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Manoranjani: A Raga Tribute to Manoranjani

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Uploaded by on Dec 17, 2007

Manoranjani is a rare and very graceful raaga, which can take three different forms, of which first two are derived from the 5th janaka raaga Manavathi, and the third is derived from the 22nd janaka raaga Kharaharapriya.

Janaka raagas are like mother raagas. They are also called melakartha raagas. Raagas derived from janaka raagas are called janya raagas. They are like children born out of mother raagas. There are 72 melakartha raagas, out which numerous janya raagas can be derived by means of permutations and combinations. Though it seems like we can only derive 34,000 raagas, in reality there are millions and much more possible raagas can be derived from mother raagas, differing in sruthi, swara, mood and so on patterns.

Raagas (modes or melodic formulas) and thaalas (rhythmic patterns) form the basis of Indian classical music. Indian classical music, both Carnatic (South Indian style) and Hindustani (North Indian style), are melodic meaning at a given time only one single note will be played (monophonic). Western classical music, on the other hand, is polyphonic meaning at a given time many notes can be played harmoniously.

Indian classical music is pure mathematical "art" form, and has very ancient tradition spanning over more than 4-5 millennia and evolved through times. Raagas are similar to Hash (index) codes of computer algorithms, except that they are sound based. That is why it is said that anyone mastered Indian classical music can learn any language of the world easily.

The music of this video, raaga Manoranjani, is beautifully rendered by the talented violin ace duo Ganesh-Kumaresh who are from the Carnatic tradition of South India. The music is based on the composition "Attu Kaaraadhani" by Saint Tyagaraja (18th century) and is set in Aadhi thaalam. Music track is taken from album "Manoranjani" by Ganesh-Kumaresh.

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Uploader Comments (mmanoba)

  • That black-and-white bird at 0:24... do you happen to know its name? I had one like this in my backyard some years ago, and until today i wasn't sure whether it was a real bird or a heavenly vision! A beautiful video!

  • @blessall4ever It's Male Asian Paradise-flycatcher. Each and every photo is captioned. Please turn on the "CC" feature found near video resolution. BTW, thanks for the appreciation.

  • Which is this place at 3:27? Its very beautiful.

  • @navnith2211 Hi, captions are added to each and every photos. Enjoy!

  • Can you name each of these places in the video?

  • @EliteXtasy Hi, captions have been added. Now, each and every photo is named and they are Wiki compatible so that you can search further to find more information about those places.

Video Responses

This video is a response to Incredibly Incredible India
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All Comments (19)

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  • @mmanoba Thank you so much for your reply. Sorry to say the captions won't show for me. Nevertheless added your vid to my favorites!

  • Maashallah this is nice

  • i love the song and also the pics its sooo beautiful.....

    well who ever made this he/she is so fantastic....

    especially those animals that are pictured closely...

    i wondered how they do that...????

  • Absolutely beautiful and perfect raga! Carnatic music is amazingly pure and meditative -- completely unique in the world. And how lovely that the name of the raga is so close to your name. ;) Thank you for sharing this and the info!

  • One way is: Usually Tabla is used in Hindustani and Mridangam in Carnatic style as percussion instruments.

  • The carnatic style uses the ghamaka system which is very unique :)

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