AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Indian Music--Eminent Thinkers on Core Issues. Discourses by Premlata Sharma, S. K. Saxena, and Kapila Vatsyayana.(Book Review)

Notes

| September 01, 2003 | Miner, Allyn | COPYRIGHT 2003 Music Library Association, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Edited by R. C. Mehta. Mumbai: Indian Musicological Society, 2002. [113 p. $15.]

This set of essays by three senior North Indian musicologists is based on lectures which they presented in Mumbai and Delhi in 1992, 1998, and 2000. The lecture series honoring Vishnu Narayan Bhatkbande (18611-1936), the early-twentieth-century systematizer of North Indian music theory, was organized by the Indian Musicological Society and its director, R. C. Mehta. People familiar with writings on North Indian music theory and criticism in the last several decades will recognize these scholars' names. For the most part, it is this audience which will find this book of interest. Avid listeners to Indian music might also find portions of these essays enjoyable and thought provoking. The use of technical terms, however, and the intimate insiders' perspectives offered here will make the book a difficult one lot nonspecialist readers.

Premlata Sharma was known for her works on Sanskrit musicological texts, and mentored many scholars during her decades at Banaras Hindu University. In her series of short linked essays she rethinks the standard periodization and conceptualizaton of Indian music history. The essays were prepared directly from her recorded talk, and the repetitions, asides, and generally oral nature of the writing read like a very informal talk to undergraduate students. Stylistic as well as grammatical and typographical flaws, however, will be taken in stride if the reader is curious about this senior scholar's thoughts on broad issues late in her life. She argues that Indian music history has been constructed on Western criteria and English terms, many of which are inappropriate for the subject. Although her argument is vaguely responsive to quotations from authors of the colonial era and earlier times, few contemporary scholars will disagree with the general point. After briefly examining some Sanskrit terms relating to conceptions of history, such as those tot time and space, she proposes using the terms rta and satya as superior indigenous principles on which to base formulations about Indian music history. These terms denote movement and order, and endurance and sustaining, respectively.

Regarding the chronological periods that are standard in writings on Indian music history, Sharma suggests a new set of divisions that would express the changing aims of the authors, as opposed to implying lineal" progress. She makes a few interesting points from the musicological literature that she knows so well to explain her thinking in coming up with the overlapping periods "formative," "expository and expansive," "reconciliatory and re-evaluative," and "interpretive." Sharma excelled at dealing in detail with texts, but does so here only a little. Reading these essays is comparable to hearing her talk, for there are points to puzzle over, to appreciate, and to quibble with, but we hear one of the important Indian musicologists of our era speak in her own voice.

Sushil Kumar Saxena, formerly a professor of philosophy at Delhi University, is an active writer on aesthetics, music, and dance, and has also been a music critic fur the Hindustan Times newspaper. This essay is an expanded and reworked version of his 1998 talk in Delhi. The title "Some Basic-Aesthetic Reflections" is an apt one. The essay consists of the author's minutely thought-out and deeply held opinions about what makes good music. The style is personal, and is clearly the accumulation of a lifetime of experience in giving critiques of Hindustani music, especially vocal ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
The Ragas of Early Indian Music: Modes, Melodies and Musical Notations from the...
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society Kippen, James R. July 1, 1997 700+ words
...assumed that both Hindustani (North Indian) and Karnatak (South Indian...times, the modern student of Indian music has rarely been offered either...philosophy and aesthetics of Indian music up to the thirteenth century...Widdess' Ragas of Early Indian Music may be ...
East Indian Music in the West Indies: Tan-Singing, Chutney, and the Making of...
Magazine article from: Latin American Music Review Diethrich, Gregory March 22, 2002 700+ words
MANUEL, PETER. East Indian Music in the West Indies: Tan-Singing...the largest ethnic groups. East Indian Music in the West Indies does not attempt...diaspora studies. Although East Indian Music in the West Indies deals predominantly...
Innovation in Indian music.
News wire article from: Asia Africa Intelligence Wire December 3, 2002 700+ words
...the present innovation. "Indian music has always had a global presence...Improvisations, so inherent in Indian music, was like a challenge to...absorbed the subtleties of north Indian style of playing which pour...There'll come a day, when Indian music on this ...
The Ragas of Early Indian Music: Modes, Melodies and Musical Notation from the...
Magazine article from: Notes Miner, Allyn September 1, 1997 700+ words
...concepts of classical Indian music is raga, the melodic...framework. Modern North Indian (Hindustani) and...The Ragas of Early Indian Music is a major contribution...scholarly literature on Indian music. This book is not...
The dawn of Indian music in the West; Bhairavi.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News November 1, 2006 700+ words
...9780826418159 The dawn of Indian music in the West; Bhairavi...describes the history of North Indian classical Music in...Indo-Jazz, and Indian music's influence on classical...Shujaat Khan. South Indian music is addressed, but...
Dhrupad: Tradition and Performance in Indian Music.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Notes Sarrazin, Natalie June 1, 2005 700+ words
...and Performance in Indian Music. By Ritwak Sanyal...and Performance in Indian Music seems to avoid such...fifteenth-century North Indian form acts geographically...accessible and familiar to Indian music listeners. Underlying...
Indian music speaks to heart.
Newspaper article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) November 2, 2001 700+ words
...herself to the study and performance of north Indian classical music. Potter interprets...4, in UNM's Keller Hall playing north Indian classical music. She will be on stage...free "demonstrated introduction" to north Indian classical music at 2:30 p.m. Saturday...
Beautiful Evening Promised.
Newspaper article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) April 16, 1998 700+ words
...who is from Calcutta, India, and is with the Rotterdam Conservatory in Holland, plays classical Indian music on the tabla, a north Indian percussion instrument. "He has performed in concerts all over the world," said Arun Agrawal, a...
Harking back to the dreary past.
Magazine article from: Business Recorder October 14, 2006 700+ words
...in his book, "The Ragas of North Indian Music", has conclusively stated that: "Modern North Indian classical music has in its roots in ancient Indian music, but appears to have acquired...
Rediff.com and Indian Music Industry Association Announce Streaming Media...
Press release article from: Business Wire May 3, 2001 700+ words
...BUSINESS WIRE)--May 3, 2001 Indian music lovers in the US can listen and customize...Playlist' from a large selection of Indian music on Rediff Radio Rediff.com India Limited...Ltd. (PPL) under the aegis of the Indian Music Industry Association (IMI) and the...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, Indian Music--Eminent Thinkers on Core Issues. Discourses by Premlata...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA