A thin, cold air wraps the 바카라Mada바카라 streets of Mylapore바카라the four streets around the iconic Kapaleswarar Temple. The locality has bestirred itself by six in the morning, with a few shops and coffee stalls open for business. And then the tunes of a bhajan resonate from one of the streets.
The singers are a group of thirty men, women and children, marching slowly, their chorus hanging in the air, as they halt at intersections to register their presence. After an hour of ambulatory singing, the group returns to its starting point바카라the eastern tower of the temple. After a short crescendo, the bhajan ends.
바카라We will be back tomorrow around the same time; this has been our daily ritual during Maargazhi (the Tamil month between mid-December and mid-January) for many years,바카라 says K. Santosh, a finance manager in an MNC. He admits that not many are accomplished singers but are united by their love for music and devotion to Lord Krishna.
A similar interest in Tamil devotional hymns called Thevaram바카라in praise of Shiva바카라binds a smaller knot of devotees who assemble near the Gandhi statue on the temple바카라s south-eastern corner. 바카라Today we are only six and a few more will join us. Our group has thinned down this year as many are out of town but whoever is in Chennai carries on this annual outing,바카라 explains Arumugam, a retired banker.
Elsewhere around the four Mada streets, at least a dozen groups would similarly circumambulate the temple, suffusing the early hours in music for a month during Maargazhi. 바카라Considered the most pleasant month climate wise, Maargazhi is dedicated to gods and prayers. Events like weddings are not held as the faithful are expected only to utter prayers and hymns...thus the tradition of bhajan singing in and around temples. This older practice evolved into musical concerts, thus spinning off Chennai바카라s own music season, which now extends from November to end January,바카라 points out veteran singer and composer Rukmini Ramani.


Till a year ago, this 80-year-old used to lead her own troupe of singers through Mylapore바카라s streets, continuing a tradition of veedhi bhajanai (bhajans on the streets) that her late father Papanasam Sivan, a well-known composer, had started over 70 years ago. As a child, she used to accompany him during his 바카라walk and sing바카라 outings during Maargazhi. Her group, even in the absence of Rukmini 바카라Amma바카라, goes about its routine, singing compositions of Sivan as well as some of Rukmini바카라s own.
바카라Sivan was the trail blazer of veedhi bhajanai and huge crowds waited on the Mada streets to listen to him. The way he connected ordinary people with divine music inspired others to form their own bhajani groups and take this format all over the state,바카라 observes Premeela Gurumurthy, vice-chancellor of Tamil Nadu Music and Fine Arts University.
Senior carnatic vocalist Madurai G.S. Mani points out that bhajans sung on the streets was an unobtrusive instrument the elders had deployed to take Carnatic music to the people. He describes its effect: 바카라Just imagine, women would have cleaned up their doorway and drawn kolams, the men would be neck deep in their morning papers and kids would be struggling to wake up. Then, suddenly, live music permeates the air. It charges the atmosphere.바카라 Out of curiosity, children would pop out on the streets; this reciprocity would inspire singers, he adds.
Just around the corner from East Mada Street, the thin voice of a singer cuts through the air from a small nondescript temple , as Santosh바카라s group winds up. The temple hall, shrouded in dawn바카라s shadowy darkness, is illuminated by about 30 oil lamps. Sitting in front of the sanctum of Raghavendra, the madhva saint, Delhi V. Muthukumar sings a composition of Swathi Thirunaal. It is a typical concert ensemble, with violin and mridangam, but with no amplification. The flickering light from the oil lamps dance to the slow, measured rhythm.
바카라We wanted to create a new but natural ambience바카라the simple setting of the temple and the musical connect between the performer and the divine,바카라 explains V.V.S. Murari, who organises these early morning concerts. The early hour also means a small audience바카라less than ten people have gathered to listen to Muthukumar. But the cost accountant-turned-music teacher does not mind. 바카라Having been on many concert stages I find this experience refreshing. This is more of a communion with god than with the audience,바카라 he says after a 90-minute concert, as the first rays of the sun filters through, gradually brightening the hall.
It is in such nooks and corners that Carnatic music gets rediscovered and replenished, says Vincent D바카라Souza, editor of Mylapore Times, a neighbourhood weekly. 바카라The rasikas and singers create alternate spaces where Carnatic music can be performed and heard. This way even unknown singers and budding talents find a stage to perform. When such events happen in other places, all locals need to do is to walk to the nearest temple or a bungalow to listen to a concert,바카라 he points out. When a 바카라difficult바카라 form as Carnatic music becomes accessible it finds new converts, reasons D바카라Souza.
Rasikas of Chennai are also organising concerts in small, intimate surroundings, converting heritage buildings, gardens, even large halls in their homes as the venue for a chamber ensemble, often without microphones. 바카라The smaller audience means greater involvement and at times more knowledgeable rasikas. The informal ambience also drives the artiste to strive for something different, try a more challenging raga,바카라 suggests Thiagarajan, who conducts a monthly concert at the ancestral home of his grandfather, Carnatic great Musiri Subramanian.
But the attraction of performing on a big stage before a large audience continues to be a major incentive for Carnatic hopefuls, more so for their parents. 바카라The prospect of a youngster on stage, even amidst a group, with videos shot by parents and shared on social media, is a good way to hook young aspirants,바카라 admits a sabha secretary.
Rukmini Ramani concurs, saying that it does, however, compel youth to keep at it. Indeed, in a large auditorium she was sandwiched by over 70 kids바카라all singing in unison Sri Ramacharithram, the story of Ram composed in 24 verses by Sivan, even as parents crowding the front rows jostled with mobile phones and selfie sticks. Pointing to the contrast with the pristine, early morning concerts, Gurumurthy reasons: 바카라A small stream or big river, ultimately Carnatic music wins.바카라
By G.C. Shekhar in Chennai