.59 GB
- Tag(s):
- indian classical music
- Uploaded:
- Mar 8, 2018
- By:
- Horisarte
The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 1 - Pandit Vidur Mallick, 1994, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 2 - Uday Bhawalkar - Dagarvani, 2001, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 3 - Indra Kishore Mishra - Nauhar & Khandar Vani, 1995, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 4 - Dr Ritwik Sanyal - Dagarvani, 1995, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 5 - Girish Karia - Nathdwara Haveli Dhrupad, 1997, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 6 - Uday Bhawalkar - Dagarvani, 1998, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 7 - Hori Dhamar, 1999, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 8 - Ashoka Dhar - Dagarvani, 2001, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 9 - Ustad Z. Fariduddin Dagar, 2001, 320 kbps The Lyrical Tradition of Dhrupad 10 - Pandit Shivshankar Mukherjee - Gohar Vani, 2004, 320 kbps Dhrupad is essentially a poetic form incorporated into an extended presentation style marked by precise and orderly elaboration of a raga. The exposition preceding the composed verses is called alap, and is usually the longest portion of the performance. This aspect of dhrupad has been the most influential, and is reflected in other North Indian musical formats, especially in instrumental music and even khayal singing. The term dhrupad itself means "the literal rendering of verse into music" and so the songs have a particularly potent impact. The actual dhrupad song-form is set in the rhythm chautal (4+4+2+2), and rendered in steady declaration in an austere style. Some performances in this idiom include related songs, especially the called dhamar, in dhamar tala (5+5+4 beats), but there are also other rhythmic forms which sometimes appear. These are usually somewhat lighter in content than the dhrupad proper. The rhythmic sections are generally accompanied by the two-head drum pakhawaj (similar to the mridangam of Carnatic music). Dhrupad is often presented as the oldest Indian music, with an explicit continuity to ancient times. In this respect, it is perhaps the most direct development of Vedic chanting, and the literal respect for text in dhrupad is representative of those scriptural ideas. However many of the codifications of dhrupad are dated more specifically to the same period as the origin of khayal, and the two might be viewed more accurately as parallel developments, although dhrupad is certainly more austere in its formalism. This music provides a wealth of depth in melodic nuance, with the smallest motion elaborated for minutes in a variety of time-tested techniques. The sophistication of the unmeasured exposition is nearly impossible to match in the world's music, and is buoyed by a variety of patterns derived from the original melody of the raga. Today the Dagar family dominates the scene of dhrupad vocal performance due to their dedication and world-wide prominence, but there are other styles remaining. [Makar Records]<---- Search on Discdog
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