Music, Songs and Stories: Archival Selections from India

    • CD8
    • Percussion and Performance – Drumming Traditions
    • Percussion and drumming traditions are found all over India. A wide variety of drums and other percussive instruments are played in a variety of contexts, and frequently have ritual implications. This album presents two very different traditions: the tayampaka temple drumming of Kerala, and the dhol-damau of Uttarakhand, a combination that is used in various contexts in this mountain region. Both percussion traditions are forms of ritual drumming. Tayampaka is a genre of temple musical instrument art performed throughout North and Central Kerala. It can be performed on a variety of instruments but is most well known as a centa (tow headed cylindrical stick drum) composition usually played by marars, a temple drummer singer caste. It is one of the forms of the chenda melam or chenda ensemble. Though tayampaka is mainly performed as part of temple rituals it is also played in other contexts. As a temple ritual, the drumming is considered
  • india_rcd08
an offering to the gods or goddesses. In all the tracks presented here, a vocal performance is featured with the drumming. The tayampaka tracks were recorded by Rolf Groesbeck and are part of his collection. The dhol-damau of Garhwal in Uttarakhand is a twodrum ensemble. Though the double-barrel drum may be played by itself, the damau is never played on its own. The dhol is played while standing. The drummer uses the left hand to strike the left head of the drum while a stick is used in the right hand. A variety of strokes are used on both drum heads. The dhol is known for its power and sanctity in all parts of India, including the Garhwal region. The damau is a shallow kettle drum that is heard almost exclusively in partnership with the dhol at outdoor rituals and entertainment events. The damau is played with two thick sticks slightly curved at the playing end. The dhol is considered female and the damau male. The term baje is used for the various drumming patterns. The dhol-damau performances presented in this album are related to the Pandav Lila ritual theatre and dancing of Garhwal in Uttarakhand. Actors take the role of the Pandavas from the Mahabharata epic which is acted out in the open. As they act, the performers get possessed by the spirit of the characters they are playing and begin to dance. Drumming is known to bring in a state of possession. There are specific baje (rhythmic patterns) for the various characters of the Pandav Lila. The tracks presented in this album are demonstrations, where the various baje are elicited and not part of an ongoing Pandav Lila performance where these patterns would not be audible. The tracks presented here were recorded by Andrew Alter as part of his research on the Pandav Lila. The audio was extracted from video recordings that were digitized for this project.
SOUND LIST
1 Tayampaka Sandhya vela
Performer: Parameswara Kurup Date of Recording: 12th October 1989 Place of Recording: Ampulappura temple, Tamil Nadu
08'28" PLAY
2 Tayampaka – ashtapadi – Lalitalavangalata parishilana
Performer: Parameswara Kurup Date of Recording: 1989 Place of Recording: Ampulappura temple, Tamil Nadu Language: Malayalam
08'43" PLAY
3 Kalam pattu
Performer: Parameswara Kurup Date of Recording: 12th October 1989 Place of Recording: Ampulappura temple, Tamil Nadu
07'03" PLAY
4 Pandav Lila drumming demonstration 1
Performer: Manik Lal, Prem Das and Nathi Lal Date of Recording: 12th October 1989 Place of Recording: Bhatwari village, Rudraprayag, Uttarakhand Language: Hindi
14'29" PLAY
5 Pandav Lila drumming demonstration 2
Performer: Magi Lal and Darshan Lal Date of Recording: 12th October 1989 Place of Recording: Baret village, Rudraprayag, Uttarakhand Language: Hindi
18'27" PLAY
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