The music tradition of Kerala – A performance for the gods
We talked about the movement of Carnatic music stalwarts and
capitals, its development in Tanjore, and the part played by the Tanjavur
quartet. We also looked at the contributions of the famous Shadkala Govinda
Marar from Kerala. Now let us change tack and focus on a music form which was in
vogue in Kerala, one that was slightly different from the Carnatic music that we
covered so far. In the process we will also very briefly touch upon the
language prevalent in Kerala in the medieval times, namely Manipravalam and get
to know the marar community.
There is nobody who has done better research on this subject
than Leela Omcherry and her daughter Deepti Omcherry. The history of music in
Kerala is explained by them in such detail and anybody who is keen on the
subject is advised to refer their works or listen to their lucid interviews.
This article will only serve to be an introduction and is based very much on
the fine and painstaking research by Deepti and her mother, augmented with
finer details provided by others (referenced at the end of the article), so I
start with my thanks to those fine teachers.
Like everywhere else, there was traditional music which
refined itself to Jati (tribe, clan) or nadodi (folk) sangeetham. They were but
naturally simplistic and based on a few notes or swaras. This was in colloquial
languages prevalent in various regions and suited the performance, dance and
worship forms of the period, at primate places of worship be it located in groves
or caves. Sometimes this kind of music was termed Dravidian music. But it became
something different in the precinct of the temples, though quite naturally
evolving out of the Jati sangeetham (Pulluvan pattu, Kaniyan pattu, pana
pattui, Thottam Pattu, Arjuna nrittam etc) which we mentioned above.
Kulashekara Varman of Malayalam as many of you know, was
instrumental in the building of some of the first temples after the various
Chola temples in the Tamilakam region. With the construction of the sopana mandapam
and the koothambalam in Kerala temples, the forms of offerings, prayers and
methods (aradhana sampradaya) were augmented with music and dance, both of
which ended up as samarpanams or devotional submissions to the reigning deity
in the temple.
But there is more to all this for in the old days, most Siva
temples followed Tamil practices and the songs sung were Saiva thevaram or
Tevaram pattu (KVK Guruvayoor pg42). The arrival of Jayadeva’s Ashtapathi in
the 13th-14th century (which details the romantic life of
Krishna) and its acceptance resulted in its eventual implementation as the
quasi standard in temples, coinciding with the prevalent Bhakti movement.
Perhaps it also fitted well with the Sanskritized Manipravalam development in
early medieval Kerala and hence gained popularity over the Tevaram practice in
Tamil. The development of the Sopanam style gained popularity and, by the 14th
century, singers of the sopanam style contributed extensively to temple music.
It was also the period when the Sanketham concept was in vogue where the temple
and its authorities exercised a good amount of authority. A large number of
temples in Kerala were virtually sovereign states (akin to the Vatican today) with
a well-defined territory called the Sanketham. The rituals and methods of
worship were also prescribed by the Sanketham authorities. The temple owned
property, employed many personnel for its upkeep, and laid strict rules. It also
decided who did what and which caste was ideal for what. Bigger temples had a
hand in promotion of specific art forms, such as Ramanattam, Kathakali and so
on.
Music for the gods followed bhakti traditions and were usually
in Sanskrit (hence termed Arya bhasha) and when done at the sopnama or temple
steps was called Kotti paadi seva (prayers with vocal singing and drumming).
Obviously as it involved an individual enacting various events of an epic or
legend concerning the particular god, the intonation presented but one singular
bhava (mood) and used only swaras (notes) most suited for that performance.
This limited repertoire remained constant with the passage of time for the
simple reason that it was ritualistic and any change would in theory have upset
the gods. So the strict outline of a jeeva swara with its related swaras to create
a sopnana sthayam remained unaltered with the passage of time and thankfully we
still see it in Kerala. But it was not
necessarily one which fitted with what is today known as the structured
(sashtriya) music from the Carnatic melekarta scheme, and did have a few anya
swaras (unrelated notes) creeping in but suiting the creation of a bhava or
moving within it.
The vocalist thus stood to one side of the sopanam and sang
devotional hymns to a set structure devoid of too many complications. Whether
he did it solo to the accompaniment of the idakka or with an edakka player is
subject to debate, but as it is to the accompaniment of kottal or drumming, it
was also known as kottipaadiseva. Njeralath Harigovindan a present day exponent
explains - This music form was intended
to be sung for a short while, while the doors of the sanctum were shut and the
deity was not visible. The aim was to
fill the ears of the worshippers standing in front of the doorway, with
devotional songs so that their attention did not wander while their eyes had
nothing to look at.
The style of singing is seen to be quite influenced by the old
ragas or ‘panns’ which were commonplace in the Tamilakam (The term “Pan” is
used to denote the term “raga” in Tamil isai). The ancient panns evolved first
into a five note scale and later into the seven note Carnatic Sargam or Ezhisai.
Today, you can see the usage of these paans only in Kerala’s unaltered versions
of Sopana Sangeetham. As a temple performance, and one which depended on what
time of the day prayers and poojas were done, it was intrinsically related to
time and hence termed samaya sangeetham.
Examples of the ancient ragas used for Sopana saneetham are Desakshi, Sreekandi, Malabari, Banli, Samantha, Malahosvi, Goulipantu, Nalatha, Puraniru, Padi, Kanakkurinchi, Khandaram and so on. These ragas as mentioned, are typically sung to the time theory or Ganakala Niyama (certain ragas for certain periods of the day or night) which was also prevalent in Tamilian music. The Sopana style of singing is focused on devotional moods and has less of raga sancharas and sangathis.
As Sanketams dictated, orchestra during the puja became the
exclusive right of the Marar (Poduval) community from North Malabar. Maaran (Maaraar,
Maran) is the name given to temple musicians of Travancore, Cochin and Malabar
in Kerala, and their primary duty was to provide the traditional temple Sopanam
music. In parts of North Malabar they are known as Ochhans and Poduvals instead
of Marar while in Travancore Panicker and Kurup are used. The higher classes of
Maarans (Asupani Maarans) claim the six privileges Pani or Pano, Koni,
Thirumuttom, Nadumuttam, Velichor and Poochor. Pani is the right to play the
Asu and Pani. (In the Travancore regions they are called Chitikans (chaitaka)).
Kerala’s temple music allows only certain talas and the ones preferred are
Chempada (adi), Adanta (ata), Muriadanta(chapu) , Champa (jhampa) and panchari
(rupaka).
A music enthusiast would always want a comparison and in general
one can say that while the
scientific basis behind Sopnam and Carnatic are
similar, the main difference is in the style of rendition. As it is sung near
the steps or sopanam, it was called Sopanathil Pattu and is today broadly
termed Sopana Sangeetham. Those items required for a public Carnatic performance
such as aalapana, sangathis, brighas and so on are mostly absent in Sopanam.
The focus instead is on gamakas and a slow tempo with long pauses to provide
dramatic effect provides a classic example of bhava sangeetham. The stress is
on the sahitya (textual poem) and generally does not exceed one sthayi in Octave
range. Sruthi is still paramount, and tempo is kept with the chengila – a gong
tapped with a wooden stick. It is also termed as an example of kalpitha
sangeetham set to specific norms whereas Carnatic is more manodharma. The
edakka, the main shruti-laya instrument of Sopanam, is incidentally tuned to
pancham (Pa) and has a range of only one sthayi, with panchamam as its base.
But there is a different angle proposed by some experts,
that it was a music meant for sobhana or dance, and that they were originally
sung by devasris or singing girls of the temple. Dr Omchery opines that in the
South it was sung originally by the padi ilars or the Tali nangas of
Travancore. They were the kriyangis or wives of god who alone had the authority
to perform before god, be it music or dance. Similar to the Nuns of
Chritianity, they were secluded inside the temple precincts and appeared only
for the pooja performance. The girls belonging to the highest level were
offerings by the king from his family and were called Uttamottama and were
hardly seen, and spent all their time in prayers in seclusion.
The melodious rendering of Ashtapadi in the traditional
Sopana style can still be heard in places like the Guruvayur temple in Kerala,
but what is it actually? Imagine ascending the steps or sopanam, i.e. the steps
leading to the sreekovil in a Kerala temple. Sopanam music is like climbing the
steps, slowly, step by step in a slow tempo (like vilambit laya in Hindustani).
The glide is akin to slow sea waves and very rhythmic (andolita gamaka), but
unique to Sopana singing with a focus on bhakti. As exponents explain, typically
you begin with a graha swara, rotating in and out of laya in vilambita, using
one or two swaras and then moving on to the next step using the swaying adolita
gamaka. Strictly old margam tala (Carnatic is laya bound) bound, it reaches a
climactic phase through differing singing speeds vary from patikaala to
shatkaala without the steps becoming evident. Purists will also notice that
sopnam exhibits two additional swaras and they are termed the kairali gandhari
and kairali nishada. Even the Sa and pa are shaken. The drum accompaniment to
Kerala’s sopnam singing is the idakka, a small drum shaped like Siva’s damaru.
Sopana Sangeetham actually underwent some compositional changes
when the Geeta Govindam or Ashtapadi by Jayadeva reached Kerala. Jayadeva’s Ashtapadi
in Sanskrit covering the tales of Krishna and Radha (eight stanzas) soon became
a norm for Sopanam singers and it was also the music for temple dances such as
Ashtapadi attam. This was the forerunner to Krishnattam (Krishnagiti - covering
the whole life of Krishna) later formulated in the courts of Manavedan the
Zamorin of Calicut. As it moved Southwards, Krishnattam developed into
Ramanattam (See related article under references) and later to Kathakali where
Sopnaa sangeetham continued to form the bedrock, but based on manipravalam. And
slowly it left the temple and got associated with performing arts. Some works
like shivashtapadi also found popularity in those days.
Tamil language was the original language of Tamilakam, but Grantha bhasha used by the nobility of Cheranaad was a mixture of Tamil with Sanskrit. Manipravalam was a mixture of Sanskrit and early Malayalam (the version popular in Kerala – more like Karin Tamil) and was more of a literary style used in medieval Kerala. For cultural purposes at that time, Malayalam and Sanskrit formed a language known as Manipravalam, where both languages were used in an alternating style, and Manipravalam slowly transitioned to what we know as modern Malayalam. It was as you can imagine popular for poetry and used by poets and writers.
Sopanam was the music to which medieval Travancore dancers
performed, as Sopana sangeetham evolved to abhinaya sangeetha. And so as you
can see, it formed the musical basis of the Kerala’s tauryatrika – sageetham,
nrittam and natakam. As time passed by, it found a powerful patron in the form
of Swathi Tirunal of Travancore who together with his uncle Iraviyamman Thampi
created even more manipravalam based compositions, in the Sopanam style and
also used it as a base for the Dasiyattam of Travancore as well as the
revitalized art form which we all know as Kerala’s Mohiniyattam. Post Swati
Thirunal, we see that some of his compositions were being reset or polished and
represented in relatively modern Carnatic ragas and styles due to the efforts
of Sethu Parvathi Bayi, Muthaiah Bhagavathar and Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer.
Sugandhavalli Bayi and Nanditha Prabhu add that a style of
Mohinyattam termed the Sopanam style was revived with Kavalam Narayan
Panikkar’s efforts. As they put it, it
was a retreat into Kerala’s own forgotten treasures which were latent in the
ritual dance traditions. Panicker tried to re- look on the vāchika aspect of
Mōhiniyāṭtam. Rendering of music in this tradition mainly tried to bring out
the emotions and feelings through the eloquent pauses to stress on the lyrics.
Kavalam Narayana Panicker advocated that this style of rendering would be more
apt for Mōhiniyāṭtam rather than using Carnatic music which laid more stress on
gamaka prayoga. In addition to the above, introduction of sopana sangeetham was
more readily accepted by the dancers Kanak Rele of Bombay and Bharathi Sivaji
of Delhi. They used this musical rendering in combination with their own
definitions of Mōhiniyāṭtam (Angika aspect) which was well received by rasikas
outside Kerala. This style developed a repertoire with items like Ganapathy, Mukhachalam,
Tatvam, Niram, Padam and Jeeva. This was patterned as a journey of Jeevatma
towards the Paramatma symbolically represented by a devotee’s journey from the
entrance of the temple to the inner sanctum sanctorum. Today more dancers in
Kerala are accepting this sopanam style.
The
two styles Thekkan (south) and vadakkan (north) developed and the southern
style virtually vanished. As days passed by, the vadakkan style started to get
influenced by the populist Carnatic music. It is not an art taught in schools
since Sopana sangeetham is traditionally taught by singers to boys of the next
generation, so has few takers these days. While I was growing up, we used to
have two great exponents Appu and Kunjukuttan, in Pallavur. The one name that
is synonymous with Idakka and Sopana sangeetham is the legendary Pallavur AppuMarar—he was not only adept at using the edakka as a percussion drum, but also
as a musical instrument.I
can proudly say that I have been lucky to see many of his performances.
Nevertheless, there are a few Sopanam performers these days like Njeralath Harigovindan (Son of the great Rama Poduval), Sooranadu Harikumar, Ambalapuzha Vijayakumar and so on. We also have a lady singer of Sopanam these days, Girija Balakrishnan from Anamangad who plays her own edakka.
Nevertheless, there are a few Sopanam performers these days like Njeralath Harigovindan (Son of the great Rama Poduval), Sooranadu Harikumar, Ambalapuzha Vijayakumar and so on. We also have a lady singer of Sopanam these days, Girija Balakrishnan from Anamangad who plays her own edakka.
Mohiniyattam which utilized only Sopanam music is also
evolving with faster Carnatic notes and we get to hear Sopanam only during
daily performances in bigger temples. But perhaps that is where it always
belonged, in the temple, as a performance only for gods….. And at the end of
the day people will continue to ask – why did the people of Kerala always
strive to be different, be it music, dance, language….well a tricky question,
best answered another day.
So how does Sopana sangeetham, defined thus by Lakshmana
Pillai as ‘simple, sweet, perhaps more languid, yet more pathetic and tender
than the Aryan, and more sung in country parts than in towns’…. sound like?
Click these links to hear some examples.
But the one that comes to the mind of most malayalee’s is
that classic scene with Oduvil Unnikrishnan and his rendering of vande mukunda hare(Sung by MG Radhakrishnan) with an idakka accompaniment.
My next article will focus on the temple dancers and a
popular dance of Kerala – Mohiniyattam, the influence of Sopanam on it and many
other related aspects
References
The Immortals of Indian Music – Ed Leela Omchery, Deepti
Omchery Bhalla
Stylistic variations in Mohiniyattam – S Sugandhavalli Bayi
and Nandita Prabhu
Contributions of Travancore to Carnatic music – Dr S
Bhagyalekshmy
Madhurakala – Kerala theatrical arts – Dr Kanak Rele
Music in Travancore – RV Poduval
Kerala and Karnatic music – PN Krishnamoorthy
Music of the Sopanam – Brig RB Nayar
Mohiniyattam – A dance tradition of Kerala – Betty True
Jones
Ritual music and Hindu rituals of Kerala – Rolf Killius
Vanishing temple arts- Deepti Omchery Bhalla
Music of Kerala - For a more detailed explanation please follow Leela Omchery’s explanation
Role of Music in the temples of Northern Kerala – M Varma
Maddys Ramblings – From Krishnattam to Kathakali
8 comments:
Great article stuffed with information! I was quite surprised to note the concept of time theory or "Ganakala niyama" (I believe it is Gaanakaala niyama) in Sopanasangeetham, which is actually prevalent in Hindustani music today. I wonder what was the source of it in Hindustani music. And wonder why and how it became extinct in Carnatic music!
Thanks Sunitha,
I guess that makes sense, but I thought the gana is the usual Sanskrit prefix which signifies 'pertaining to'.Maybe naresh will know better. Yes, experts opine that the sopana sangeetham has some aspects similar to Khayal & gandhara singing.
regarding ganakala becoming less popular with carnatic, I would assume that it is because carnatic developed into more of a kacheri sampradayam and based on the desires of rasikas!!!
Hi Maddy,
Good article as usual.You were mentioning that they were marga tala bound. It is very interesting to note that there were many tala systems used in Tamizhakam , including Marga talas. It was perhaps in the 16th century with the systematisation of carnatic music that the suladi system dominated the rest of the systems. With the trinity composing in the suladi system and more and more compositions in this system, the other systems were slowly forgotten. In Sopanam rendition you might have noticed that even the alapana which is called Anandam paadal is tala based. It is called Aanandam paadal as the alapana starts with the syllabale "aa" and enda with "nan dam". This is also a quality which is unlike the Carnatic rendition where the raga elaboration will have tada ri ..... and it is not tala based...:) Sorry for the long comment! I can forward you my paper on sopana sangeetham which might be of interest to you!
Thanks Nandita..
Like I did from your mohiniyattam papers, I learnt a lot from your comment!!Thanks and hope your Arjuna nritam studies are going on well
Kerala has a rich heritage when it comes to art and music. In Kerala, every religion has a different art form. I would recommend every travel enthusiast to check out this amazing post. It is very informative and gives you a lot of knowledge on the culture of Kerala.
thanks Sowmya
Glad you likedit
sri eloor biju is a performer of sopana sangeetham and he is available in face book as eloor biju here is a link of an interview with him in dooradarshan
https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2014/12/sopana-sangeetham.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO4NlWchpDQ&fbclid=IwAR0oiq9HAuFEgCUFg6NzQ0lpB7kp6-WOoUW0-G_GRbV477Hx2NFGcmhMbgM please go through the interview with eloor biju in dooradarshan malayalam his songs are available as eloor biju in u tube too i may request you sir to go through atleast one sopana sangeetham from his work and judge for yoursslf i have given a tip on singer mehaboob bringing vennala mohan"s book pattinte panapathram in malayalam in that blog thanks sureshaluva@gmail,com
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