ISSN 2158-5296

Analytical Approaches to World Musics

Widdess

AAWM JOURNAL VOL. 1 NO. 1 (2011)

Implicit Rāga Knowledge in the Kathmandu Valley

Richard Widdess


Abstract:

The term rāga is current not only in the classical traditions of North and South Indian music, where it is the subject of an extensive written and oral theory, but also in many non-classical traditions especially of religious music in South Asia. For example, devotional songs (dāphā) sung by groups of Newar farmers in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal, are regularly attributed to rāgas; but there is little explicit (i.e. verbally expressed) knowledge about rāga among the performers. The question whether the concept has any musical meaning in terms of melodic structure can only be investigated through comparative musical analysis combined with ethnographic observation. An earlier study (Grandin 1997) concluded that dāphā song melodies in one rāga share a set of characteristic melodic formulae and are thus constructed in a rāga-like way. The present study suggests that rāga-preludes sung before each dāphā song constitute melodic models that underlie song melodies. A common stock of preludes is known by different groups, but singers are not aware of this commonality. There is thus an implicit melodic system that does not depend on performers’ explicit knowledge. This situation can be understood in historical and social terms.

Read full article in PDF version

Contributor Information:

Richard Widdess is Professor of Musicology in the Department of Music, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. His research interests focus on South Asia, and include the history and performance of rāga, the dhrupad tradition of Indian classical vocal music, Newar music in the Kathmandu Valley, historical ethnomusicology, transcription and analysis, and orality and cognition in world music.

© 2011 by the author. Users may read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of this article without requesting permission. When distributing, (1) the author of the article and the name, volume, issue, and year of the journal must be identified clearly; (2) no portion of the article, including audio, video, or other accompanying media, may be used for commercial purposes; and (3) no portion of the article or any of its accompanying media may be modified, transformed, built upon, sampled, remixed, or separated from the rest of the article.


© AAWM2011
Graphics by Colin Lewis
Web design by John Peterson