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sa,....... give the detais 7 swarams and which is related to others .

2007-07-09 03:03:08 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Music Classical

8 answers

Swara

The notes, or swaras, of Indian music are Shadjam, Rishabham, Gandharam, Madhyamam, Panchamam, Dhaivatam and Nishadam. Collectively these notes are known as the sargam. In singing, these become Sa, Ri(Carnatic) or Re(Hindustani), Ga, Ma, Pa, Da(Carnatic) or Dha(Hindustani), and Ni. ("Sargam" stands for "Sa-R(i,e)-Ga-M(a)"). Only these syllables are sung, and further designations are never vocalized. When writing these become, S, R, G, M, P, D, N. A dot above a letter indicates that the note is sung one octave higher, a dot below indicates a note one octave lower. A line below a letter indicates it is flat or komal, an acute accent above a letter indicates it is sharp or tivar. In some notation systems, the distinction is made with capital and lowercase letters. Natural is called shudda. Re, Ga, Dha, and Ni may be either shudda or komal; Ma may be either shudda or tivar and is then called tivra Ma. Sa and Pa are immovable (once Sa is selected), forming a just perfect fifth.

Sargam is the Hindustani (North Indian) and Carnatic (South Indian) equivalent to the western solfege, a technique for the teaching of sight-singing. Sargam is practiced against a drone and the emphasis is not on the scale but on the intervals, thus it may be considered just intonation.

In certain forms of Indian classical music and qawwali, when a rapid, 16th note sequence of the same note is to be sung, sometimes different sylables are used in a certain sequence to make the whole easier to pronounce. For example instead of "sa-sa-sa-sa-sa-sa-sa-sa" said very quickly, it might be "sa-da-da-li-sa-da-da-li" which lends itself more to a quick and light tongue movement.

2007-07-09 03:12:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Ma And Pa

2016-12-26 11:39:30 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

these are the 8 notes as called in Indian music
sa - C
it's re not ri - D
ga - E
ma - F
pa - G
dha not tha - A
ni - B
sa - C
THE ENGLISH ALPHABETS ARE THE NOTES AS WRITTEN IN FOREIGN (OUTSIDE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT).

2007-07-09 04:13:19 · answer #3 · answered by sanyam k 3 · 0 0

These are the 7 main nodes tuned on an instrument discovered in 'sanskrit language' and the group of these nodes is known as 'SAPTAK'

2007-07-09 03:10:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The sargam is not a perfect or authentic scale for singing every location have it s own scale in singing It is only a practice to control breath and cover sound up down you can create your own style to exercise the vocals i have practice my self composed scale and apply on my compositions that gets highly appreciated .Bushra Ali Syed singer

2015-09-09 01:45:54 · answer #5 · answered by Dr Bushra 1 · 0 0

First of all its sa,re,ga,ma,pa,dha,ni,sa......

2007-07-09 03:13:48 · answer #6 · answered by Hi™ 3 · 1 0

english

2015-04-13 04:16:33 · answer #7 · answered by Anirudh 1 · 0 0

Gam sa ham ni da. That's 'thanks' in Korean.

2007-07-09 03:15:53 · answer #8 · answered by chameleon 4 · 1 1

these are the sergams

2007-07-09 04:10:00 · answer #9 · answered by Rana 7 · 0 0

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