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Khyāl: North Indian classical singing
Please listen to the following example, and consider the questions below. Make a note of your answers, which need not be definitive but may be impressionistic.
Composer: Vidyadhar Vyas
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"Khyāl in Rāga Mīyān kī Malhār"
- How many performers are taking part?
- Which performer is leading the performance? What are the roles of the other performers?
- Listen to the singer. Which of the following descriptions apply to his performance? Do they apply to the whole performance, or only parts of it?
- Is the tempo slow or fast? Does it speed up or slow down at any point during the performance?
- How many different pitches does the singer use? Can they be compared with any Western scale? Does he change the pitches or introduce any new ones during the performance?
- How many different drum sounds can you hear? Do they form a regular pattern?
- How many "beats to the bar" can you hear? Does this number change during the performance?
"There is not a single aspect of [Indian village] life which does not have its music."
-Manfred M. Junius
"For us, Hindu music has above all a transcendental significance. It disengages the spiritual from the happenings of life; it sings of the relationship of the human soul with the soul of things beyond."
-Sir Rabindranath Tagore, Indian poet
An Indian dancer serves as an instrument, accompanying music by producing rhythms through footwork, ankle bells, and other body movements.