Pilu
Pilu or Piloo is a raga of Hindustani classical music. It is mostly used in light-classical forms, like thumris.
Thaat | Kafi |
---|---|
Season | Rainy season |
Arohana | 'P 'N S g m P N S' |
Avarohana | S' N D P m G m P g R S 'N S |
Vadi | G |
Samavadi | N |
Synonym | Piloo |
Similar | Kirwani |
Aroha and Avaroha
Arohana
P 'N S g m P N S
N S G m P N S
S G m P D S
S R m P N S
Avarohana
S' N D P m G m P g R S 'N S
S' N S' D n D P m G m P G P m g R S 'N S
Some performances include shades of tivra MA
Vadi and Samavadi
G as vadi
N as samvadi
Pakad or Chalan
S g R g S R 'N S, G m n P g - S
S g R S 'N S 'N - 'P 'd 'P 'N S - g R g 'N S
Organization and relationships
Related ragas: Kirwani resembles an ancient kind of Pilu.
Thaat: Bhatkhande classified Pilu in the Kafi thaat).[1]
Samay (time)
Third part of the day
Seasonality
Often related to the monsoon season
Rasa
Cheerful, Joyous, Alegre, moving. (prafullita, anandita, lavanyamayi) are synonymical expressions.
Thaat
Historical information
Origins
Important recordings
- Shankar–Menuhin, West Meets East; debuted 10 December 1967[2]
- Nikhil Banerjee:Pilu
- Ab Ke Baras Bhej: Bandini (1963); Singer: Asha Bhosle, Music:S.D. Burman
- Ezhumalai vazh Govinda: Vindhaigal Purindhai Nee En Vazhvile (2012); Singer: Harini, Music: Manachanallur Giridharan
Film Songs
Language:Tamil
References
- Jairazbhoy(1995)
- Lavezzoli, Peter (2006). The Dawn of Indian Music in the West. A&C Black. p. 63. ISBN 0826418155. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
Sources
- Bor, Joep (c. 1997), The Raga Guide, Charlottesville,Virginia: Nimbus Records, archived from the original on 2003-12-03
- Jairazbhoy, N.A.; Capwell, Charles (1995), "The Rags of North Indian Music: Their Structure & Evolution" (PDF), Asian Music, Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 4 (2): 19, doi:10.2307/833828, ISSN 0044-9202, JSTOR 833828
- Bhatkhande, Vishnu Narayan (1968–73), Kramika Pustaka Malika, Hathras: Sangeet Karyalaya.
External links
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