Indian Music — Classical, Folk, Semi-Classical and Instruments
Introduction / Context
Indian music has Vedic roots: the Gandharva Veda (an Upaveda of Sama Veda) is the earliest musicological text. The seven notes of raga Kharaharapriya appear in the Sama Veda in descending order. The Natyashastra (200 BC–200 AD) by Bharata is the first systematic text on musical theory. The cosmic sound pervading the universe is called Naada Brahma, introduced by sage Narada Muni. Musical instruments such as the seven-holed flute and Ravanahatha have been recovered from Indus Valley sites.
Key Musicological Texts — Chronology:
| Text | Author | Century | Key Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natyashastra | Bharata | 200 BC–200 AD | First reference to musical theory; 22 srutis in an octave |
| Dathilam | Unknown | Ancient | Endorsed 22 srutis per octave |
| Brihaddeshi | Matanga | 9th century | Defined the word 'Raga' |
| Sangeet Ratnakara | Sarangadeva | 13th century | Described 264 ragas; classified microtones |
| Sangeeta Makaranda | Nanda | 11th century | Enumerated 93 ragas; classified into masculine/feminine |
| Swaramela-Kalanidhi | Ramamatya | 16th century | Deals primarily with ragas |
| Chaturdandi-prakasika | Venkatamakhin |
Anatomy of Indian Classical Music — The Three Pillars
1. Swara (Note)
- Originally associated with Vedic recitation; now means a note or scale degree.
- Seven Swaras (Saptak / Sargam): Sa, re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, Ni.
| Full Name | Function | Abbreviation |
|---|---|---|
| Sadaja | Tonic | Sa |
| Rishabha | Supertonic | Re |
| Gandhara | Mediant | Ga |
| Madhyama | Sub-dominant | Ma |
| Panchama | Dominant | Pa |
| Dhaivata | Sub-mediant | Dha |
| Nishada | Subtonic | Ni |
- Shruti ≠ Swara: A Shruti is the smallest gradation of pitch (microtone). There are 22 Shrutis in an octave but only 12 are audible — these 12 are 7 Suddha Swaras (natural) + 5 Vikrita Swaras (altered).
2. Raga (Melodic Framework)
- Etymologically from Sanskrit 'Ranj' — to delight or satisfy.
- Raga forms the basis of melody; Tala forms the basis of rhythm.
- A raga is neither a scale nor a mode — it is a scientific, precise, aesthetic melodic form with its own ascending (Aaroha) and descending (Avaroha) movement.
- Minimum notes required: 5.
Classification by Number of Notes (Jaati):
| Type | Notes | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| Audav / Odava Raga | 5 | Pentatonic |
| Shadava Raga | 6 | Hexatonic |
| Sampurna Raga | 7 | Heptatonic |
Three Types of Raga (Raga Bhed):
| Type | Feature |
|---|---|
| Shuddha Raag | Playing absent notes does NOT change its nature |
| Chhayalag Raag | Playing absent notes CHANGES its nature and form |
| Sankeerna Raag | Combination of two or more ragas |
Hierarchy of Notes within a Raga:
| Term | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Vaadi | 'King' | Most important / most frequently used note; principal note |
| Samvaadi | 'Queen' | Second most important; the 4th or 5th note relative to Vaadi |
| Anuvaadi | Supporting | All other notes except Vaadi and Samvaadi |
| Vivadi | Absent | Notes NOT present in the composition |
Six Principal Ragas (Hindustani) — Time and Season Specific:
| Raga | Time | Season | Mood |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bhairav | Dawn | Any | Peace |
| Hindol | Morning | Spring | Sweetness of a young couple |
| Deepak | Night | Summer | Compassion |
| Megh | Late Night | Rainy | Courage |
| Shree | Evening | Winter | Gladness |
| Malkaush | Midnight | Winter | Vir (Brave) |
Note: In Carnatic music, there are 72 melas (parent scales) on which ragas are based. Carnatic ragas do NOT adhere to any time specification.
Performance Terms:
- Aaroha: Ascending movement (Sa re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni).
- Avaroha: Descending movement (Ni Dha Pa Ma Ga re Sa).
- Laya (tempo): Vilambit (slow) | Madhya (medium) | Drut (fast).
- Alap: Gradual exposition of the raga in slow tempo emphasizing Vaadi and Samvaadi; sung without words (in Aakaar — using vowel 'aa' only); opens a Hindustani performance.
- Taan: Basic notes in fast tempo showing dexterity. A short taan of 3–4 notes = Murki.
- Alankara: Ornamentation — a specific melodic pattern in succession (e.g., Sa re Ga, Ga Ma Pa, etc.).
- Sthayee/Mukhda: First part of composition (most used).
- Antara: Second part of composition.
Samay (Time of Performance):
- 12 AM–12 PM = Poorva Bhaag → Poorva Raga; Saptak: Sa to Ma.
- 12 PM–12 AM = Uttar Bhaag → Uttar Raga; Saptak: Pa to Sa.
3. Tala (Rhythmic Cycle)
- Rhythmic groupings of beats ranging from 3 to 108 beats.
- Tala is independent of the music it accompanies.
- The tempo of tala = Laya.
- Commonly used talas: Dadra, Kaharba, Rupak, Ektal, Jhaptal, Teental, Ada Chautal.
- Teen-tal (16 beats) is most commonly used by composers.
Carnatic Tala Structure:
- Three components: Laghu, Dhrutam, Anu Dhrutam.
- 35 original thalas × 5 ghaatis = 175 thalas in Carnatic music.
- Carnatic tala structure is more rigid than Hindustani.
4. Rasa (Aesthetic Emotion)
- Emotions evoked through singing/playing are Rasas (also called 'aesthetic delight').
- Originally 8 rasas; Shanta rasa was added later → Nauras (9 rasas).
| Rasa | Mood |
|---|---|
| Shringara | Love |
| Haasya | Humour / Laughter |
| Karuna | Pathos |
| Roudra | Anger |
| Bhayanak | Horror |
| Veer | Bravery |
| Adbhuta | Wonder |
| Bibhatsa | Disgust |
| Shant | Peaceful / Calm |
After the 15th century, Bhakti (devotion) rasa was widely accepted as a 10th rasa; some musicologists consider it the same as Shanta.
5. Thaat (Classification Framework)
- A Thaat is a system for classifying ragas in groups (parent scales).
- 10-Thaat classification (Hindustani) proposed by musicologist V.N. Bhatkhande.
- A thaat must have 7 notes in ascending order only (Aaroha only; no Avaroha).
- Thaat has no emotional quality and is NOT sung; ragas derived from it are sung.
The 10 Thaats: Bilawal, Khamaj, Kafi, Asavari, Bhairavi, Bhairav, Kalyan, Marwa, Poorvi, Todi.
Thaat vs. Raga — Key Differences:
| Feature | Thaat | Raga |
|---|---|---|
| Notes | Must have exactly 7 | Minimum 5 |
| Movement | Only Aaroha (ascending) | Must have both Aaroha + Avaroha |
| Melody | Not necessarily melodious; NOT sung | Must be melodious; sung |
| Vaadi/Samvaadi | Does NOT have these | Has Vaadi and Samvaadi |
| Naming | Named after popular ragas | Named after emotion evoked |
| Emotional quality | None | Yes |
Classification of Indian Music
Indian Music → Classical | Folk | Fusion (Classical+Folk) | Modern
Classical Music — Two Schools
Both share roots in Bharata's Natyashastra and diverged in the 14th century.
Hindustani Music (North India) — focuses on improvisation within musical structure; adopted Shudha Swara Saptaka (Octave of Natural Notes).
10 main styles of singing in Hindustani music: Dhrupad, Dhamar, Hori, Khayal, Tappa, Chaturang, Ragasagar, Tarana, Sargam, Thumri.
Dhrupad
- Oldest and grandest Hindustani classical form; mentioned in Natyashastra.
- Roots in older forms: Prabhanda and Dhruvapada.
- 'Dhruva' = unmoving — returns Swara (tonal), Kala (time), Shabda (textual) to a fixed point.
- Zenith reached in the court of Emperor Akbar (Tansen, Swami Haridas, Baba Gopal Das; Baiju Bawra also speculated).
- Consolidated as classical form in the 13th century; declined in the 18th century.
- Uses Sanskrit syllables; of temple origin; 4–5 stanzas; performed by two male vocalists (duo).
- Accompanied by Tanpura and Pakhawaj.
- Starts with Alap (wordless).
- Four Dhrupad Gharanas (Vanis/Banis):
| Gharana | Vani Style | Key Feature | Notable Artists |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dagari Gharana | Dagar Vani | Great emphasis on alap; pairs; Muslims singing Hindu texts | Gundecha Brothers (Jaipur) |
| Darbhanga Gharana | Khandar + Gauhar Vani | Raga alap + composed songs; incorporates layakari | Mallik family (Ram Chatur Mallik) |
| Bettiah Gharana | Nauhar + Khandar Vani | Unique techniques; Haveli style | Mishra family (Indra Kishore Mishra) |
| Talwandi Gharana | Khandar Vani | Based in Pakistan; difficult to maintain | — |
Haveli Style = form of Dhrupad prevalent in Bettiah and Darbhanga schools.
Khyal
- Derived from Persian — means 'idea or imagination'.
- Origin attributed to Amir Khusrau; biggest patronage by Sultan Mohammad Sharqi (15th century).
- Characteristic feature: heavy use of Taan → Alap gets much less room than in Dhrupad.
- Based on short songs (2–8 lines) called Bandish; themes are largely romantic.
- Two-song structure: Bada Khyal (slow tempo) + Chhota Khyal (fast tempo).
| Gharana | Founded by | Key Features | Famous Artists |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gwalior Gharana | — | Oldest Khyal gharana; equal emphasis on melody + rhythm; prefer simple ragas | Nathu Khan, Vishnu Palushkar |
| Kirana Gharana | Nayak Gopal; popularised by Abdul Karim Khan & Abdul Wahid Khan (town Kirana, UP) | Precise tuning; slow tempo ragas; melody and clarity of pronunciation | Pt. Bhimsen Joshi, Gangubai Hangal |
| Agra Gharana | Khuda Baksh / Haji Sujan Khan (19th c.); revived by Faiyaz Khan → renamed Rangeela Gharana | Blend of Khyal + Dhrupad; emphasis on Bandish | Mohsin Khan Niazi, Vijay Kichlu |
| Patiala Gharana | Bade Fateh Ali Khan + Ali Baksh Khan (19th c.); sponsored by Maharaja of Patiala | Ghazal, thumri, khayal; greater rhythm; intricate tanas; alankaras; uses tarana-style gayaki | Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (Raga Darbari) |
| Bhendibazaar Gharana | Chhajju Khan, Nazir Khan, Khadim Hussain Khan (19th c.) | Breath control — sing long passages in a single breath; uses Carnatic ragas | — |
Tarana Style
- Rhythm-driven; fast tempo; short repeated melody with variations.
- Second contrasting melody (higher notes) introduced once.
- Requires specialised training in rhythmic manipulation.
Gharana System
- Gharana = social organisation linking musicians by lineage or apprenticeship adhering to a particular style.
- From Urdu/Hindi 'ghar' (house/family) — refers to the place of origin of the musical ideology.
- Well-known Hindustani Gharanas: Agra, Gwalior, Indore, Jaipur, Kirana, Patiala.
Hindustani vs. Carnatic Music — Comparison
| Feature | Hindustani | Carnatic |
|---|---|---|
| Influence | Arab, Persian, Afghan | Indigenous (no foreign influence) |
| Improvisation | High — basis of performance | Rigid; no freedom to improvise |
| Sub-styles | Multiple → leads to Gharanas | One prescribed style; no Gharana system |
| Instruments | Tabla, Sarangi, Sitar, Santoor (equally important) | Veena, Mridangam, Mandolin (vocal emphasis) |
| Ragas | 6 major ragas; time-specific | 72 ragas; NOT time-specific |
| Common instruments | Flute, Violin | Flute, Violin |
| Composition unit | Bandish, Taan, Alap | Kriti (Pallavi + Anu Pallavi + Varnam + Ragamalika) |
Carnatic Composition Parts:
- Pallavi: First thematic line; repeated in each stanza; best part = 'Ragam Thanam Pallavi'.
- Anu Pallavi: Two lines following Pallavi; sung at beginning (and sometimes end).
- Varnam: Sung at beginning of recital; reveals the raga; two halves — Purvanga + Uttaranga.
- Ragamalika: Concluding part; free improvisation; artists must return to original theme.
- Swara-Kalpana: Improvised section with drummer.
- Thanam: Melodic improvisation in free rhythm with Mridangam.
- Ragam: Pieces without Mridangam.
Semi-Classical Styles of Hindustani Music
| Form | Key Features | Origin / Association |
|---|---|---|
| Thumri | Mixed ragas; romantic/devotional; Bhakti-inspired; female voice; inherent sensuality; Hindi/Awadhi/Braj Bhasha; two types: Purbi (slow) and Punjabi (fast) | Gharanas in Banaras and Lucknow; Begum Akhtar |
| Tappa | Fast, subtle, knotty; 'quick turn of phrases'; rhythm-heavy | Originated from folk songs of camel riders of NW India; gained legitimacy in court of emperor Muhammad Shah |
| Ghazal | Rhyming couplets + refrain; max 12 ashaar (couplets); always about love; Sufi influence | Originated in Iran (10th century AD); spread to South Asia in 12th century via Sufi mystics; Amir Khusrau among first expounders |
Folk Music — State-wise Quick Reference
| Folk Form | State | Theme / Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Baul (Baul Sangeet) | Bengal | Bengali religious sect; Hindu Bhakti + Sufi influence; mysticism; Lalon Phakir |
| Wanawan | Kashmir | Wedding ceremonies; auspicious |
| Pandavani | Chhattisgarh | Based on Mahabharata; Bhima as hero; tambura; Tijanbai (Padma Shri + Padma Bhushan) |
| Alha | Madhya Pradesh | Heroic ballad; Braj/Awadhi/Bhojpuri; Mahabharata theme (Pandava reincarnations) |
| Panihari | Rajasthan | Women fetching water; scarcity; romantic at times |
| Ovi | Maharashtra + Goa | Women's songs; 4 lines; marriages, pregnancy, lullabies |
| Pai Song | Madhya Pradesh | Rainy season festivals; good monsoon/harvest; Saira dance |
| Lavani | Maharashtra | Dance + song; performed on Dholki beats; powerful rhythm |
Fusion of Classical and Folk — Sugam Sangeet
| Style | Association | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Bhajan | Bhakti movement; North India | Devotional; simple melodies; Mirabai, Tulsidas, Surdas, Kabir |
| Shabad | Sikhism; Gurudwaras | Developed by Guru Nanak + disciple Mardana; from Adi Granth |
| Qawwali | Sufi shrines | Praise of Allah/Prophet/Sufi saints; single raga; Urdu/Punjabi/Hindi; 8-member team; Amir Khusrau credited; Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan |
| Abhanga | Maharashtra | Praise of Vitthoba God; Tukaram, Namdev |
| Bhatiali | Bengal | About nature/daily life; sung by boat drivers |
| Tevaram | Tamil Nadu | Sung by Shaivite community (Oduyars) |
| Kirtan | Bengal |
Musical Instruments — Four Classical Categories
| Category | Type | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tata Vadya | Chordophones (string) | Sound modified by hand; three sub-types | Sitar, Veena, Sarangi, Sarod, Tamboora, Esraj |
| Sushira Vadya | Aerophones (wind) | All wind instruments | Shehnai, Bansuri (flute), Pungi, Ninkirns |
| Awanad / Avanaddha Vadya | Membranophones (percussion) | Outer membrane beaten; most ancient = Bhumi Dundubhi (earth drum) | Tabla, Mridangam, Dhol, Dholak, Congo |
| Ghana Vadya | Idiophones (solid) | Solid instruments needing NO tuning | Manjira, Jaltarang, Jhanj, Khartal |
Sub-types of Tata Vadya:
- Bowed: Sound drawn by bow across strings (Sarangi, Esraj, Violin).
- Plectral: Strings plucked by fingers or plectrum (Sitar, Veena, Tamboora).
- Struck: Struck by small hammer or sticks (Gotuvadyam, Swaramandal).
Key Instrument Facts:
- Tabla → principal percussion accompaniment in Hindustani classical.
- Mridangam → principal percussion accompaniment in Carnatic classical.
- Shehnai = double-reeded wind instrument with widening tube; Ustad Bismillah Khan = 'Shehnai King'.
- Flute = was called Nadi or Tunava in Vedic period; Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia = famous flutist.
- Manjira = small brass cymbal; dated to Harappan civilisation; used in temples.
- Veena = belongs to Goddess Saraswati; most revered string instrument.
- Bhangash family = pioneers of Sarod in the 20th century.
Folk Instruments — Quick Map:
- Tumbi (Punjab — Bhangra), Ektara/Tun Tuna (one-stringed; wandering monks), Dotara (two-stringed; Bauls), Pungi/Been (snake charmers; dried bottle gourd + bamboo), Algoza (double flute; Punjab), Gogona (bamboo; Bihu, Assam), Ghumot (drum; Ganesh festival, Goa), Idakka (like Damru; Kerala), Chimpta (fire tongs; Punjab).
Modern Institutions
| Institution | Founded | By | Key Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gandharva Mahavidyalaya | 1901 (Lahore) → shifted to Mumbai 1915 | V.D. Palushkar | Teaching Hindustani + Carnatic classical music and dance; Prayag Samiti in Allahabad |
| Sangeet Natak Academy | 1952 | Government of India | First national arts academy; music, drama, dance; administers National School of Drama (est. 1959) |
| Marris College of Music (now Bhatkhande Music Institute) | 1926 (Lucknow) | Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande | Theory of music + practice; renamed Bhatkhande Music Institute |
| SPIC MACAY | 1977 | Kiran Seth | Society for Promotion of Indian Classical Music and Culture Amongst the Youth; 200+ global chapters; free events |
Musical Communities
| Community | State | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Langha (Muslim tribal) | Gujarat + Rajasthan | Entertain Muslim Rajputs through songs |
| Manganiar / Merasi | Rajasthan | Use instrument Kamaicha; sing classical folk music |
| Karta Bhajas | West Bengal | Four classes; chanting mantras |
| Bauls | West Bengal | Mystic singers; a class of Kartabhaja |
| Muria Tribes | Madhya Pradesh | Sing songs called Relo |
Applied Anchors
- Indian Heritage and Identity: The Raga-Tala-Swara framework reflects a philosophy of cosmic order — time (Samay), emotion (Rasa), and sound (Naada Brahma) are interlinked, embodying Indian civilizational continuity from the Vedic period.
- Continuity of Traditions: The Guru-Shishya (Gurukul) tradition and the Gharana system represent living transmission of knowledge — no text, but direct oral/musical lineage.
- Religion-Philosophy-Art Linkage: Dhrupad = temple origin; Bhajan/Kirtan/Qawwali/Shabad = devotional music crossing religious boundaries (Dagars — Muslims singing Hindu texts; Bhakti saints using music as social reform).
- UNESCO and Intangible Heritage: Sangeet Natak Academy (1952) promotes intangible performing arts heritage; SPIC MACAY globalizes Indian classical music — both reflect State efforts at cultural preservation.
- Indo-Persian Synthesis: Khayal and Ghazal represent the meeting of Indian and Persian musical traditions — a cultural fusion that enriched Indian music without erasing its fundamentals.
- Folk as Living Heritage: Forms like Pandavani, Baul, Lavani, and Maand represent communities' living relationship with mythology, ecology, and social life — not codified but vibrant.
Exam Traps
- Raga ≠ Tala roles are often swapped: Raga = basis of melody; Tala = basis of rhythm — NOT the other way around.
- Swara vs. Shruti: There are 7 Swaras in Indian music (Sa-re-Ga-Ma-Pa-Dha-Ni) and 22 Shrutis (microtones), of which only 12 are audible. A common wrong statement is 'there are 5 swaras in Indian music'.
- Odava Raga = 5 notes (pentatonic), NOT 6. Shadava = 6; Sampurna = 7.
- Thaat vs. Raga: Thaat has 7 notes (only Aaroha); Raga has minimum 5 (both Aaroha + Avaroha). Thaat is NOT sung; Raga is. Thaat has NO emotional quality. Thaats are named after ragas; Ragas are named after emotions.
- Dhrupad zenith was under Akbar (not Aurangzeb or Jahangir). Tansen = Navaratna of Akbar's court.
- Khyal patronage = Sultan Mohammad Sharqi (15th century), NOT Akbar. Khayal is attributed to Amir Khusrau for origin.
- Gwalior Gharana is the OLDEST Khyal Gharana — not the oldest Dhrupad school.
- Kirana Gharana is from a town in Uttar Pradesh — NOT Karnataka, despite famous exponents Bhimsen Joshi and Gangubai Hangal being from the Karnataka/Maharashtra border region.
- Agra Gharana was renamed Rangeela Gharana by Faiyaz Khan — a common MCQ.
- Tappa originated from camel riders of NW India — NOT from classical tradition; it gained legitimacy in the court of Muhammad Shah, not Akbar.
- Ghazal originated in Iran (10th century AD) — NOT Arabia; NOT Persia in the sense of Persian court music.
Quick Revision Points
- Three pillars of Indian classical music: Raga, Tala, Swara.
- 22 Shrutis per octave; 12 audible (7 Suddha + 5 Vikrita Swara).
- 10 Thaats in Hindustani (V.N. Bhatkhande); 72 melas in Carnatic.
- Raga hierarchy: Vaadi (King) → Samvaadi (Queen) → Anuvaadi → Vivadi.
- 9 Rasas = Nauras; Shanta was added 9th; Bhakti accepted post-15th century.
- Dhrupad: Oldest Hindustani style; Sanskrit syllables; temple origin; duo performance; Pakhawaj.
- Khayal: Persian origin; Amir Khusrau; Sultan Mohammad Sharqi patronage; Bandish; Bada Khyal + Chhota Khyal.
- Thumri: Mixed ragas; Bhakti-inspired; Banaras/Lucknow Gharanas; Begum Akhtar.
- Tappa: Camel riders NW India → Muhammad Shah's court.
- Ghazal: Iran (10th century AD); max 12 couplets; always about love; Sufi connection.
- 4 instrument categories: Tata (strings), Sushira (wind), Awanad (percussion membrane), Ghana (idiophones).
- Tabla = Hindustani; Mridangam = Carnatic.
- Shehnai King = Ustad Bismillah Khan; Flute master = Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia.
- SPIC MACAY = Kiran Seth, 1977; Sangeet Natak Academy = GoI, 1952; Bhatkhande Music Institute = V.N. Bhatkhande, 1926 Lucknow.
Ready to test this chapter?
Save your reading progress here, then use the quiz to lock in recall.