Just to keep the multi topic thread thing going....
FMiguelez wrote:.
Hi, Spikey Horse. I admit TOTAL ignorance regarding Indian music, but it sounds fascinating.
They don't use the western tunning system, do they? That example you cited, when played by authentic Indian instrumets, does it really sound like a harmonic minor scale, or the tunning is different?
Hey I'm pretty ignorant too, not much more than a 'fan' really .... and not anywhere as advanced as I should be on the tabla as I just haven't had the chance to practice as much as I'd have liked.
I know very little about the Indian MELODIC theory or tuning of a sitar / veena etc. I do know there are officially 22 divisions in an octave but I've never learned any theory regarding of all those 'shrutis'!
Maybe this might be of interest:
http://sonic-arts.org/monzo/indian/indian.htm
I do know that the frets of a sitar all are movable (just tied on by silk thread) and I tune my sitar and nudge the frets about until it sounds 'right' to me and this often changes depending on what scale I am (generally) playing ... this works well enough for me!! But I am quite sensitive to tuning - I can often tell not only that someone else has been playing my acoustic guitar but
who it was from the way it's been left tuned.
So anyway I would bet the tuning will be slightly different for each raga played - they all sound so individual that has to be the case ...... and maybe there is a difference in each gharana (regional playing style) and I'm sure each player will have their own tuning 'fingerprint'.
But in practice, just as important as the how instrument is tuned (and maybe more so) I would say it is the way it is
played which is really what dictates the exact pitch of each note. The sitar is almost more like a fretless instrument in the way you have to play it. The sitar has very long strings which are much easier to bend (intentionally or not) than a western guitar and there is no fret board so the note you get is
so dependant on the pressure on the string... added to this it is much easier to bend a string sideways on a sitar, and you can bend much further too - in fact whole melodies (within melodies) can be played by bending the string to play several notes during a sustain...
The really great players have such an amazing ear and control of pitch it is quite amazing, and if I listen to them a lot over a period of time I find my pitch sensitivity goes up in the same kind of way heavy mixing periods can over sensitize your ears to sonic detail. I once heard of an experiment done where a sitar performance was analyzed and they discovered the player changed his intonation gradually as the raga developed. That about sums it up I think!
FMiguelez wrote:
Also, would you mind pointing me out to some authentic sounding Indian music, that includes some sort of explanation in terms of what's going on in the music, as you described? (figuring out where/what the taal is, etc).
I'd like to listen to some, but I want to not only listen to it, but feel it, as you were talking about.
Thank you for sharing this. Totally ad hoc for this rhytmic discussion.
A lot of CDs I have bought actually have brilliant notes about the raga and taal being played, I remember for me they were a great way into the music - especially if already a musician. Otherwise I'd say just google it .... there's a lot out there - but there will be a lot of contradictory facts, terms, spellings etc don't worry this is normal

(as it's really supposed to be taught guru-disciple style - not on the net! - and there are so many different styles)
Off the top of my head some classic CD's (and artists) for starters....
'Afternoon Ragas' by Nikhil Banerjee (or
anything by him ...)
These next two are fantastic studio recordings - recoorded in Wales I think!!! They are all world famous sitar players and also features the 'bass sitar' or surbahar as well as sitar and tabla.
Imrat Khan, surbahar and sitar, Rag Marwa (link below)
http://www.wyastone.co.uk/nrl/world/5356a.html
Nishat Khan / Irshad Khan: Rag Bhimpalasi, Rag Tilak Kamod (this version of Rag Bhimpalasi on surbahar is just absolute divine perfection)
Er, anything by Ravi Shankar (especially with tabla player Ustad Alla Rakha) - I particularly like older recordings which were often more traditional and less Western influenced. But it's all good.
But really there's so much .. it's so dependent on taste... apart from classical there's some amazing folk (and all in between) .... and instrument wise there's tabla, pakwaj, flute, sitar, veena, sarangi, surbahar, vocal ....
Also I've just discovered a ton of stuff (old recordings of Nikhil Banerjee etc) on youtube - might be a good place to get a flavour of what you like before buying... that and those amazon audio demos.
This is vid is also quite a good resource, in fact it's a must see.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3Ho0Y_N ... ed&search=