The difference between the tribal and folk cultures in any given culture
Introduction
“Tribal,
Folk and Devotional Music” by NA Jairazbhoy in AL Basham (ed.). A Cultural
History of India. London: Oxford University Press, 1975, pp. 234-237. Excerpt
from Chapter XVI Music (pp. 212-242): Classical music is the most refined and
sophisticated music to be found in the subcontinent of India. There are many
other forms, however, which have a specific function in the society, and these
are by no means devoid of artistic expression. The great diversity of music in
India is a direct manifestation of the diversity and fragmentation of the
population in terms of race, religion, language, and other aspects of culture.
The process of acculturation, so accelerated in modern times, is still not a
very significant factor in many areas of the country.
There remain
remote pockets where tribal societies continue to live much as they have done
for centuries. Even though some of these may show evidence of borrowing from
higher cultures, they nevertheless manage to assimilate these elements into
their own culture in such a way as to enhance their own identity. There are
more than a hundred different tribes in India, numbering more than 30,000,000
people, called Adivasis. They are found mostly in the hill regions,
particularly in central and eastern India, extending to the Nilgiri Hills in
the south. Racially, most of these tribes have been described as
Proto-Australoid, and their religions as being animistic. Between them, they
create a considerable variety of music, some of it tonally quite simple and involving
only two or three notes, and some using as much as a full octave, usually
pentatonic. Most of their music is monophonic, with the exception of the tribes
in Manipur, Assam, where a simple form of polyphony is quite common. A variety
of instruments is used: some tribes have perhaps no more than a drum, while
others have quite a number, including some in each of the four major
categories-chordophones, aerophones, membranophones, and idiophones.
Many of the
tribes have two distinct types of music, the ‘outdoor’ ensemble, which is often
performed by members of a different tribe or a Hindu caste, and their own
characteristic tribal songs. The outdoor ensemble is used at weddings and on
festive occasions. It varies in size and structure, depending to some extent on
the affluence of the tribe. The main instruments are the double-reed oboe-type,
a straight, curved, or Sshaped horn, a variety of drums – kettle-shaped,
cylindrical, or frame drums similar to the tambourine – and cymbals. The names
of these instruments sometimes vary from one [p. 235] tribe to another,
although it seems likely that they represent a common tradition. Songs in a
tribal society are mostly functional and often have the sanctity of a
ceremonial rite. Such are, for instance, the songs which accompany the events
of the life-cycle-birth, initiation, marriage, and death. Similarly, the
agricultural songs which accompany the burning and preparation of the fields,
planting, transplanting, harvesting, etc., have an element of ritual associated
with them, and there is often a real fear that the harvest may not prove
fruitful unless great care is taken over the formalities. Although many of the
tribes practise this ‘slash and burn’ method of cultivation, there are still
tribes which are in the hunting and food-gathering stage. Some of these have
songs to propitiate their deities, in the belief that this will ensure the
success of their ventures, and songs to give thanks at the successful
conclusion of the hunt. When things go wrong, in times of disease, drought, or
shortage of food, the tribal shaman is often invoked, and he generally has his
own repertoire of songs.
Most tribes
do, however, have more or less secular songs, such as greeting songs,
lullabies, love and courtship songs, ballads, and humorous songs. On the
occasion of certain festivals and celebrations, members of the tribes may dance
and sing for the pure joy of it. On such occasions, one may also hear songs
describing their ancestry and the origin of the tribe. Some of these songs might
well be completely unaccompanied, or accompanied by just a drum. Sometimes the
male musicians play one-stringed, long-necked lutes, which provide a drone.
Certain tribes, however, have stringed melody instruments, either a small
fiddle or a stick zither with attached resonators, and these may be used to
accompany the songs. Thisstick zither may well have been the prototype of the
vina depicted in miniature paintings during the Muslim period. The modern stick
zither, rudra vina, occasionally used in north Indian classical music, still
resembles the tribal instrument, but is much larger and of more elegant
construction.
The folk
music of non-tribal India is a vast subject which has not yet been adequately
studied. There are, however,some points ofsimilarity with tribal music,
especially in the context of occurrence. Village songs, like many tribal songs,
are often associated with the cycles connected with life and death, agriculture
and the seasons. The songs vary in detail, not only from one region to another,
but also within a region among the different strata of society. A further
parallel can be found in the use of the ‘ outdoor’ ensemble which provides
festival music and is played at weddings and funerals. This ensemble is
generally much like its tribal counterpart, with the oboe-like instrument
(called shahnai in north India, nagasvaram in the south), long brass or bronze
horns (usually called turhi or karna), a variety of drums, such as kettle-drums
(nagara) played in pairs with sticks, and the cylindrical or slightly
barrel-shaped double-headed drum (dholak), and one or more pairs of cymbals,
generally made of bell-metal (jhanj). Similar ensembles are also found in the
cities. The distinction between tribal music and folk music is not always clearly
defined. Nettle proposes that folk music is an oral tradition found in those
areas which are dominated by high cultures, having a body of cultivated [p.
236] music with which it exchanges material and by which it is profoundly
influenced. This exchange is very much in evidence in the folk music of India.
Hindu mythology and religious philosophy are an integral part of much of Indian
folk music. Songs sung at childbirth, for example the sohar songs of Uttar
Pradesh, often describe the birth of Krishna or Rama, and wedding songs might
well describe the wedding of Siva and Parvati. A fisherman’s song could begin
with an invocation to a protective deity (such as Jhule Lal in Sind) and
festival songs often have a predominantly devotional character.
The Bhagavata
Purana, which deals with the life and adventures of Krishna, an incarnation of
Vishnu, is probably the most popular of the Puranas and the story of Krishna
has had great influence on both north Indian folk and classical music. The
ecstatic devotion of the gopis (milkmaids), especially Radha, to Krishna, and
their yearning for him, occur over and over again, in both types. This
literature, composed in Sanskrit, has been received in oral form, generally
through translations, by all except the erudite. The legends have been
disseminated in a number of different ways, but most often in the form of
sermons or readings with commentaries (such as Hari katha) at religious
festivals, where they have attracted large audiences. These presentations
generally include songs and music, and on occasions they may include secular,
and even humorous material. A second very important source of dissemination is
through religious mendicants, bards, magicians, and snake charmers, who travel
from one village to another recounting the stories, often in song, and receive
in exchange just enough remuneration to keep them going. A third source is
through musical drama, which is found in one form or another in most parts of
India, sometimes associated with the temples, as in the kathakali form in
Kerala, sometimes produced by wandering bands of players, who travel from one
village to another carrying their sets (if any), costumes, and musical
instruments by bullock cart, during the festival seasons. The role of the
religious mendicant in the growth and spread of medieval Hinduism cannot be
overstressed. Many of them have since then become sanctified and are now
referred to as ‘saint singers’ or ‘poet-saints’. The popular devotional
movements began in Tamilnadu and gradually spread north through Maharashtra
into north India. The songs of the poet-saints were generally composed in the
vernacular languages and received immediate recognition in both the cities and
the rural areas. The greatest impact of these saint-singers on Indian music was
in the upsurge of a new type of song, variously called bhajan, kirtan, or
abhang. These devotional songs represent something of an intermediate stage
between classical and folk music, less abstract than the classical, but more
sophisticated than most folk music.
While
classical music placed emphasis on technique and beauty of performance, and
thus became the preserve of specialists, the emphasis in the devotional songs
lay in mystical and emotional experience. The sound produced was incidental to
the act of singing and one did not need to be a good musician to derive
spiritual benefit from the songs. The songs, however, often have ‘catchy’
tunes, many of which are derived from the ragas of classical music. The wide
appeal of these songs can also be attributed to the lively rhythms with which
they are accompanied. They have provided a repertoire for congregational
purposes in temple services as well as in the many informal gatherings of
devotees (bhajan mandals) which take place during the festival seasons.
Ethnomusicology can be considered as the holistic and cultural study of music
existing in various folk, tribal and other ethnic societies.
Intercultural
aspects can be found in all styles of music because of the cultural changes in
societies that are induced by the changing reigns of rulers in the different
ages of a nation‟s history. British scholars started to give a proper shape to
the tradition of ethno musicological works by collecting folk songs and
enabling their translation. From 1870 on Indian scholars started research on
folk and tribal songs following the methodology of the predecessors. Cultural
communications made by the exchange of ethnic musicians in India are
significantly studied. The influence of other cultures makes ethnic songs inherently
intercultural. Hence, all music in the world is essentially intercultural. The
present paper is a sincere attempt to retrace the history of the study of
ethnomusicology in India. The focus of the study has shifted towards making
critical examinations, rather than collecting abstract information. New
anthropological tools are employed to analyze the music and its cultural
setting. These tools include aspects of structuralism, cybernetics, information
theory, semiotics and direct field methods that are based on participant
observation. The analysis of the collected material is conducted by
incorporating both musicological and anthropological parameters. Transcription
is another relevant apparatus which is essentially the subjective
interpretation of a sounding musical phenomenon that is perceived and
subsequently illustrated through a graphic pattern.
Research is
made on the evolution of music forms as these have gradually evolved and taken
different shapes in their respective cultural contexts. Scholars of
ethnomusicology observe the intercultural dynamics and processes of
acculturation in the context of traditional music. Ethnomusicology often deals
with certain phenomena that can be observed in many forms of traditional music
in the modern world: The influence of western culture, innovation,
modernization, urbanization and all types of cultural interactions that are
comprised under the general term intercultural music.
EARLY SCHOLASTIC STUDY IN INDIA
Scholastic
study of ethnomusicology started with the study of the folk music.
Documentation is one of the main areas of study in ethnomusicology as the
discipline gives importance for field work and use of the field techniques in
the research methodology to study music. Ethnomusicology is an approach to the
study of any music not only in terms of itself but also in relation to its
cultural context. This aspect of the discipline focuses more on the study of
folk songs and folk musical instruments. In India, not much attention was paid
to study folk music before independence. The first Indian scholar who took an
interest in studying the folk songs was Rabindranath Tagore. The folk songs
collected by Rabindranath Tagore were published in a monthly magazine called
Sadhana since 1899.
India is a
rich field of ethnomusical diversities as the country is blessed with a lot of
heterogeneous folk-tribal and ethnic cultures. Still the subject is a bit
overlooked in the traditional domain of study and research in this land.
Specially, the ethnomusicology is not incorporated as a separate discipline in
the college and university education yet.
The present
scholar did an extensive work on the changing aspects of the Toto tribal
communities in north Bengal by transcribing and comparing their music in
several decades. Thus in the scholastic tradition of Indian music, the cultural
contacts with English writers of the west during British rule in India paved
the way for the emergence of intercultural musicology in India as the tenets of
ethno musicological methodology are found in their writings on Indian music.
And in later days this newly built tradition has maintaining its existence as a
multidisciplinary approach among the works of Indian scholars related to many
disciplines.
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