| The perspectives presented
                                      in the foregoing papers, considered along
                                      with our observations, portray Dhrupad as
                                      a mideaval genre of raga-based art-music,
                                      threatened with extinction, but showing
                                      initial signs of a revival.
 The Dhrupad genre is believed to have
                                      evolved from one of the streams of
                                      Prabandha Gana, which held sway between
                                      the 11th and the 13th centuries. Dhrupad
                                      replaced Prabandha Gana from the 14th
                                      century, and reached its zenith between
                                      the 15th and 18th centuries. Thereafter,
                                      it receded from the mainstream and yielded
                                      place to the Khayal form. Since then, it
                                      has survived on the periphery, pursued by
                                      a few dedicated families.
 
 Dhrupad was structured originally around
                                      the poetic and melodic- rhythmic material
                                      from the tradition of devotional music
                                      practiced in the Vaishnava temples. Its
                                      entry into a secular environment paved the
                                      way for the acceptance of appropriate
                                      changes in poetic content, and mode of
                                      presentation. However, even in its
                                      manifestation as a genre of art-music,
                                      Dhrupad retained its bias in favour of the
                                      poetic element (the Pada), and continues
                                      to merit classification as "Padashrit"
                                      (founded on poetry) and "Swarashrit"(founded
                                      on melody). For the same reason, Dhrupad
                                      remains, primarily, a genre of vocal
                                      music.
 
 Today, we recognise the parallel existence
                                      of two streams of Dhrupad: the form of
                                      devotional music practiced in the
                                      Vaishnava temples, and popularly known as
                                      Haveli Sangeet, and Darbari Dhrupad, the
                                      performing art, popularly known as,
                                      simply, Dhrupad.
 The
                                      Decline of Dhrupad There are several views on
                                      the causes for the decline of Dhrupad. The
                                      historical-political view argues that a
                                      genre of devotional music sustained
                                      primarily in the ritualistic context of
                                      the temples could not possibly have
                                      thrived in an aristocratic environment as
                                      a form of entertainment. Proponents of
                                      this view also suggest that Dhrupad's
                                      situation might have been more precarious
                                      because it was a genre of Hindu devotional
                                      music exposed to the proselytising zeal of
                                      a Moslem aristocracy.
 This view might seem inconsistent with the
                                      belief that the reign of Emperor Akbar was
                                      the "Golden Age of Dhrupad".
                                      Consider also the fact that the decline of
                                      classical Dhrupad commenced during the
                                      sunset years of the Mughal Empire, and
                                      accelerated under the patronage of the
                                      Hindu aristocracy in Bengal and Bihar.
 
 It is, therefore, worth considering a
                                      socio-cultural view of the phenomenon. The
                                      decline of one genre, and its replacement
                                      by either its own transformation or by an
                                      alternative genre, is an open-ended
                                      historical process. This process is a
                                      natural response to the changing audience
                                      profiles, cultural/ musical needs of
                                      society, and changing esthetic values.
 
 Dhrupad probably declined in popularity
                                      because of its own rigidity. Almost every
                                      facet of the genre militated against
                                      change. Its resistence to change, and its
                                      failure to accommodate audience tastes
                                      caused its popularity to decline. This is
                                      supported by the observation that
                                      Dhrupad's effort to protect itself from
                                      extinction led it towards a rhythmic
                                      obsession which, in the opinion of many,
                                      resulted in an unpleasant aural
                                      experience.
 
 Dhrupad's successor, the Khayal, was the
                                      product of an evolutionary process as much
                                      as Dhrupad itself was. Dhrupad can be
                                      interpreted as having transformed itself
                                      into the Khayal. By this argument, the
                                      Bada Khayal is nothing but the
                                      three-tiered Dhrupad alap, merged with the
                                      Pada, and renderred to percussion
                                      accompaniment.
 
 Also, consider the fact that the
                                      fountainhead of every significant gharana
                                      of Khayal music belonged to a lineage of
                                      Dhrupadiyas. We cannot also ignore the
                                      fact that literally hundreds of Bada
                                      Khayal compositions performed today retain
                                      the poetic element and the melodic contour
                                      of their Dhrupad originals.
 
 Comprehensive raga presentation in
                                      Hindustani music ensured its continuity by
                                      losening the rigid Dhrupad format. Its
                                      flexible manifestation came to be known as
                                      the Khayal. Some Dhrupad gharanas,
                                      however, persisted with the traditional
                                      format of presentation despite a
                                      progressive decline in its popularity.
 
 This declining popularity had its logical
                                      impact on the diversity of the Dhrupad
                                      styles available to music audiences.
                                      Although Dhrupad can claim at least five
                                      living stylistic traditions, the public
                                      mind is, by and large, exposed only to two
                                      of them, the Dagar and the Darbhanga
                                      gharanas.
 Vaishnava
                                      Temple Music Compared to Dhrupad,
                                      Vaishnava temple music, or Haveli Sangeet
                                      as it is known in Rajasthan, Gujarat, and
                                      Madhya Pradesh, claims superior
                                      resilience. It is argued that its audience
                                      is the Lord himself, and is sustained by
                                      the commitment of the clergy to music as
                                      an offering to Lord Krishna. Its value as
                                      a part of "atmospherics" of
                                      religion is, of course, recognized.
                                      Despite this acceptance, it is claimed,
                                      the genre is not exposed to the fickleness
                                      of public taste. This claim, and the
                                      argument supporting it, both deserve
                                      scrutiny.
 First, the argument. The audience of
                                      temple music might be involuntary and
                                      captive. This fact does not make the
                                      audience inconsequential to the survival
                                      of the genre. The commitment of the clergy
                                      might have the sanction of ecclesiastical
                                      tradition. But, this fact does not make
                                      the genre immune to the esthetic values of
                                      devotees. If, or when, the music becomes a
                                      matter of either dissonance or irrelevance
                                      for devotees, the clergy will lose
                                      interest in sustaining it. Therefore, even
                                      if only indirectly, Haveli Sangeet must
                                      also be ultimately susceptible to changing
                                      public tastes.
 
 In addition to the disadvantage of having
                                      an involuntary audience, Haveli Sangeet is
                                      more vulnerable than classical Dhrupad
                                      because its audience is, on an average, of
                                      inferior discernment. An art-music
                                      audience can appreciate Dhrupad as well as
                                      Haveli Sangeet as sophisticated musical
                                      genres. But, for the Vaishnava devotee on
                                      a pilgrimage, it is merely a devotional
                                      song, on par with a Bhajan from a film.
                                      With the disadvantage of an undiscerning,
                                      involuntary, and uninvolved audience,
                                      Haveli Sangeet functions in an
                                      accountability vacuum. It gets no
                                      indication of its own relevance, can drift
                                      imperceptibly towards irrelevance, and has
                                      no basis for shaping a response aimed at
                                      averting extinction.
 
 Now, the claim. The present reality does
                                      not show up Haveli Sangeet as being in a
                                      better health than classical Dhrupad. The
                                      question of musicianship in "Samajgayan"
                                      (community singing) does not arise.
                                      Amongst professional soloist singers, the
                                      average level of musicianship is
                                      uninspiring. The inflow of fresh talent to
                                      the profession has all but dried up. Many
                                      popular Vaishnava temples now function
                                      without Haveli Sangeet as a part of the
                                      daily ritual of service. Some of them have
                                      replaced live Haveli Sangeet with
                                      commercial recordings of Bhajans as
                                      ambient music.
 Preservation
                                      and Revival The present status of
                                      Vaishnava temple music suggests that the
                                      commitment of the clergy, however strong,
                                      is a poor bulwark against the threat of
                                      extinction. Considering the totality of
                                      its circumstance, it is difficult to
                                      identify conditions under which Haveli
                                      Sangeet can become a living tradition
                                      again or re-fertilize classical Dhrupad.
                                      However, if conducive conditions do
                                      emerge, revivalists can now draw upon a
                                      substantial body of documentation and
                                      research being undertaken by scholars in
                                      India and the west.
 The revival of classical Dhrupad can be
                                      contemplated because it addresses a
                                      voluntary audience. And, voluntary
                                      audiences will be attracted to great
                                      music, irrespective of the genre.
 
 From a contemporary perspective, the
                                      feasibility of a Dhrupad revival owes a
                                      great deal to the towering duo, Ustad
                                      Nasir Ameenuddin and Ustad Nasir Moinuddin
                                      Dagar. They demonstrated the value of what
                                      Indian music was about to lose, perhaps
                                      irretrievably. But for their legacy,
                                      Indian society might not have mustered the
                                      will and the resources to initiate
                                      revivalist movements.
 
 Their recordings remain, to this day, the
                                      most powerful testimony available to the
                                      maturity and sophistication of the genre.
                                      Their formidable musicianship remains a
                                      durable challenge for all vocalists --
                                      Dhrupadiyas as well as Khayaliyas. Their
                                      music also earned for them the admiration
                                      of serious musicologists in Europe, who
                                      helped to create an international
                                      constituency not only for Dhrupad, but for
                                      all of Hindustani music.
 
 The departure of the Elder Dagar Brothers
                                      from the concert platform created the
                                      conditions for Dhrupad enthusiasts to
                                      clamor for revivalist initiatives. Two
                                      significant initiatives, each
                                      qualitatively different from the other,
                                      are noteworthy. Both of them have
                                      attempted to extend the boundaries of
                                      musicianship in Dhrupad beyond heredity.
 
 The Bhopal initiative was spearheaded and
                                      funded by a state government, with
                                      pedagogical and stylistic inputs from one
                                      of the streams of the Dagar tradition. In
                                      contrast, the Brindaban movement was
                                      initiated and funded by the hereditary
                                      clergy of a Vaishnava denomination, and
                                      functions under the guidance of another
                                      reputed Dhrupad lineage, the Mallik family
                                      from Darbhanga in Bihar.
 
 The Bhopal initiative has attracted good
                                      talent, and so far trained about twenty
                                      Dhrupad musicians, of whom a handful are
                                      now established concert performers. In
                                      terms of its sustainability, this
                                      initiative faces two major uncertainties
                                      -- the uncertainties associated with all
                                      government supported cultural projects,
                                      and the scarcity of competent and
                                      dedicated Gurus.
 
 The Brindaban movement's contribution to
                                      musicianship has been comparatively
                                      modest. However, it has utilized the
                                      growing interest in the culture of the
                                      Vraja region and its Vaishnava cults, to
                                      promote the hitherto lesser known
                                      Darbhanga gharana.of Dhrupad. The movement
                                      claims significance also on account of
                                      having restored Dhrupad's link with its
                                      original home in the Vaishnava temples.
                                      From available evidence, this link appears
                                      tenuous, and its long-term value to either
                                      Haveli Sangeet or to classical Dhrupad is
                                      debatable.
 
 Neither of these establishments has been
                                      around long enough to bring Dhrupad to a
                                      state of self-generating growth. Dhrupad
                                      requires superior momentum to reach such a
                                      stage. This will probably come from the
                                      future role of the alumni of these
                                      establishments as teachers and performers,
                                      and the continued growth in Dhrupad's
                                      popularity with audiences.
 Audiences
                                      and Musicianship Young Indian vocalists
                                      with respectable performing standards have
                                      partially restored Dhrupad to the
                                      mainstream concert platform. These
                                      musicians are making conscious efforts to
                                      shape Dhrupad to impart to it greater
                                      acceptability amongst contemporary
                                      audiences. In creating a market for their
                                      music, their focus seems to include Indian
                                      audiences south of the Vindhyas nurtured
                                      in the Carnatic tradition, and
                                      "soft" targets for Hindustani
                                      music in Europe and the US.
 Their efforts appear to be winning back
                                      mature Hindustani music audiences who had
                                      either rejected Dhrupad as an unpleasant
                                      aural experience or not heard quality
                                      Dhrupad for a long time. For the newer
                                      entrants into the classical music market,
                                      especially the younger and uninitiated
                                      audiences, Dhrupad appears to be a novel
                                      experience, but more accessible than
                                      Khayal.
 
 In South India, Dhrupad claims acceptance
                                      because of two factors: a general opening
                                      up of the Carnatic market to Hindustani
                                      music, and the similarity of the Dhrupad
                                      format to the Ragam-Thanam- Pallavi format
                                      in Carnatic music.
 
 In the domestic market, with an ample
                                      availability of other genres of classical
                                      and semi-classical music, audience
                                      preferences or loyalties are not shaped by
                                      the genre as much as by individual
                                      musicianship. The situation in Europe and
                                      the US appears different. There appears to
                                      be a genre-based following for Dhrupad,
                                      verging on a cult. This probably defines a
                                      market that has either found other genres
                                      of Hindustani music comparatively
                                      inaccessible, or had only negligible
                                      exposure to them.
 
 In the western markets, Dhrupad appears to
                                      claim a premium on the grounds of being
                                      "ancient" and
                                      "spiritual". However, such
                                      intangible values cannot over-ride the
                                      fundamental factor of intelligibility and
                                      comfort with the aural experience. The
                                      easier accessibility of Dhrupad is,
                                      therefore, likely to be the primary
                                      driving force. In this sense, even almost
                                      four decades after the first European
                                      concert tour of the Elder Dagars, Dhrupad
                                      might still be functioning as a
                                      "beginner's brief" or an
                                      "orientation course" in
                                      Hindustani music for western audiences.
 
 Several western-born musicians have, by
                                      now, acquired respectable performing
                                      competence in Dhrupad. Despite their
                                      accomplishments, the western market
                                      appears to deny them a fair share in the
                                      belief that their music is not
                                      "authentic Dhrupad".
 
 The intermediaries in the western
                                      "ethnic music" market are
                                      searching, in vain, for a prototype of
                                      "authentic Dhrupad" as a
                                      yardstick against which Dhrupadiyas can be
                                      evaluated. They have yet to come to terms
                                      with "continuity within change"
                                      and the stylistic diversity of gharanas as
                                      fundamental to the understanding of Indian
                                      musical genres.
 
 In addition, the easy accessibility of
                                      Dhrupad to audiences could have created
                                      the erroneous impression that Dhrupad is
                                      also easy to master as a performing art.
                                      This error compounds the risk of
                                      misjudging musicianship and leads,
                                      predictably, to diffidence in evaluating
                                      the talent and accomplishment on offer.
 Directions These trends are creating
                                      an interesting situation. The livelihoods
                                      of Indian Dhrupadiyas are being sustained
                                      largely by European and American
                                      audiences. Since the Indian market is not
                                      diffident about assessing Dhrupadiyas,
                                      western Dhrupadiyas can shape reputations
                                      on the Indian stage. But, their Indian
                                      successes, earned at great financial cost,
                                      do not give them an encashable credibility
                                      back home.
 As a genre, contemporary Dhrupad is
                                      evolving within the interaction between
                                      Indian and Western musicians on the one
                                      hand, and culturally alienated Indian
                                      audiences, and trans-culturally receptive
                                      western audiences. But, the west is, in
                                      effect, funding it very substantially.
 
 We need to recall Dhrupad's evolutionary
                                      history in order to appreciate the
                                      implications of the current situation.To
                                      begin with, a genre of Hindu devotional
                                      music accepted the role of a performing
                                      art and became Dhrupad. Because the
                                      influence of the Middle-Eastern and Moslem
                                      aristocracy was in the ascendancy at that
                                      time, Dhrupad accepted some elements of
                                      middle eastern music along with some
                                      dilution of its Hindu mythological poetic
                                      bias.
 
 In its second transformation, Dhrupad
                                      encountered stylistic influences from the
                                      music of the Sufi cults, again of middle-
                                      eastern origin. This encounter gave birth
                                      to Khayal, a more secular, and more
                                      complex art-form in which the dominance of
                                      the poetic element was weakened, while the
                                      meditative-contemplative character was
                                      retained, and perhaps strengthened. .
 
 In both these encounters, the alien
                                      counterpart was another Asian culture with
                                      its own tradition of religious/ meditative
                                      music. The fusion was not only easy, but
                                      also enriching. Dhrupad's present
                                      encounter with the west is a qualitatively
                                      different reality. Dhrupad is now
                                      interacting with a totally dissimilar and
                                      secular musical culture from the northern
                                      hemisphere. The equation, too, is
                                      different. Dhrupad is no longer the
                                      dominant mainstream genre, rich in
                                      repertoire, and generously patronized at
                                      home. It is dealing with alien influences
                                      from a position of weakness, and economic
                                      dependence. How is contemporary Dhrupad
                                      handling this reality ?
 
 Without implying any disrespect to the
                                      commitment of Dhrupadiyas to their art, it
                                      is possible to interpret the tendencies in
                                      contemporary Dhrupad as product/ marketing
                                      strategies. These observations are, of
                                      course, more valid in the case of
                                      musicians - primarily Indian - whose
                                      training and natural advantage offers them
                                      the possibility of making strategic
                                      choices.
 
 One tendency shows Dhrupad trying to move
                                      closer to its roots, and to strengthen and
                                      broad-base its Indian-ness. This suggests
                                      a strategy of enlarging the Indian market
                                      for Dhrupad, and expecting the resultant
                                      music to simultaneously - and perhaps
                                      consequently -- become more attractive to
                                      its western constituency.
 
 The other tendency is pushing Dhrupad
                                      closer to aural comfort for western
                                      listeners. This suggests a strategy aimed
                                      directly at consolidating Dhrupad's
                                      hard-currency market, even if, as a
                                      consequence, its domestic market remains
                                      restricted to the culturally rootless
                                      yuppies.
 
 Both these tendencies are often visible in
                                      the music of the same musician. However,
                                      they are also seen as individual
                                      predilections of different Dhrupadiyas.
                                      The present generation of successful
                                      Dhrupadiyas can afford to experiment with
                                      different directions or even do without a
                                      well-defined direction because quality
                                      Dhrupad musicianship is still in short
                                      supply.
 
 It is fair to recognize that there is also
                                      a third tendency, visible amongst a few
                                      lesser-known Dhrupad gharanas lacking a
                                      significant visibility in the
                                      "market". They continue to
                                      perform their music exactly as they have
                                      done for two centuries, or more, of
                                      virtual oblivion.
 
 At the present juncture in Dhrupad's
                                      history, it is not cynical, but realistic,
                                      to analyze Dhrupad primarily as a response
                                      to a "market". The genre will
                                      merit examination afresh when, and if, it
                                      attains the stage of delivering an
                                      abundant supply of quality musicianship.
 * Deepak
                                      Raja
                                      
                                       Deepak
                                      Raja is a sitar and
                                      surbahar player of the Imdad Khan/ Etawah
                                      gharana, and an occasional writer on
                                      music. He holds an MBA from the Indian
                                      Institute of Management at Ahmedabad, and
                                      is a Management Consultant by profession. 
                                      He
                                      may be contacted at dpkraj@yahoo.co.uk.
                                      Ms. Rao may be contacted at suvarnarao@hotmail.com.   |