Monday, July 28, 2008

Some links

Effective Proposal Writing Vasudev Murthy Sage Publishers ISBN
Here's a review in The Hindu Business Line
And another in The Dawn, Pakistan



What the Raags Told Me Vasudev Murthy. Rupa and Co., ISBN 81-291-0317-6.
Book Cover and a few press reviews of my book

Review in the Indian Express Tribune India Chapter Extract Interview in the Deccan Herald Interview in The Hindu Review in Sruti Magazine Radio Gandharv review A reference to my book in The Hindu
My son Sarang wrote a nice book which I highly recommend :-) Its a publication from Katha (www.fictionindia.com www.katha.org)

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


Articles in the Deccan Herald



On Cruelty - East or West
On the Nagasaki Bombing
On William McGonagall, the World's Worst Poet
About the lawyer Jacques Verges
About Violins and the Supernatural
Music and Spirituality
The Music of New Orleans
A Solitary Lamp for Sardar Patel
Flat Earth and Globalization
Why we hit out at the Police
The Rosetta Stone and the Decay of Indian Culture
Find your Own Space





Articles in Vijay Times



Nov Article on Nuremberg Trials
Dec Poem: Give me a Bribe! Cried my MP
Dec Corruption our new National Religion

Other Articles


Story in Veena Magazine, London Arts Review
God in a Restaurant
Poems: Far Away, The Other Me, etc.
June 2005: My article in RAVE magazine
A book in which I am a contributing author: The European Vegetarian Union's utopia
My Travel Articles on Bootsnall.com

Monday, July 21, 2008

The Music of Mali - Segu Blue



I listened to the intense music of the Mali musician Bassekou Kouyate on a flight from London to Bangalore



Segu Blue is what I heard. Simply brilliant addictive stuff!!!! Listen to it online (click here)

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Nemo at the Dog Show







This is our little Nemo, the Pug with an attitude, photographed by many people at the Dog's Day out event in Bangalore.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

USA here I come!

A visit to my old haunt - Dallas, for a week!

Thats where I studied, worked, lived for almost seven and a half years!

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Thomas Hardy



I borrowed Selected Poems of Thomas Hardy from the British Library last night.

Nothing like elegant poetry to put you in the mood.

I Look Into My Glass

I look into my glass,
And view my wasting skin,
And say, "Would God it came to pass
My heart had shrunk as thin!"

For then I, undistrest
By hearts grown cold to me,
Could lonely wait my endless rest
With equanimity.

But Time, to make me grieve,
Part steals, lets part abide;
And shakes this fragile frame at eve
With throbbings of noontide.




Sunday, June 22, 2008

Old Friends


A reunion after 24 years! The more things change, the more they remain the same!

Samuel Butler



Reading the brilliant book The Way of all Flesh by Samuel Butler. For excellence in language and style, you can't beat this book.

Preview - Our offbeat House being constructed


Our little house being constructed. Notice the granite blocks and sculptures. More pcitures along the way!

Friday, June 13, 2008

Travel

A quick trip to the mid-east beckons....there's been too much travel lately. On the other hand, its to be my first trip out of Bangalore since the new airport was opened. But other than that, I can;t say I'm looking forward to it. Ticket, Forex, visa - all here, but ....

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Soul Food - a short story

Soul Food
VASUDEV MURTHY

If you like being frightened by things like blood and gore, then you should not read further. That is because this tale does not have these tedious elements in them and you will not find what you are looking for.

The material world remains fundamentally the same, offering little in terms of excitement to one who seeks to swim in the occult, where grim menace emerges unexpectedly, where horror is subtle and not stretched in time, or grotesquely sprinkled with the intent to unsettle and disturb. In the occult world that I visit, horror is permanent and accepted and has no connotation of evil. It is merely � and correctly � another aspect of the universe and does not come with childish and na�ve labels like �good� or �evil�. The very word �horror� is inadequate and is an application of a tedious, contrived value system which refers to some kind of dissonance or an excitement of our nerves in a certain way. With horror comes the feeling of being extinguished in a manner not of one�s choosing. And that then is how it actually is.

After death, you see, our souls are herded together, like so many cattle and we are yoked and taken to Shambala, where we are cleansed and examined for any defects and sorted. We, as those previously alive, but still with a glimmering of understanding of a sense of self, are put through a sieve of sorts and certified.

For what, you ask, perhaps anxiously. Well, my dear Sir or Lady, we are truly soul food, intended for consumption by a more powerful entity, a genuinely permanent reality that needs to eat and stay alive for purposes beyond explanation. Preposterous, you say? It does not matter. Your experiences while you lived actually do season your soul and give it an extra spice, which makes for gourmet consumption. And so, in Shambala, your soul is sorted and accumulated in one of many little bottles depending on the hue your life took. Later, your last sense of self is extinguished as you are consumed, yes indeed. You protest and say that you lived a good life? I applaud you, but regret to say it merely means you shall be used as an ingredient, no less, no more. Were you shockingly evil and did you deliberately cause pain and suffering? No matter. You too shall be used for food. Perhaps this causes bitter disappointment, setting your value systems on their head. Perhaps you are frightened, not of death any longer, but the lingering endless waiting of your soul in a container as you wait your turn to be picked up and eaten. THAT extinguishing, THAT event � now THAT will truly be death.

I see that the innocent, the good, the evil, the macabre, the cruel, the soft and compassionate are all equal and are merely crops of different varieties. Each is allowed to grow till it is ready for harvesting. Then arrives the state we call physical death, where the soul is extracted and taken to Shambala, as described.

This journey requires telling. The first step, immediately after physical death, involves setting free the soul. It is extracted from the top of the head and immediately chained and constrained. You will be bewildered and confused. How different this is from just a few moments ago, you will wonder. Your dignity is stripped and you are tied to other similarly newly-dead with ropes of ether. Not knowing what else you could possibly do in this bodyless state, you will be in a state of stupor, completely terrified, uncomprehending, wondering what next.

And soon there will be a tug and you will hopelessly drift in the direction of Shambala, which you may not even have known existed, except in distorted ways in books here and there. By now you would have realized that you are being manipulated against your will, what little there still is of it. But you cannot protest, for you know not how to express this feeling and you know not who could listen and what they could possibly do. But FRIGHT overwhelms you, as you sense a complete and final loss of control. You are truly paralyzed.

And now in Shambala, you sense many such agglomerations of similarly baffled souls who seek pointless freedom of a sort. The sense of darkness is overwhelming. You are roughly handled and dipped through a soup of what seems purple fire, but which is in fact a kind of cleansing pool. You will emerge, washed but yet completely helpless. You will be separated and herded based on some criteria which you cannot understand and then placed with millions of similar entities. Now your sense of time will leave you. You have nothing to look forward to and have no idea how to mark the passage of time and what to do about it. So you wait, awake for eternities, completely subjugated, completely removed of dignity and respect, for these mean nothing any longer. Were you once compassionate to a sick puppy? Did you once kill an old helpless lady? Neither means anything here � they merely added a kind of spice to your soul and made it additionally attractive for consumption.

And then the Event will unfold. You will be pulled out, helpless, paralyzed, uncomprehending. And you shall feel that sense of being consumed. That will be the final darkness.

That will truly be death.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

P D James

I've just discovered P D James and am thoroughly in awe.

From Innocent Blood

"He held her left hand, wondering what dreams, if any, peopled the uplands of the valley of her shadow."

Striking, fantastic stuff.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

A short story - will it scare you?

Flight NA100 to Mumbai
----------------------

I knew I would never see him again, but I did not speak out. As Pilot of NightAir 100, my duties do not include needless chatter with passengers.

My taxi dropped me at the airport at about 1 am and I walked past security, who ignored me completely, as though I did not exist. The place was quiet and deserted. I walked through the final doors and then on the tarmac towards my plane, a Boeing 737 waiting motionlessly in a dark area of the airport, very far away from the terminal. It stood silently, blacker than night, glowing with tales and mystery. Not a soul was around. I got into the cockpit and started up the engines and went through the manifest and papers. I went through the checks and let the engine idle and waited for my passengers. I turned on the lights in the cockpit. Then I looked into the blackness and waited. And waited. I had all the time in the world.

And soon I saw him, my lone passenger, running across the large concrete expanse, breathless, with two small bags in his hands. I waved at him from the cockpit window and saw the relief on his face from a distance. He clambered on, huffing and puffing, a short fat businessman.

He peeped into the cockpit. “NA 100 to Mumbai?” he asked, gasping, trying to catch his breath. I nodded, not turning around.

He went to find his seat, and then returned a moment later.

“No airhostess? No other passengers?”, he asked, a moment later, a bit nervously.

“Nope. Its just us. One Pilot. One passenger. Red-eye flight, you know.”

“Ah.”

“We’re ready to go. Please sit down and fasten your seat belt.”

“Of course, of course”, he said hurriedly. In the mirror, I saw him turn and walk back quickly to his assigned seat. A fat businessman on a mission to make more and more money. I shut the door to the cockpit, made the routine announcements on the intercom and dimmed the lights. It was pitch dark now, inside and outside.

I taxied the plane to the head of the taxiway and announced an imminent takeoff. The lights were off on the runway too, but I knew the way, having taken off so often. I revved the engines and gathered speed. Faster, faster, faster. The Plane shook and trembled and rattled as it trundled down the runway, against the wind, about to lift off, about to take off into the black moonless night, about to take my passenger to his destination.

And soon it took off. A sleek black arrow with one pilot and one passenger. I angled the plane up and away, seeking to gain height as much as possible.

And then I saw it, once again, another 737 right in my flight path. Where had it emerged from? Why hadn’t I been warned?

And my plane crashed straight into the other plane and we went up in flames together, lighting up the night.

I had failed in my task to take my passenger to Mumbai. Perhaps another hundred passengers in the other plane had also died.

Tonight I am scheduled to fly NA100 once again to Mumbai. At the same time. From the same place.

I wonder who my passenger today will be.

On Dogs

My little fellow Nemo has become quite something - driving away dogs ten times his size, steadily growing and becoming strong and generally coming into his own.

A friend sent me some nice thoughts about dogs. Here they are:

The reason a dog has so many friends is that he wags his tail instead of his tongue.
-Anonymous



The average dog is a nicer person than the average person.
-Andy Rooney

If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and a man.
-Mark Twain

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Vegas Boston London

A whirlwind trip through Las Vegas, Boston and London. London is becoming quite my favourite city. I like the place, the feeling and the people. Las Vegas was glitzy, loud and noisy, quite the stereotype I had in mind. Boston was quite nice too, with friends kindly showing me the historical district.

I'm exhausted and plan to sleep for a week after I get back to Bangalore soon!

Friday, May 02, 2008

Battersea Dogs Home

Dropped by at the Battersea Dogs Home during some free time I had last Sunday.


I was quite impressed by the enormous care they seem to lavish on their residents. Large clean well lit areas, toys and so on. I observed the adoption process too where people seem to be interviewed and evaluated thoroughly for whether there's a fit between a potential adoptee and adopter.

A couple of photos



"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way in which its animals are treated."

Saturday, April 26, 2008

London on my Birthday

Arrived here today - a nice warm day. The hotel is just a few minutes from Paddington. A tiny cosy room - and a nap beckons!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

A simple beautiful poem

What is this life if full of care
We have no time to stand and stare?
No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep, or cows.
No time to see, when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
No time to turn at Beauty's glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.
No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.
A poor life this, if full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

- William Henry Davies 1871 - 1940

Thursday, April 03, 2008

A New Blog

I've taken on a new role of Head of Intellectual Capital Enhancement at the place where I work.

I've started a blog to mull over Consulting Research and so on. Please do visit.

http://consulting-research.blogspot.com/

Friday, March 21, 2008

"Someone should do something"


There is every reason -and every logical reason, on the face of it - why its not possible for you to adopt a dog in need. You hope that someone else, apparently better placed, will somehow be able to help.

But consider

"Saving just one dog won't change the world, but it surely will change the world for that one dog." - Richard C. Call

"It is as if life had said, 'I am going to send you into a world of cruelty. I shall make you sensitive to pain, fear, heat, cold, hunger and starvation. In this world of cruelty I shall make you defenseless. In addition I shall strike you dumb.' This is the kind of world that animals are born into." - Grace Johnson


Compassion is free to give. Please be extravagant.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

My Dogs

Jumble, a kind -hearted black lab came to us about 2.5 years ago. He was too boisterous for his former owners. Today his only 'fault' is that he is black and scares the living daylights out of ignorant people who assume he is ferocious. Here he is seen resting prior to be being attacked by Nemo.
Rani was abandoned at CUPA two years ago. I thought I would be tending to her for a few days before a definite passing on to the Rainbow Bridge as she was very very ill and weak. She bounced back and is doing very well. A lovely lady who needs help to walk about but maintains her pride and independence. Tolerates the little pest Nemo.
Nemo is presently creating major chaos at his home. He is the smallest and youngest but is top dog. He prefers parathas, papads and, in general, food. He is forever fighting with Jumble who returns the favour very affectionately like a big brother.Here you see Nemo attacking Jumble ruthlessly.
Here, Jumble has been toppled and Nemo has won a glorious victory.

And here he poses for the media.

Monday, March 10, 2008

A Trip to Kochi

A trip to Kochi - Vasco da Gama, Zheng He, Marco Polo, Ibn Batuta, the brand new wonderful Kochi airport and a set of extremely nice new friends.

A clean city, polite and courteous people, breathtaking scenery, old rambling heritage buildings.

Yes, this is a cool place. Do visit.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Snake




Please avoid looking back at me
with cold contemptuous eyes
as you slither swiftly forward
intent on anothers death,
that you may live.

My spirit chases you,
since I cannot.
That sensing flickering tongue,
that muscular rapture...
onwards! onwards!
to your life
and someone's death.

Through moist grass,
dank earth, decaying leaves,
cobwebs
and petrified flowers
a move towards that grey mouse,
innocent, nibbling
at something. Something nice. Quite unaware.
Of how time is so fleeting.

One moment in the warm sun,
blue skies, a breeze through its fur.
The next, steel coils
pushing air outwards from its lungs
razor fangs stabbing the body
A descent into time's quicksand
via your stomach.

A look backwards at me again,
in seething contempt
for my pompous values and speeches
about sacred life.

And then onwards! onwards!
beneath the brambles deep inside that hole
you call home.
The mouse digests within
and you look coldly at the blackness about.

My spirit shrivels and retreats.

Saturday, March 01, 2008

A Lot to Crow about



A Lot to Crow about

Outside my window, on the dry crackling branch,
he looks at me, that black crow, head cocked

ready to take flight, to mock,
at my lack of wings,
and alleged superiority.


Write your poems, pal, make a living

Burn in hell, while I flit,
from anywhere to anywhere, shifting blackness.
Excellent rat entrails; some for you? No?
Ah! Savage, am I? Hard beak, a piercing intelligence!
Ugly black feet, you say? Tough luck!

Be beautiful and attractive, Sir, and suffer.
My ungainly nest of mere twigs, my unwholesome diet,
my uncuddly chicks - why, I'm quite happy!
I survive, survive well, watching the antics
of anxious fools like you, hunched over keyboards

searching for meaning in foolish symbols
scrolling on that screen.



He looks up at the clear blue,
his canvas to choose, preens his dark bitter wings,

caws twice, once in contempt and the other
in inquiry. An answering raucous echo,
from a mate sneering elsewhere at us,
a fluttering of wings,
green leaves in distress,
and - gone!

Friday, February 29, 2008

Forensic Science


 
Forensic Science



Note, Sir
the gentle depression on the sofa
where she sat, her arm draped on the backrest
Do photograph the vacuum;
It may tell you something.

The air shimmers -
She was here; I sense the form
and the quiet air still carries
the echoes of her voice;
can it be recorded?

Pick up that strand of black hair carefully,
with tweezers
Decipher the DNA
Reconstruct that beautiful face
that I may once again look and be lost

Ah! a wine glass! Evidence!
Handle it carefully, with a soft cloth;
capture her prints
and model her soft fingers
that I may hold them to my lips again.

Lipstick prints on a tissue!? Wonderful!
Are they identical, Sir,
to those placed on my eyebrows
so long ago? Those
that I failed to collect?

How will you find her?
She, the victim AND the murderer?
Go back in time, snatch her,
before she vanishes
into colourless memories.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

The Sea of Japan


The moon has waned today
to a mere speck of grey light
draped by red restless clouds

The salty winds in my town near the Sea of Japan
punctuated by your dark screams
As I bite into your dreams

tasting the purple blood of eternity.


Who hears them?

The mermaids have slept
In the dark green kelp
that floats for ever
and muffles your cries

The whales have gone away
with the currents
thinking sweet thoughts of your pain.
They shall be back next year
succulent bits of them
on your plate


The Octopii have descended deeper
All arms flailing
pretending to be you
As you try to die

In the morning
there shall be no blood
on those clean white sheets

Merely the impossible aroma
of the deep sea.

An Unheard Melody



























An Unheard Melody


Where is that light, from the beacon
across vicissitudes, across pain so acute
skimming surfaces, reaching below
finding nothing, only the agony of solitude?
What lonely note is this, that flies across
distances and ticking clocks, to enter my mind?
When hearts have shrunk, grotesque wraiths have risen
trapping in mindless ether, this love - why must it bind?
What has cleaved through the atrophy of despair
seeking, seeking - and when not finding, severing?
Why have eyes closed, just when they should see
a light that falls, on a compass without bearing?
Reach out then, but do not seek to touch
The loneliness within, sacred, and so clean

This melody you alone must hear and then it must die

Like flowers growing under a dark sun, never to be seen

Saturday, February 23, 2008

The Song of Oluadah

A Poem I wrote a couple of years ago




The Song of Oluadah



Image hosting by Photobucket


Said Oluadah's Father:

Oluadah! Oluadah!
My son, my son!
Where are you?
Who took you away?
Oluadah! O Oluadah!
They say a white man dragged you away
and you walked on the water
and went away.
Say it is not true
Oluadah! Oluadah!



Said Oluadah:

Father! O Father!
I do not wish to say Goodbye
My children must know you
and I do not wish to go away
What shall I tell these men, O Father?



Said Oluadah's Father:

Oluadah! O Oluadah!
My son!
I wish to see your children
and their children
I wish to stroke their eyebrows
I wish to hold them to my chest
Do not go, my son!
Do not go!
Oluadah! Oluadah!



Said Oluadah:

Father! O Father!
They say I shall go to Savannah
They say I am worse than the dog
who died of sores in the village
These chains hold me to the wood
and I rock with the water
Can I not drown, O Father?
Can you not teach me how, O Father?



Said Oluadah's Father:

Oluadah! O Oluadah!
Come back my son!
Your mother grieves, your sister cries
The village is dark
Your friends dash their heads
against silent trees
asking for you
what shall I tell them, Oluadah?
What shall I tell
the leaves and the birds, Oluadah?



Said Oluadah:

Blood stains the rocking wood, O Father
So many die,
so many wish to die
I can hear them throw their bodies
and the sharks feast lazily
And ahead of us, I can hear
the sharks swim
waiting for my unborn children
Where are you, Father?
Where are you?



Said Oluadah's Father:

Oluadah! O Oluadah!
Come back, my son!
Take the chicken, take the yam
take the ripened fruit
what use are they to me without you?
Oluadah!



Said Oluadah:

O Father!
They have tied a rope
around my neck
They have chained me to the planks
I have died
though they say they shall
sell me alive
No longer shall I see you, O Father!
No longer shall I sleep under your tree, O Father!
No longer shall I eat the ripe yams, O Father!


And you shall not hold your Grandchildren, O Father!



Oluadah! Oluadah!

Sunday, January 06, 2008

My Books

I've written a couple of books. The experience of writing, getting it edited and finally published was interesting, though exhausting.

The first book took about six months to finish, but took two years between revision, acceptance and finally release. It hasn't really moved a great deal, so say the Publishers, because I guess its a niche book. Its a novel based on twenty different Indian Classical raagas (scales). The Publisher is Rupa & Co., New Delhi.


The reviews were not too bad, I guess.

Review in the Indian Express Tribune India Chapter Extract Interview in the Deccan Herald Interview in The Hindu Review in Sruti Magazine
The second book was about writing proposals and was published by Sage Publications, Delhi. Here's a review in The Hindu Business Line And another in The Dawn, Pakistan

There are a couple more in the pipeline (in fact, I'm done) but I need to get over some lethargy and find a willing Publisher.

Meanwhile., why don't you get a copy of each published book?

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Nemo the Pug


Here is a photo of my pug Nemo, sadly paralyzed in his hinds. He has recently acquired a wheelchair and is learning to move around.

He was recently featured in Woof Magazine and is soon to have his own monthly column where he will express his opinions on various matters!!!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

More photos from Bulgaria

Sofia - Kyundestil, Rila, Melnik, Gotse Delchev, Dospat, Pompograd, Brachov Monastery, Plovidv - SOfia
The wonderlands of Southwestern Bulgaria - near Dospat



Alexander Nevski Cathedral, Sofia


A wild dog at a water hole in the Rodopi Mountains

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Romania & Bulgaria

I'm back after a fantastic visit to Romania and Bulgaria.

Romania, offshoot of Rome, with a fabulous 'dark' history, Dracula (Vlad Tepes) and more, with very beautiful women and dark Metros.... here is a photo of a Romanian tapestry work I took there.



A visit to two enchanting countries with rich histories and cultures.

Bulgaria turned out to be paradis on earth. I went around Southwestern Bulgaria and took many pictures. I found the people very nice and friendly and the landscape breathtaking. From Pernik, to Kyundestyl, to Melnik, to Getse Delchev to Dospat to Asenograd to Plovdiv and back - the whole experience was enchanting. Do visit.



A little bridge near Dospat


The church at Asenovgrad Fort....


Saturday, September 29, 2007

Switzerland


I spent a few great days in Switzerland on work. But I managed to see a fair bit.

The place is, of course, ridiculously clean! I liked the fact that this seemed to be a nation of dog lovers. But the people were not particularly friendly.

In Zurich I visited the downtown area and the lake - what do you think of the swan? A little shopping, dozens of photos.

I also went to Bern where I visited Einstein's museum. The whole matter was quite something and very absorbing. Its a great little city, entirely deserted on a Sunday.

Then Interlachen and Jungfrau - great train rides and astounding scenery.

Had a cool time!

Friday, August 03, 2007

At the Dhrupad Gurukul, Bhopal

I spent a fantastic week at the Dhrupad Academy outside Bhopal with the Gundecha Brothers. It seems clear now that everything else is irrelevant compared to music.

These brothers have revived an ancient form and popularized it. Students of one pair of the Dagar brothers, they have innovated as well, using the poems of Tulsidas and others in new Dhrupad compositions.

Anyway, I had a great time - no phone, no email, no newspaper - only fresh air, silence and music. It became rapidly clear that my concepts of certain Raags - Jhinjhoti, Khamaj and Bihag were rather primitive. I now take greater care in musing over single notes rather than worry about the whole. Word has it that my violin sounds bearable now. I even ventured to learn some vocal music and exercised my rather rusted vocal cords. The human voice is certainly a better instrument than any man-made contrivance. This is best understood by listening to the Gundecha brothers glide seemingly endlessly between notes.

Music starts early in the morning with the boys singing low notes. The sounds of the Tanpura fill the building. Classes in the morning and a collective simple lunch. Many students from remote towns in India stay at the Academy on small scholarships, and - what is more gratifying - with the complete support of their families. The future of Music in India is bright.

I have to thank David for introducing me to the Gundecha Brothers.

My last day with them had Khamaj on the menu. I learnt many 'tricks' and understood a lot more. I thought I would leave extracts about Khamaj from a never-to-be-published book.
------------------------------------


My Dear Daughter,

You will read this letter only after I have gone, I know. Do not grieve. I am happy in the other world, which is full of music. If it had been otherwise, I would have returned! Of course, I shall miss you, my musical companion and most wonderful daughter. But you have your duties and must teach music to someone before you can join me so that we can be together forever, enjoying music in the place where it was created to begin with.

Have you seen the photograph of the two of us? It was in Benaras. I had always dreamed of taking you there with me where we could enjoy music. You were very young then and might have even forgotten by now. So I am going to write about it to remind you.

My greatest failing was that I never introduced you to the lovely Raaga Khamaj. I did not know it well enough and was perhaps temperamentally unsuited for it. But it seemed unfair that you should be deprived of some knowledge of this Raaga. I wanted you to hear it in Benaras, where Thumris, Tappas, Chaitis and other musical forms are almost invariably based on Khamaj.

And so, during a school vacation, I took you away. It was difficult as you will now understand. There was little money, and travel in those days was not easy. But I did it. Others did not like it but my mission was more important than the insults of others.

...
...
Then gradually, the mood shifted to music and an old man sang some old Thumris. The magic of Khamaj suddenly fell on all of us. Sinuous, winding, beautiful – the old man seemed capable of finding unexpected twists and turns in the Raaga. Just when we thought he could not possibly do anything new, he composed a new pattern, amazing himself and the audience! This was your first introduction to Khamaj, shorn of theory. He handled the Shuddha and Komal Nishads of the Raaga with a delicacy inconceivable. When you heard it first, you clutched my hand hard with your little fingers. Then I truly knew that music meant the same to you as it had meant to me!

....
....

He stopped dramatically. Then he continued in a whisper, Shadaj, extending it long and soft. Then with a jerk, he crept down, singing Komal Nishad, like the bending branch of a Mango tree! He approached the note and seemed to study it from all angles – literally! He bent this way and that, stood up and looked downwards, fingers still on the harmonium. He looked sideways and then forward. He looked backwards and lowered his voice! He was possessed by the magic of the Nishads, traversing all the millions of ways in which they could be reached.

“Look”, he shouted, suddenly turning to us. “Have you seen a more exasperating and cunning Raaga? I have spent fifty years trying to master it and still it eludes me! Today I was sure I would finally learn. But it smiles and goes away! It is a whore, whom all can love and enjoy and none possess! It is a gift of the Gods!

Why do we avoid Shuddha Rishabh when so much of feeling is soaked in it? Hear the pleading, the desire, the appeal in it! Must I shed tears daily that I sing this note and no one cares?

...
...
Mother of so many Raagas, Khamaj vibrates with mysteries and beauty. Komal Nishad, shy and enchanting, never far away from its elder sister, Shuddha Nishad, much bolder and protective, with a radiant beauty that turns the head of the cows and calves nearby …. the gateway to higher octaves…ah! How I love this note! Have you not seen the animals sitting outside, unable to eat or sleep, tortured by the Nishads? Try to feed them and see them refuse…they want only the Nishads of Khamaj by which their plaintive pleas to God might be heard. Many of them have passed on, with God unmoved by their cries of agony. And, the dancing girls whose art is expressed through the pleading lyrics in Khamaj – what would their existence be like without the Nishads? The men who come to watch them dance and sing and then come to them – they have been seduced by the Nishads, hapless unknowing victims, guided by Khamaj, their souls laid bare, their pasts visible to all. The doors of their chambers close and the Raaga displays itself in the higher octave. Sing they might Shadaj, Shuddha Rishabh, Shuddha Gandhar, Shuddha Madhyam and Shuddha Gandhar (Sa Re Ga Ma Ga), but they turn and look at the sisters, who in turn look at each other and smile. And so the men seek them, but the enchanting Nishads turn away, pointing instead at the images of God on the walls.
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We stood up and quietly left. It was true; a small collection of cows and dogs stood outside silently, listening, their eyes closed. We walked past them respectfully. We said not a word as we walked back to Mishraji’s home. And though we went to many other concerts over the next few days, this experience remained with us throughout.

We returned to our little town, with Khamaj following. And as you grew up and I watched you, it seemed that Khamaj had left a lasting impression, colouring everything you said or did. You became more sensitive, more mature, wiser, and more beautiful.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Music with David Israel

My good friend David Israel is here with me these days. He's working on a Dhrupad
documentary while also practicing on his Sarangi. Now how many people do you know
who might give up everything and spend months at the Dhrupad Academy in Bhopal
learning Dhrupad from the Gundecha Brothers? Inspired by him, I plan to spend a MUCH
briefer period there, learning what little I can.

David and I have been enjoying extended music sessions for several days now. Both of us explore solitary notes together and find some nameless joy in getting a sequence right. Who will listen to us? God knows. I don't think we have any hopes of ever hitting the rock circuit and developing a crazed teenage following. But we enjoy the long and lonely CORRECT note and thats quite enough, thank you.

His Sarangi is most interesting and it responds well to his efforts. The placement of fingers is almost there, and I enjoy his discoveries of interesting movements between notes. Its fascinating. He amiably accepts tentative suggestions I make for corrections, and has not yet hurled his sarangi at me in frustration. We have explored Yaman, Bhairav, Bhupali, Bageshree, Tilak Kamod, Nand and Bhairavi, in small doses. I would certainly like to have a fraction of his open mind and intense curiosity about music and more. I have gained more from this series of musical encounters than he has, for sure.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Yaman - The Infinite


Yaman is a very sweet and popular evening Raaga. It is very vast
and can be explored endlessly without getting bored. Many teachers
start off their students with this Raaga, though that is not true in
Carnatic music where the Raaga of choice is Mayamalawagowla.

Evening Raagas employ the Teevra (Sharp) Madhyam for good effect.
The beauty of Yaman is the invisible presence of this note without
it actually being played till much later, thus building up a climax
of sorts. The eventual playing of this note brings great relief
and relaxation as though heralding the close of a long day.

In Yaman Kalyan, we see the presence of both Madhyams. Another
popular Raaga is Yamani Bilawal. This is an evergreen Raaga easily
deployed in Ghazals, Light Music and more.

Here is a description from an unknown book

"And so it refers to Pancham and begins again. Yaman floats within
and without. And like the pearl that Shuddha Nishad and Shuddha
Rishab hid, I see Teevra Madhyam! Present in its own absence, glittering
when invoked, I bow to this note. Tears have flown down from unseeing
eyes, ecstatic with happiness. My feet disappear, my legs grow numb,
and my hands waste away. I do not know what is above or below, left
or right. Nothing has meaning anymore, because everything now is
understood. I float in a pool of music. There is no thought of an end,
of the passage of time. God has mercy on me now and allows Pancham and
Shuddha Gandhar to veil this note again. And with a slow flourish,
the explanation for this act of mercy is given: Shuddha Nishad,
Shuddha Rishabh, Pancham, Shuddha Rishabh and Shadaj!

My daughter lies asleep in my bed, an unnatural glow radiating from her.
Her innocent heart has heard and understood Yaman better than I possibly
could. I look at her with loving pride.

The movement of life has altered my ability to understand music and where
I find references to reality in music and perhaps miss the point altogether,
she easily understands grander things without being awed!

Is there now a rhythm, a cadence? My heart mimics it in vain, hoping to
understand Yaman this way. My eyelids grow heavy; my ability to think has
been taken away. The notes of Yaman reduce everything to irrelevance.
Can I understand Shuddha Gandhar? Can I understand its twin, Shuddha Nishad?

My blood runs cold for a second as a fleeting understanding invades my
soul. Finding me unable to withstand its import, ignorance floods in again
and I feel only the peace that I can handle without any destruction. I
lift my numb arms to heaven, in hopelessness. Oh God! Why did you do this?

I see a smile on my sleeping daughter's face. Then she shifts in her sleep
and turns her face away from mine. God has spoken through her again and I
have been spared. The echoes of Yaman must diminish to a level I can
withstand."



Listen to Yaman

Shubra Guha - Yaman Kalyan

Rashid Khan

Girija Devi

Shujaat Hussain Khan (Sitar - very classy) Yaman Kalyan

Steve Gorn (yes!) Flute

Imdad Khan

Amir Khan

Bade Ghulam Ali Khan

Mohammad Hussain Sarahang

Aminuddin Dagar

Nasseruddin Sami

Ustad Halim Jaffar Khan - Yaman Kalyan

Malini Rajurkar

Pannalal Ghosh - the Definitive

D K Datar

Mehdi Hasan


Film Songs

One Two Three Four

Five Six Seven Eight



Cordially

VM