It DEFINITELY is Mayamalavagowla. Listen to Deva Deva Kalayami from Maharaja Swathi Tirunal. It is set in Mayamalavagowla and the prayogams that Sri.TM Krishna sings here is very, very much similar to that song.
They use the same notes, but this is an excellent example of how a rāgam is not strictly defined by its notes. When singing Nādanāmakriyā, you cannot sing above the N of the middle octave, and you cannot sing below the N of the lower octave. This restriction on the range of the scale is the major difference between the two rāgās.
dude? give him respect, he is a great musician. he has Gods grace
rajkram 1 week ago
nice dude!!-s.p.ramh
vikramprabhuramh 2 months ago
beautiful!
KalpanaSwaram 2 months ago
3:18-3:25! TMK special!
krishnanjiyer 2 months ago
@carnaticmusic89 :Thank you for your explanation about the difference between Mayamalava Gowla and Nadanamakriya.
Vykhari1 5 months ago
It DEFINITELY is Mayamalavagowla. Listen to Deva Deva Kalayami from Maharaja Swathi Tirunal. It is set in Mayamalavagowla and the prayogams that Sri.TM Krishna sings here is very, very much similar to that song.
MrShaqtee 5 months ago
Does anyone have a link to the name / lyrics of this poem?
abmohan 5 months ago
Nadanamakiriya is only set in Matthimashruthi...!
choclate1989 1 year ago
They use the same notes, but this is an excellent example of how a rāgam is not strictly defined by its notes. When singing Nādanāmakriyā, you cannot sing above the N of the middle octave, and you cannot sing below the N of the lower octave. This restriction on the range of the scale is the major difference between the two rāgās.
carnaticmusic89 2 years ago 2
How can one distinguish between Mayamalavagowla and Nadanamakriya? They use the same notes, dont they?
youisfun 2 years ago