The rāgas of early Indian music : modes, melodies, and musical notations from the Gupta period to c. 1250
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The rāgas of early Indian music : modes, melodies, and musical notations from the Gupta period to c. 1250
(Oxford monographs on music)
Clarendon Press, 1995
Available at 11 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. [410]-415
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The concept of raga, the traditional basis of melodic composition and improvisation in Indian classical music, has become familiar to listeners and musicologists throughout the world, but its historial origins and early development have been little explored. This book draws on written documents from the pre-Islamic period in India, including musical treatises (expecially that of the thirteenth-century theorist, Sarngadeva), literary works, and a remarkable
inscription comprising musical notation. These documents bear witness to the development of the earlies ragas, which they name, classify, define, and in some cases illustrate with melodic examples. The melodies, which have not previously been studied in detail, for the focus of the book, which analyses
their notation, musical structure and relationship to the theoretical tradition in which they are embedded, as evidence for the early history of melodic compostion and improvisation in the Indian tradition. Dr Widdess's comprehensive treatment of his subject will be of interest to musicologists and ethnomusicologists, particularly those concerned with music theory, mode and monody, and improvisation, and also Sanskritists and other Indologists.
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