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SPECIAL FEATURE
HOMAGE TO
M.S. SUBBULAKSHMI
(1916 - 2004)
The Music Of MS
The following is by musician, scholar and critic SULOCHANA
PATTABHI RAMAN as told to S. JANAKI.
Music was second nature to M.S. Subbulakshmi. It was not even a
way of life, not even a religion, but a penance that enveloped her
being and soul.
I have known her for many years. The greatest
feature about Subbulakshmi's musical presentation was the
perfection, especially in the sangati-s of kriti-s. With constant
practice and more practice her rendition of sangati-s would shimmer
like burnished gold. One felt this even as she commenced her
recitals with the Dakashinamoorti sloka. The sangati-s in the kriti-s
were the same but would seem fresh and new every time she rendered
them. This was because she firmly believed that the sangati-s
in a kriti should not be sung to the dictates of manodharma. Sangati-s
must be rendered in an orderly and methodical way, not in a
haphazard fashion using manodharma as an excuse. This she strongly
observed in her musical renditions.
MS advocated full-throated singing and
was not in favour of the crooning style which had come into vogue in the
eighties. She felt that crooning did not have a wholesome effect. MS employed
full-throated karvai-s and it was an indescribable feeling as she effortlessly
soared to the tara sthayi-- especially when she touched the antara gandhara in
some raga-s.
She was also very particular about the
singer choosing the correct pitch suited to his or her voice, and adhering to
it whether it was a kutcheri or a practice session. She felt that lowering the
natural pitch of the voice would affect its tensile strength. And needless to
say, everyone is aware of the consequences of attempting to sing at a higher
pitch!
Raga alapana was Subbulakshmi's forte.
She would lay a strong foundation for the raga and build a magnificent edifice
on it in the nature of a spire or cone. Her aesthetically rendered full-throated
karvai-s played a major role in giving shape to the raga swaroopa. It can be
said that MS enjoyed singing raga alapana more than kalpana swara-s. This was
probably due to the influence of her mentor Semmangudi who felt that melody was
the underlying factor in the music of women, and all these "throat-hurting"
punches in swara singing could affect the vocal chords. MS was a specialist in
niraval singing. She would not repeat the words continuously, but would
intersperse them with raga phrases and long karvai-s. She sang niraval with a
simple easy flow and would not indulge in frenetic phrases. This lent saukhyam
to her niraval singing. Music meant melody for MS, and she experienced it 200
per cent.
Innovation was most often not a
feature of her raga essays. One could anticipate her forays and exploration of
the raga, yet it would seem fresh and sparkling. Why? Because of her sensitivity
and full consciousness of sruti suddham, her total fidelity to the
swarasthana-s, her total involvement and striving towards perfection. I get
goose pimples whenever I recall her beautiful rendering of both the dhaivata-s
in the Viriboni varnam in Bhairavi. There was a magnetic quality to her
singing.
From the first note of the varnam to
the last strains of the mangalam, MS was an embodiment of sincerity in her
presentations. I think it was in one of her last tv recordings that she felt
there had been one slight slip in her singing. She and Sadasivam took pains to
visit the studio the next day to check the recording and correct it if need be.
Her voice was God's gift to her, but a
single swallow does not make a summer! Voice alone does not make a good
musician. It was her total passion for the arts, the guidance she received from
her mentors, ceaseless activity of her gray cells, and most importantly, her
constant endeavour and practice that made her music so special.
Much has been written about MS "losing
herself in her music". At this juncture I would like to share with your readers
what she once told me: "To lose oneself in the music should be the listener's
prerogative and privilege and not that of the performer. If the performer loses
himself or herself in the music, he or she will land in an unholy mess (kalebaram).
The musician's mind must be alert at every moment of the kutcheri."
MS had great regard for other
musicians. She would share some of her thoughts saying: "Although
Mazhavarayanendal Subbarama Bhagavatar's voice was gruff when I heard him, there
was so much rasaanubhava in his music." Talking about Papanasam Sivan's Varali
kriti Ka va va she would marvel at the beauty of the composition-- "athukku
oru tani azhagu." MS had a good sense of humour. Talking about Chembai
Vaidyanatha Bhagavatar she said with a chuckle that "avarukku romba kurumbu
jaasti," and went on to relate how he had once punned on the swara phrases
when Papa Venkataramiah accompanied him on the violin. Chembai sang: "Pa pa ni
dha(an) pa pa," recalled MS with twinkling eyes.
M.S. Subbulakshmi's music had a
universal appeal. Most rasika-s have their own musical preferences-- some like
different music styles, some like different musicians. But MS with her nectar of
a voice cast a spell on all her listeners. She was very sound in her knowledge
of music, was a highly intelligent artist, she knew what to do, how to do it,
and when to do it, but it was an all pervading aura of bhakti in her music that
held sway over one and all.
Encomiums have been showered on MS and
she has been hailed as the "Queen of Song", "the Nightingale", "the uncrowned
melody queen" and more. But it was her supreme devotion to the Godhead that will
always be etched in the memory of all her millions of admirers. |