Pages

March 30, 2013

Tears on a Lotus - dhrupad music album review

The clock ticks towards midnight, a time when I spontaneously move to a routine desperation for my usual brain cleansing session -- reading bedtime poems and listening to some soulful music.

Tonight's music pick is "Tears on a Lotus", one of my most favourite Dhrupad albums, by the Gundecha Brothers. Despite a couple of hundreds of rewind and forward, I remain smitten with the album's persisting melodic nuance since I heard it for the first time two years ago. 

Being the most ancient form of Hindustani classical music that still remains beautifully intact, Dhrupad has not only gloriously survived in India over the centuries, but has also enthralled Indian classical music lovers across Asia, Europe and North America for several decades. Going by the innate nature of Dhrupad, which is spiritual and aimed at inducing the feeling of contemplative meditation to the listeners, the Gundecha Brothers -  desciples of prominent Dhrupad exponents Ustad Zia Fariduddin Dagar and Ustad Zia Mohiuddin Dagar - have done full justice to "Tears on a Lotus." 

Whether it is Raag Gaoti Alap or Raag Gaoti Dhrupad or Raag Shivranjani Alap, each of the seven tracks is an absolute meditative delight, transporting the listeners to a realm of trance. The last track of the album is my personal favourite evening raga Shivranjani Dhrupad, which is usually known to evoke the pensive mood of sorrow and romance. However, the Shivranjani sung by the Gundecha Brothers is a hymn to the Hindu goddess of power Shakti, and the following beautiful Sanskrit couplet used in it makes the dhrupad recital more spiritually touching: 

"Sandhya sanjivani sur samadhi rupini
Gayatri trivarg dhatri savitri trilok yatri
Mahamantra mahayantra mahatantrini
Rahoyaga krimaradya rahstarpini
Om lum vam ram rhim yam.
Sandhya sanjivani..."

Buy from Amazon.  

March 23, 2013

Eternal Mewar

Photograph taken from the roof of City Palace complex, Udaipur, during a past trip of mine to the city.

~
R
Sent from BlackBerry®

March 07, 2013

Documentary: Operation Wrath of God


An interesting film about a secret operation done by the Mossad to assassinate individuals alleged to have been directly or indirectly involved in the 1972 Munich massacre in which 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team were murdered.Their targets included members of the Palestinian terrorist group Black September, who were responsible for the Munich attack, and members of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) accused of being involved. Authorized by Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir in the autumn of 1972, the operation may have continued for more than 20 years.Covert Israeli assassination units killed dozens of terrorists and conspirators across Europe during this time, as well as mistakenly murdering an innocent waiter in Lillehammer, Norway, in what became known as the Lillehammer affair. An additional military assault was launched by Israeli commandos deep inside Lebanon to kill several high-profile Palestinian targets.

More background: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wrath_of_God 

January 15, 2013

On 'Meghnad Badh Kabya' (The Poem of the Killing of Meghnad)

Ok. Let's go a little farther today in reading 'The Poem of the Killing of Meghnad' - 'an epic in blank verse' written by Michael Madhusudan Dutt - which has Ravan's warrior son Meghnad as the tragic protagonist. Important to mention, according to Madhusudan's inventive mind, Meghnad - the invincible Meghnad who could be killed only by a kausal (trick) - was killed by Rama's brother Lakshman in a temple, which violated Kshatriya war code.

"Meghnad instantly seized the divine sword - but he could not lift it. He pulled at the bow - it remained in Lakshman's hand. He angrily grasped the shield, but his efforts were useless..."

Maybe I am on the verge of finding in Meghnad another hero of mine like I did in the past in Homer's Achilles, Weiss' Auguste Rodin, Pushkin's Eugene Onegin, George Eliot's Maggie Tulliver, Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Kalidasa' Shakuntala.

Off to reading anyway. :)

(Excerpts from my diary, 15 January 2013)

~
R
Sent from BB