peshkar
This is a peshkar/kaida/rela that I learned from Pandit Suresh Talwalkar, and i want to do a cycle-by-cycle breakdown. I've wanted to do one of these forever! Maybe open the video in a separate window, and resize things so you can see both the video and the blog at the same time if that's useful. Or just listen.
So:
Cycle 1: Theka, an intro phrase from khali (9th beat) then a tihai from 13¼
DhaDhinna (Dhatunna) DhaDhinna (Dhatunna) DhaDhinna Dha
Cycle 2: Peshkar theme 1, with a variation introduced on the 4th repeat, from 13
Cycle 3: Theme 1 again, with a variation from 5-9, then a tihai from 11⅞
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ( - - terekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ( - - terekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ... introducing terekite, foreshadowing theme 2...
Cycle 4: Peshkar theme 2, with a variation again introduced on the 4th repeat, from the 13th beat
Cycle 5: Theme 2 again, with the variation from the previous cycle from the 5th beat, and a tihai from 114/8
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha - (DhagenaTerekite) [underlines denotes double]
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha - (DhagenaTerekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha
Cycle 6: Peshkar theme 2 again, variation from 5, and a tihai from khali (9th beat)
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha -
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha -
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha
Cycle 7: Peshkar theme 2 w variations from 5 and 13 (i call this an idling cycle... prepping for tihai)
Cycle 8: Peshkar tihai:
{Dha - terekite Thin Na - - Dha - kreDha Thin na - -
Dha - kreDha Thin na - -
Dha - kreDha Thin na Dha - - - } *3
Cycle 9: Kaida! Theme, introduced without baya, with a variation & baya introduction from 13
Cycle 10: Kaida theme, full, with a variation from 13
Cycle 11: Minor variation (Ghe na instead of Dha - ) with a Dha Dha variation from 13
Cycle 12: Ghe na variation from 1, Dha Dha variation from 5, filled version from khali and a tihai from 13 (sort of..there's an intro phrase)
ge Dhatidhagena Dha terekite DhatiDhagena Dha - (kena)
DhatiDhagena Dha - (kena)
DhatiDhagena Dha
Cycle 13: Now the kaida becomes home base, and rela phrases (of 7 & 9) are introduced, from beat 7, and then again from beat 15
The rela phrase is
Dha terekite TakeDhinneNaNaghene (7)
Dha terekite Dha kitetake DhinneNaNaghene (9)
(I'll use only the numbers from here on in)
Cycle 14: Kaida, rela from 3, kaida, rela from 7, kaida, rela from 11 through to sam
or, A 7-9 A 7-9; a 7-9, 7-9, 7-9
(lower case 'a' means khali)
Cycle 15: A 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; a 7-9, 7 {7 Dha - 7 Dha - 7 Dha}
Cycle 16: A 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; 7-9 7-4-4 {9 Dha - - 9 Dha - - 9 Dha}
Cycle 17: 7-9, 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; 7-9, 7-6 {9 Dha -kat- 9 Dha -kat- 9 Dha}
Cycle 18: final tihai: 7-9, 7-4-6 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha - (ge- din - ne)
7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha - (ge- din - ne)
7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha
Sooooo. The 1st 18 years of the life of a tabla composition. Lots of drama from 14-18, just like everyone. Note that there are 10 tihais in this progression, one used to start the whole thing going, then others to transition between sections, as punctuation within sections, and to end the piece (and start the next cycle).
This is a peshkar/kaida/rela that I learned from Pandit Suresh Talwalkar, and i want to do a cycle-by-cycle breakdown. I've wanted to do one of these forever! Maybe open the video in a separate window, and resize things so you can see both the video and the blog at the same time if that's useful. Or just listen.
So:
Cycle 1: Theka, an intro phrase from khali (9th beat) then a tihai from 13¼
DhaDhinna (Dhatunna) DhaDhinna (Dhatunna) DhaDhinna Dha
Cycle 2: Peshkar theme 1, with a variation introduced on the 4th repeat, from 13
Cycle 3: Theme 1 again, with a variation from 5-9, then a tihai from 11⅞
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ( - - terekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ( - - terekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha ... introducing terekite, foreshadowing theme 2...
Cycle 4: Peshkar theme 2, with a variation again introduced on the 4th repeat, from the 13th beat
Cycle 5: Theme 2 again, with the variation from the previous cycle from the 5th beat, and a tihai from 114/8
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha - (DhagenaTerekite) [underlines denotes double]
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha - (DhagenaTerekite)
Dha - kreDhaDhinna Dha
Cycle 6: Peshkar theme 2 again, variation from 5, and a tihai from khali (9th beat)
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha -
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha -
KreDha - KreDha - Dhin na KreDha - KreDha - Thun na Dha
Cycle 7: Peshkar theme 2 w variations from 5 and 13 (i call this an idling cycle... prepping for tihai)
Cycle 8: Peshkar tihai:
{Dha - terekite Thin Na - - Dha - kreDha Thin na - -
Dha - kreDha Thin na - -
Dha - kreDha Thin na Dha - - - } *3
Cycle 9: Kaida! Theme, introduced without baya, with a variation & baya introduction from 13
Cycle 10: Kaida theme, full, with a variation from 13
Cycle 11: Minor variation (Ghe na instead of Dha - ) with a Dha Dha variation from 13
Cycle 12: Ghe na variation from 1, Dha Dha variation from 5, filled version from khali and a tihai from 13 (sort of..there's an intro phrase)
ge Dhatidhagena Dha terekite DhatiDhagena Dha - (kena)
DhatiDhagena Dha - (kena)
DhatiDhagena Dha
Cycle 13: Now the kaida becomes home base, and rela phrases (of 7 & 9) are introduced, from beat 7, and then again from beat 15
The rela phrase is
Dha terekite TakeDhinneNaNaghene (7)
Dha terekite Dha kitetake DhinneNaNaghene (9)
(I'll use only the numbers from here on in)
Cycle 14: Kaida, rela from 3, kaida, rela from 7, kaida, rela from 11 through to sam
or, A 7-9 A 7-9; a 7-9, 7-9, 7-9
(lower case 'a' means khali)
Cycle 15: A 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; a 7-9, 7 {7 Dha - 7 Dha - 7 Dha}
Cycle 16: A 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; 7-9 7-4-4 {9 Dha - - 9 Dha - - 9 Dha}
Cycle 17: 7-9, 7-9, 7-9, 7-9; 7-9, 7-6 {9 Dha -kat- 9 Dha -kat- 9 Dha}
Cycle 18: final tihai: 7-9, 7-4-6 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha - (ge- din - ne)
7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha - (ge- din - ne)
7 Dha -ne 7 Dha -ne 7 Dha
Sooooo. The 1st 18 years of the life of a tabla composition. Lots of drama from 14-18, just like everyone. Note that there are 10 tihais in this progression, one used to start the whole thing going, then others to transition between sections, as punctuation within sections, and to end the piece (and start the next cycle).
No comments:
Post a Comment