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Mohan
Samant
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REFLECTIONS
6
Music
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Reflections
on
Music
(written sometime in the 1960's)
Three main guts, thirty-three brass strings, an oversize
heavy black wood
bow and an ivory string tuner; along with it a well carved single
red wood box in your lap. You could confront a very bitter sweet
struggle for the rest of your life as a possible victim or master
of this dreadful musical instrument. I have, of course, been one
of the victims. In reality, nobody ever believes that you can play
the sarangi. Your association with playing the sarangi often means
that even your knowledge of Indian classical music is a vague statement.
The subject would be changed promptly.
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There
are approximately nine sarangi players in the world, six in India
and three in Pakistan. This four or five hundred years old romantic,
erotic and obstinate little instrument known as Sarangi Saptarangi
or Ravana Hatya will never yield its lifelong virginity to any raga
or to that extent any ustad who happens to be her lover. If you could
not tune the three main guts to the exact tones of the thirty-three
resonating wires, if your bow is not properly balanced or has too
much or too little resin, if the air is too humid or too dry or too
polluted, if you do not have the freshness of early morning dew on
a blade of green grass, if you are drunk, drowsy, stupid, invalid,
in pain, nervous or tense, this will all be reflected immediately
through the instrument as a neurotic, incoherent sound on a Panoramic
Vista. A frightening sight for your ego and personality. The sarangi
for that reason is like a distilled clear mirror of cosmic proportion
that reflects every corner, every part, every shade and color, every
curve of your body and mind and soul in varieties of perspectives
at one and the same time like a painting of Picasso or Paul Klee.
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The
sarangi is like the Goddess Durgee
With the exception of the vocal cord, there is no other instrument
on the Indian continent or any where in the world that will let
you understand innumerable color shades of the super structure of
the Indian Raga system with all its seriousness.
Ragas like Marwa, Darbari Kanada, Miyaki Mathar and so forth could
be played very light heartedly (Thumri like) or very deeply on almost
all popular musical instruments with the exception of the voice,
rudra veena and sarangi. Sarangi and rudra veena resist light heartedness.
The voice can be twisted around depending upon the quality, depth
and intelligence of an individual mind. Not so with the sarangi.
Beyond the light and shade games of its own, sarangi is like the
Goddess Durgee. She is very much alive with too many hands, too
many symbols and weapons, a necklace of chopped bloody heads and
a tongue full of fresh blood. At all times all your ego, intelligence
and personality is sarangi and nothing else.
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A painting, modern or otherwise, despite its multidimensional perspectives
and depths, remains confined to an area defined by the sides of the
canvas. A sculpture of any size is trapped within the size of the
stone. The sarod, veena and sitar are confronted with the automatic
quick tempo limitations of striking fingers - DA, DID, DA. However,
sarangi, vocal music and poetry resonate the sounds that carve the
endless sky and timelessness, the Bramha. It is as though there appeared
the endless picture of Lord Bramha covering the entire sky for a fraction
of a second and then disappearing. Playing a well tuned sarangi is
like creating a poem where the words are impregnated with dynamism
and a volatile symbolic space in between them, almost like an explosion
in time and space. The great forms of art are usually the direct manifestation
of intense pain and pleasure related to the experienced human relation
to the nature of a thing. The man who does not experience anything
does not express anything. He is a masked man. Sarangi is a poem.
It is beyond the range of a masked man. |
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my school days while travelling from Devas to Indore in Madhya Pradesh
early in the morning with my friend, we heard a very deep melancholy
woman's soul in the form of Raga Ramkali. Everybody knows the December
mornings in those regions which we call not the Ram Prahar but Amrit
Hours of the day. One feels as if one's whole body and soul are being
caressed by a distant, transparent sound of kinnaras. Ram Kalee seems
to have been sprinkled in the air like jasmine scent. Not until we
reached an old temple in the middle of nowhere did we find that it
was not a woman singing but a man playing a sarangi, a very old blackened
sarangi with some pictures pasted on the torn leather of the instrument.
Essentially I am not a romanticist but I made up my mind then and
there to learn to play that instrument. In fact I made up my mind
to marry that eternal virgin, ever sounding, ever promising, ever
unyielding, ever unforgiving, ever ferocious with her multiple hands
with symbols that create and destroy all animate and inanimate, the
eternal Durgee. |

One feels as if one's whole body and soul are being caressed by a
distant, transparent sound of kinnaras. |
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I
do not practice sarangi. I play it every day as if I am in a concert,
sometimes very well, sometimes very badly. Similarly, I don't practice
painting with drawing and sketching. I just paint and if I don't
like it I overpaint the same canvas twice, thrice, many times. I
do not use drawings and sketches in preparation for the paintings,
they are separate works altogether. There is a practical reality
for an artist's loft life in New York or for that reason anywhere
else. There is always a possibility of getting up in the morning
with a feeling of confusion, cynicism, egotism or aggressiveness.
However, one of the surest ways to start the day with pin point
concentration is to start tuning the sarangi. Within two hours of
playing it, an artist can very easily acquire one of the freshest
moods for a good working condition without the use of drugs, pills
or liquor. There is nothing so good as looking at one's own paintings
with delight without a trace of ego. Internally, it is very pleasant.
One feels one's motor is in full swing. This has been my experience
for the last twenty years.
There
are two distinct processes in the creation of poetry, music and
painting. One is the achievement of near perfect craftsmanship (no
disregard for that) and the other is an intense, painful, internal
striving that reaches outward to culminate in forms known or unknown.
This condition could be erotic and at times could create a very
destructive tension and confusing madness but given a motor power
of a great visionary artist, it could create a Mahakali in person.
In fact there is no such thing as professionalism in a great work
of art. Only craftsmen become professionals. There is no such thing
that man does not understand modern art or indeed any art. It is
like saying I don't understand English while saying it in a correct
English language. Man refuses to accept any uncomfortable new idea.
He would rathe r
be comfortable within the confinements of the known rather than
the unknown. Man is never unaware, even in his unconscious, of the
subtle differences in the sounds of words harsh or soft, or sounds
of musical notes cohesive or not, or all kinds of surface noises
high or low. They all confront him in a great variety of mixtures
on his ears. His mind detects all the differences.
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One of the surest ways to start the day with pin point concentration
is to start tuning the sarangi
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