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Raag Shree - Tarana | Tejaswini Digamber Vernekar | Purvi Festival 2023

KalaSudha Music 1 month ago
04:34

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Pandit Tejaswini Digamber Vernekar closes a three-part Raag Shree suite at Purvi Festival 2023 in Motihari with this Tarana, the third segment, following the Alap and Bada Khayal that precede it. A BHU Gold Medalist and All India Radio-graded vocalist, Vernekar brings the same raga grammar she built across the earlier sections into this fast, rhythmically charged final piece.

The Tarana form sets rapid, abstract syllables (ta, na, diri, tom) in place of the poetic text of a khayal bandish. Where the Bada Khayal in Vilambit laya gave each phrase of Raag Shree room to settle, the Tarana compresses that same raga material into a fast-moving frame. The defining movement of Shree, the leap from Komal Rishabh to Pancham, now arrives inside a dense rhythmic cycle rather than a slow arc. The result is a different kind of tension: the raga's austere, Poorvi Thaat gravity held against the forward drive of the tala, the syllables cutting through the space where the earlier sections let silence do the work.

Credits

Film Editing Mukul Kumar

Ragas

Shree

श्री

Early evening

Raag Shree is far from a collection of notes; it is a structural marvel of the Hindustani classical tradition, a monolithic tribute to the spiritual and technical depths of Indian music. To understand Shree is to stand at the brink of a vast, darkening ocean while the sun vanishes, leaving a sky stained with purple and gold. It is a raga of immense gravity, often described by practitioners as “Param-Ghirbhir” (profoundly deep), demanding breath control, mental focus, and emotional maturity that few other scales require. While many ragas seek to charm or soothe, Shree seeks to command. It carries a feeling of ancient, Vedic authority, functioning as a bridge between the tangible world of the day and the mystical, internal world of the night. The fundamental basis of Raag Shree lies within the Poorvi Thaat, a parent scale known for its complex emotional palette and use of the Teevra Madhyama (augmented fourth). The notes are Shadaj (S), Komal Rishabh (r), Shuddha Gandhar (G), Teevra Madhyama (M#), Pancham (P), Komal Dhaivat (d), and Shuddha Nishad (N). However, simply listing these notes does not convey the “tension” that defines the raga. In Shree, the Rishabh is kept extremely low in pitch, almost oscillating with a heavy, mournful weight, while the Pancham acts as a distant, unshakeable lighthouse. The interaction between Komal Rishabh and Teevra Madhyama creates a cognitive dissonance that reflects the turbulent energy of sunset, a time when the heat of the day meets the cold of the oncoming dark. Historically, Raag Shree holds the status of “Adiraga,” often cited in old scriptures as one of the earliest six ragas from which all others were derived. In the Sangeet Ratnakara and other medieval treatises, Shree is personified as a divine king, robed in royal robes, holding a lotus, and representing the essence of Lakshmi (prosperity) and Shree (divine beauty). Yet, this beauty is not “pretty” in the conventional sense. It is “Sublime”, the sort of beauty that inspires amazement and a touch of fear. The raga’s resonance is so potent that tradition dictates it must only be performed during the Sandhiprakash period—the twilight hours. It is believed that the specific vibrations of the Komal Rishabh and Teevra Madhyama correspond to the atmospheric shifts occurring as the earth rotates away from the sun, making it a “heavy” raga that replicates the literal increase in atmospheric pressure and the settling of the day’s dust. The melodic movement, or Chalan, of Shree is notoriously difficult because it is non-linear (vakra). A performer cannot simply ascend or descend the scale. The Aroha (ascent) usually follows a pattern like S, r, S, P or S, r, G, M# P. The Avroha (descent) is a complex weaving of S, N, d, P, M# G, r, G, r, S. The soul of the raga resides in the Shree-Ang, a specific melodic signature that accentuates the leap from Rishabh to Pancham. This jump (r-P) is one of the most daring intervals in classical music; it requires the singer to glide from a microtonally low, trembling Rishabh directly to a rock-solid, resonant Pancham. This creates a “longing” that is never quite resolved, keeping the listener in a state of high spiritual alert. In terms of Rasa (emotional essence), Shree is a rare combination of Veera (heroism), Raudra (awe-inspiring intensity), and Shanti (deep peace). Unlike its cousin, Raag Puriya Dhanashree, which is more melodic and yearning, Shree is austere. It feels like a prayer offered by a warrior or a sage rather than a lover. The Vadi (king note) is Komal Rishabh, and the Samvadi (minister note) is Pancham. This relationship is asymmetrical and “heavy,” so the performer spends disproportionate time dwelling on the lower notes. The Mandra Saptak (lower octave) is the playground of Shree. A master vocalist may spend thirty minutes in the Alap (unaccompanied introduction) just exploring the relationship between the tonic and the flat second, building a mountain of tension that only finds release when the Pancham is finally sounded as a gong. The conceptual basis of Shree is just as important. It is often associated with “Tyaga” (renunciation) and the realisation of the cosmic order. In the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of the Sikhs, Raag Shree is the first raga mentioned, signifying its importance as a vehicle for sacred communication. It is said to represent the soul’s realisation of its own insignificance in the face of the Infinite. When the Teevra Madhyama is used in Shree, it is not a passing note; it is a sharp, piercing signal of the “middle path” amid the earthly Gandhar and the celestial Pancham. This makes the raga a favourite for Dhrupad singers, the oldest and most rigorous form of Hindustani music, where the microtonal nuances (Srutis) can be fully realised through slow, meditative development. Practitioners of different Gharanas (schools of music) approach Shree with varying degrees of aggression or meditation. The Gwalior Gharana might emphasise the clarity of the Bandish (composition) and rhythmic play, while the Agra Gharana leans on the “Nom-Tom” Alap, using powerful, resonant vocals to evoke the raga’s heroic nature. The Jaipur-Atrauli Gharana, known because of its complex, “beaded” melodic chains, treats Shree with mathematical accuracy that illuminates its Vakra (twisted) nature. Regardless of the school, any performance of Shree that does not leave the audience feeling slightly “crushed” by the burden of its majesty is considered incomplete. It is a raga that demands everything from the performer: physical stamina, intellectual rigour, and a soul that has known both great struggle and great peace. Comparing Shree to other evening ragas, such as Marwa or Puriya, reveals its unique “Pancham-centric” gravity. While Marwa avoids the Pancham to create a sense of restless anxiety, Shree uses the Pancham as an anchor. This makes Shree feel more stable and “ancient,” like a granite temple that has stood for millennia. The “Re-Pa” movement is the defining hallmark. If a singer misses the microtonal “edge” of that Rishabh, the raga can easily slip into the identity of another, less demanding scale. This is why teachers often wait years before introducing Shree to a student. It is a raga for the “ripe” mind, one that can handle the dissonant “clash” of the notes without losing the meditative thread. In the modern era, legends like Pt. Bhimsen Joshi and Ustad Amir Khan have provided definitive recordings of Raag Shree. Pt. Bhimsen Joshi’s rendition often showcases the “Pukar” (calling out), where his powerful voice reaches for the Pancham with an almost desperate spiritual hunger. Ustad Amir Khan, conversely, treated Shree with a meditative, “Merukhand” approach, slowly unfolding the raga note by note, like a dark flower blooming in slow motion. These masters understood that Shree is not about speed or vocal gymnastics; it is about “Sthayibhava”, the continuing emotional state. Even in the Drut (fast) compositions, the underlying “heaviness” of the raga remains, making sure that the listener never forgets the sun has set, and the celestial enigmas are now afoot. To truly master Shree is to master the art of calm between the notes. Because the intervals are so wide and the relationships so dissonant, the “spaces” in the music are where the raga truly lives. It is in the stillness after a heavy, vibrating Komal Rishabh that the listener feels the “pressure” you mentioned—the burden of the atmosphere, the gravity of existence, and the overwhelming immensity of the cosmos. It is, quite literally, the sound of the universe settling into itself. The domain of Raag Shree is anchored by several iconic Bandishes (compositions) that have become the gold standard for students and maestros alike. One of the most legendary is the traditional Vilambit (slow) composition, "Hari Ke Charan Kamal", a profound meditation on the sacred that perfectly represents the raga’s spiritual gravity. Another celebrated Cheez (song-text) is "Sanjh Bhai", which literally translates to "Evening has fallen," directly referencing the raga’s Samay (performance time) and the atmospheric transition it represents. These compositions are designed to highlight the raga's "Vakra" (crooked) nature, forcing the performer to negotiate the difficult leap from Komal Rishabh to Pancham within the poetic structure. In the Gharana context, the Agra Gharana is particularly famous for its treatment of Shree; their "Nom-Tom" Alap and robust, rhythmic Dhrupad-influenced style suit the raga's "Veera" (heroic) and "Param-Ghirbhir" (extremely deep) nature. Historically, few have commanded Shree with the authority of Ustad Vilayat Khan on the sitar, whose "Gayaki Ang" (vocal style) allowed him to pull the Meend (glide) from Rishabh to Pancham with a haunting, vocal-like accuracy that few could replicate. In the vocal realm, Pandit Bhimsen Joshi of the Kirana Gharana was a master of the raga’s "Pukar" (emotional calling), using his incredible breath control to sustain the tension of the lower notes before leading into a resonant, earth-shaking Pancham. Similarly, Ustad Amir Khan of the Indore Gharana was known for his philosophical, slow-unfolding Alap in Shree, which emphasised the raga's intellectual and cosmic dimensions. These masters didn't just perform the notes; they inhabited the "heavy" quiet between them, making sure that the raga's ancient authority remained intact for the modern listener.

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