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Art & Culture
Creation and
Silences
Tao says:
Thirty spokes share the wheel’s hub;
It is the center hole that makes it useful.
Shape clay into a vessel;
It is the space within that makes it useful
Shabda.
Maun. Shoonyata
In the context of Indian Shastriya Sangeet, these are big and weighty
words. If we look at it from the surface, ‘maun’ is silence. But
maun in music is more than mere silence; it is a pregnant silence!
Born out of that silence is Music. According to the shastras,
Omkara dhvani was the first primordial sound that permeated the
universe.
In Goenkaji‘s Vipashana Centers, you see placards with the words ‘arya
maun’ and below that in English it says ‘noble silence’. A silence
is noble when it comes out of an egoless state? May be? So the next
logical conclusion is to say that silence is closest to a perfect
state when it is noble. Silences have various avatars, like that
deadly silence when murder is committed or when we are shocked, so on
and so forth, but silence in music has its own flavor, a rasa.
It stands apart. Now why is silence so important in music? Without
silences, music means sounds coming from a non-stop chattering mind
and that even from the best of musical minds can get tiring!
That ‘break’ is so necessary, for they say that the mind’s attention
span is just 40 seconds. That reminds me of a beautiful belief that
the late Pandit Kumar Gandharva used to hold close to his heart. He
was supposed to have said that, when a bandish has a beautiful
finishing line, it should be sung only once. Never to repeat that line
again. For, in all probability the rasika’s wandering,
chattering mind would have missed it! And sure enough you have this
listener’s undivided attention now for quite some time, without doubt!
Silence is golden; we have all heard that line. Most often than not,
silence conveys more than the music itself for ultimately the
‘unknown’ is beyond words. Even the best of musicians have to accept
that is it SILENCE that elevates their music to greater heights. Now
let me explain this in a different way to make myself clear. In Hindu
philosophy, we explain the ‘unknown’ in various ways. The crescent
moon or the waxing moon on the third day is very important to the
Hindus. And generally in our homes when we were kids, our elders would
try to point out that almost non-existent moon to us! This is how it
would go! You see that low branch over there in that mango tree? You
see that fork in that branch? See that leaf in the corner, at the tip?
Yes? By now we would be all excited like we were on a mystery trail or
something. Now between that leaf and the other leaf from the other
branch you see the sky? Yes! We would cry in chorus! Now look straight
ahead into the night sky, do you see that thin white line? There would
be great excitement. Yes, we have ‘discovered’ the new moon. The adult
can lead the child only to that last leaf, after that, the child needs
to take that LEAP into space to find the moon!
The voice cannot carry the tongue and the lips that gave it wings.
Alone must it seek the ether, said Kahlil Gibran most poetically.
Divine music and dance has to enable us to have a taste of that which
is ‘sacred’. But humans with our imperfections can never do that. All
the great artists, be it in music, dance or in any other art form take
the rasika figuratively by the hand and lead him towards the
‘unknown’. But there is that vast expanse of ‘space’ between the human
effort and the Unknown?
In music, this space; this short gap in time is Silence.
Arya Maun
When,
Time stands still.
Is it this SILENCE that makes music divine?
The deep silences, the pregnant silences.
And, behind this silence?
Void. Shoonyata. Creative Energy.
The seers say that to go beyond time and space is Mukti
(liberation)
What are the Sapta Swaras? Have you ever wondered? Your
aadhara swara might be different from my aadhara swara.
Your sapta swara, the whole scale, the full octave is built on
your base note ‘shadja’ out of thin air! You give it a concrete
shape and give a form, a roop to call it a raga. This whole
creation has come out of that “great sacred void’’ and it needs to
return to its source. And this is what Silence does in a silent way to
music. This is why those half pauses, full pauses or being completely
enveloped by that over powering silence for sometime is so essential
in a music recital. This adds vitality and poignancy to the Art. The
greatness of a musician is evident when this silence does not seem
contrived but is the natural and simple sequence to his thought
process. All great Art is simple. It seems simple.
From clay, the pot emerges and to clay, it returns.
– Kala Ramesh
April 17, 2005
The writer is a performing
vocalist in Hindustani Classical Music, who has worked on Pandit Kumar
Gandharava’s compositions and Nirguni bhajans along with the
paramparic bandishes of the Gwalior Gharana, under the guidance of
Vidushi Smt Shubhada Chirmulay, Pune. Kala has several articles
published on Shastriya Sangeet and Indian thought to her credit.
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