It is funny how a single word can give different
meanings depending on the context. Take the word ‘Break’ for example. It means,
1.to shatter
2.to puncture
3.to malfunction
4.succeed in deciphering something
5.to interrupt
6.to take rest
7.to diminish
8.to relinquish
9.to surpass (a record for example)
10.to give way
11.to destroy
12.to undergo a change
13.to begin(dawn was breaking )
14.to pound
15.to make something public(news for example)
16.an opportunity(noun).
Oops...this is not an English class nor am I a teacher
(though I love both, English as a language and me as a teacher!). So, why am I
talking about this now?
It is because of two reasons with each one related to
the other and both related to a song. If this sounds confusing, so be it. At
times, it is enjoyable to be confused (of course, nothing can be more enjoyable
than confusing others J).
Recently, I was forced to take a break (this one pertains to no.6
in the list). ‘Forced’ because I was diagnosed with an infection which is dangerously
contagious and therefore I had to be ‘quarantined’ at home (don’t worry, the
contagious phase is over now and by reading my post, you are unlikely to contract the infection!).
This meant that I had to be confined to home and some of the rooms were out of bounds for me. I
had to depend on my family members on almost every thing. Moreover, the
infection made me too uneasy. But I took this on my chin. I reasoned that
somehow it had to happen and it happened.
I developed my sense of gratitude, feeling happy
and thankful that the infection was
not that intense compared to many other adults. I felt more positive and stronger.
But I would be lying if I said that I always felt
positive as there were phases when I felt extremely low. During those times, I
either took a book and read or hummed some songs to myself. Of course, there is
that social media as well and I took
this opportunity to express myself on some of the ‘burning issues’. But what
gave me real energy was the post (https://rajamanjari.blogspot.in/2018/04/ilaiyaraaja-virtuoso.html)
I wrote last Sunday in my other blog. In fact, I wrote the whole post with the infection troubling me
but I did not feel the discomfort(power of his music and power of analysing his
music!).
What happened a day before that should be of interest.
I was all alone at home and I had to go to the kitchen. It was exactly after 12 days since my infection was diagnosed.
When I went to the corner, I felt some very odd feeling. It seemed as if the sink and the tap were silently telling me something. It was a feeling which I
felt was familiar and yet one which I had never experienced before. Suddenly, a
particular song started playing in
my mind. It was so instantaneous that it gave me no room to think about the
reason.
Now, last Sunday
after writing the post I wanted to
attend a Hindustani concert and
stepped out of my home after 13
days. As the car crossed my colony, I again felt a very strange feeling, the
same kind of feeling I had when I went to the kitchen 2 days ago. Each and every place looked so different to me despite
being so familiar. And yes, the same
song started playing in my mind.
Unlike what some of you must have guessed, it is not a
pathos song. On the other hand, it is one of the peppiest songs ever in the history of Indian Film Music.
If there is one song which can do what even a pep talk cannot achieve, it is ‘Rojaappoo
Aadi Vandhadhu’ from ‘Agni
Nakshatram’ (1988). Just listen to the song when you feel down and see the
way your body, mind and the soul react. Yes, it is meant to be a ‘gym song’(the
heroine does more acrobatics and indulges in real exercise than the hero who
just moves his ‘fat filled body’ here and there J)
but tell me one gym song or a disco song which is filled with so much
of energy and melody and I shall give up writing and move around with ‘half-moustache’
throughout my life!
What makes this song
great is rather a difficult question to answer because it is a combination of
many factors. However, I would like to first focus on a technical aspect and then move on to the other aspects. Though it is technical, I shall try and make it as
simple as possible.
Carnatic
music is known for its taaLa
structure and the different unique patterns. But apart from the patterns, there
are also certain other techniques.
Let me just take up two.
1.Vinyaasam
and 2. Gati Bhedam.
The first one
is done when the percussionist
switches from one pattern to another-say from 4 to 3- keeping a common
meeting point which would be a count
which would be divisible by both. For example, take a simple aadi taaLam which has a count of 8. The percussionist starts
playing in tisram till the 24th beat where 8 and 3 would meet. This is just a simple example(very soon, I am
planning to make video presentations
on You Tube and I am sure this will be clearer then).
The second one
is said to take place when the ‘nadai’
or ‘gati’ undergoes a change but the
count remains the same. For example, ‘3’
will be made to fit into ‘4’. One can
put 3 beats as well as 4 beats for the same song or rather for
that particular line.
In film music,
I cannot think of any other composer
apart from the legend from PaNNaippuram.
He did it in the ending lines of the CharaNams
in ‘Pallaviye
CharaNam’ (https://rajamanjari.blogspot.in/2016/05/ilaiyaraaja-phenomenon.html).
He did it in some more songs as well and this includes a very rare song about which I shall post soon here.
But in ‘Rojaappoo
..’ the entire composition has ‘Gati
bhedam’. One can count 4 and at
the same time count 3 too. The Master that he is, he has made the drums play 3 in faster mode(called as ‘mel
kaalam’) while the 4 go in medium speed(‘madhyama kaalam’). So, instead of three, 6 beats are fitted in 4. I know this is somewhat (very) technical but shall soon
demonstrate live.
And look at the kind of introduction the Master gives. It starts with one percussion instrument sounding only the 1st beat and the other one sounding
the 3rd beat(no ‘gati bhedam’ here). After four 1 2 3 4(rather 1 – 3 - ), another percussion
instrument joins in the 3rd
beat and this goes on for another 4
cycles. The ‘gati bhedam’ starts
then..
...and it continues till the end. In between, Laya Raaja gives some special effects at
the end of each line in the second part
of the Pallavi(can we probably call
it as ‘anu pallavi’?), in the first interlude when the drums and bass guitar indulge in a romantic play, after the last line of the CharaNams, and in the
beginning of the second interlude
when the drums play just briefly
after the humming of the chorus.
There is ‘usi’
too in both the interludes when the chorus sings ‘chaa ..chaa cha chaaa’ in
the last segment(s). What is ‘usi’ has been explained in some of the posts in
my other blog, and I shall do this again in one of my forthcoming posts here.
Apart from this, there is of course the dazzling guitar, the joyful strings, and the mystical bass
guitar which are present almost throughout either together or one after the
other.
The construction
of the entire song –in terms of the swara pattern- too needs a special
mention, but since this post is
already pregnant with technical details, let me succinctly say that the sudden
appearance of higher octave notes
after the mid-octave notes and the
sudden appearance of the latter after the former, make our hearts jump(for
example, in ‘Chinnanjiru Paruvam Innum Kodippadho’, the first phrase has
the mid-octave notes, the second and third have the higher octave
notes and the higher octave give way
to the mid- octave in ‘Kodippadho’
in ‘adho’ giving that ‘sliding effect’(for
a change, watch the song too and see what happens during this section J).
Ah, yes, the romantically sensuous voice of Janaki is undoubtedly an asset in this
song.
So many things look the same in the song and yet they
are different-whether it is 3 in 4 or it is the mid-octave and the higher
octave.
And that typifies my feeling when I went to a corner in
my home or saw the roads in my colony!
3 comments:
//this is not an English class nor am I a teacher//..Both are true at least for me aNNa.
Wow..ஒரு வார்த்தைக்கு எத்தனை விதமான அர்த்தங்கள்.
Your recent experience explains beautifully how our 'attitude' determines everything.
"No matter what the problem is, the way it is interpreted can have a positive or negative effect on one's life. By adopting a positive interpretation, one can make one’s problems a source of nourishment for personal growth."
I would say, nourishment for other's growth as well.
Lovely song and post aNNa.
Bhuvana- Yes, that is the beauty of English language.
I took the illness in my stride probably because of my past experiences. Thanks for your comment. What about the technical details of the song? Any doubts or clarifications in that?
Have to go through the post once again while listening to the song. Will do that and ask you.
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