Vocal
गीत
"Raga, tala, and meaning carried by the human voice."
Indian classical vocal music, or gita, treats the human voice as the primary instrument, shaping raga, tala, and lyric across the Carnatic and Hindustani traditions through forms from dhrupad to khayal.
Quick Facts
Rich Heritage
Singing sits at the origin of Indian classical music. Its roots reach back to the chanting of Vedic literature and to the Natya Shastra of Bharata Muni, and the 13th-century Sangita Ratnakara of Śārṅgadeva gave it a lasting framework by naming song as the first of the three arts of sangita. Around the 12th century the tradition divided. In the north, under Persian and Islamic influence, dhrupad gave way over time to khyal, and lighter forms such as thumri took shape. In the south the Carnatic tradition developed its own body of song, reaching a height in the 18th century with the Trinity of Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, and Syama Sastri, whose kritis remain central to the repertoire. The concert format that audiences know today was settled in the 1930s by Ariyakudi Ramanuja Iyengar. Through every change the voice stayed at the centre, the standard that instruments were built to imitate.
Artistic Philosophy
Indian classical singing rests on a simple idea: the human voice is the first and truest instrument, and every other instrument imitates it. A singer joins three strands in one breath. Raga supplies the melodic grammar and the mood. Tala supplies the cycle of time. Sahitya, the text, supplies meaning, and much of it is devotional. The goal is not a perfect rendering of a fixed song but a living interpretation, and the measure of a performance is manodharma, the improvisation a singer shapes in the moment within the raga's rules. Because so much depends on subtle movement between microtones and on the colour given to a word, the art cannot be learned from notation alone. It passes from teacher to student by example, ear, and long practice, in the north through the gharana lineage. A mature singer is judged by truth to the raga and feeling for the words, not by display.
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Featured Disciplines
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Dhrupad
Dhrupad is the most ancient surviving Hindustani vocal form, emphasising raga purity and extended alap over virtuosic display, with roots in temple devotion and Mughal court patronage.
Tappa
Tappa is a semi-classical vocal form featuring rapid, bouncing taan patterns, originating from Punjabi folk songs and refined at the Lucknow court by Shori Mian in the 18th century.
Viruttam
Viruttam is a free-rhythm form setting Tamil devotional poetry from the Nayanmars and Alvars to classical raga elaboration, connecting Carnatic music to ancient spiritual traditions.
Devarnama
Devarnama is a devotional song form from Karnataka's Haridasa tradition, composed in Kannada, with Purandaradasa ("father of Carnatic music") as the most celebrated composer.
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