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chandrakantha.com > Indian Music and Dance > Indian Classical Music > Hindustani Sangeet > History of North Indian Music > Contemporary Indian Music and the Vedas

Contemporary Indian Music and the Vedas

There is a ubiquitous statement about the his­tory of In­dian Music.  One constantly hears that “classical In­dian music is der­ived from the Vedas”.  Although no one can say that this statement is false, it is deceptively simplistic.  When dis­cussing Vedic con­tri­butions to contemporary music, there are three things that should be kept in mind.

  1. There is not the least shred of evidence to sup­port the belief that contemporary In­dian music is der­ived from the Vedas.
  2. It is inconceivable that there is no Vedic con­tri­bution to contemporary In­dian classical music.
  3. The com­monly held model as to the nature of the Vedic con­nec­tion is simplistic, incomplete, and fun­da­men­tally flawed.

Let us look at these points in greater de­tail.



Lack of Evidence

It is impor­tant to re­mem­ber the old adage, “Absence of evidence is not evidence of ab­sence”.  It turns out that we cannot rea­sonably expect to find any clear evidence.  Let us quic­kly look at some of the pos­sible sour­ces of evidence and see why things start to break down.

Internal Musical char­acter­is­tics – One of the first places to look for evidence is in the music it­self.  How­ever, this allows us to push things back only to a limi­ted degree.

The si­tua­tion is very analogous to owning a pair of socks.  Let us say that we have a pair of white socks.  As it wears out, we patch it with black thread.  After some period we have no white thread left.  At that point, there is no objective way to tell that there was ever any black thread at all.

This analogy is very si­mi­lar to trying to ascertain mus­ical influences by examining contemporary mus­ical practice.  Music is constantly changing.  We need only look at how music styles have chan­ged just within our own lifetime.  If we con­sider the change in music over longer per­iods, we quic­kly reach a point where there is nothing recognisable.

In a sense, this creates a “musical horizon” be­yond which we cannot expect to penetrate.  There is con­si­der­able de­bate as to how long back this mus­ical horizon extends, yet it is clear that it does not allow us to look back to the Vedic period.  There­fore, we cannot expect to find any unambiguous Vedic influence in any contemporary mus­ical practice.

Literary Evidence – It turns out that literary evidence gives a better look at the mus­ical cul­tures of antiquity.  These are frozen in time and not sub­ject to change.  Although there are ob­vious dif­fi­culties when comparing writ­ten dis­cus­sions with the ac­tual mus­ical practice, it is clear that the ab­ility of literary dis­cus­sions to extend our pic­ture into the past is a very powerful tool.

It is fortunate that the Vedas, es­pec­ially the Samaveda, are ba­si­cally hymn books.  There­fore, elements of the Vedic mus­ical sys­tem are expressed both implicitly as well as explicitly within them.  Fur­ther­more, we are fortunate that India gives us the oldest surviving text on music and stagecraft in the world (i.e. The Natyashastra).

Although there are very good mus­ical texts which go back to the ear­liest per­iods, there are just not enough of them to provide a link to contemporary practice.  There is a geographical and temporal gulf which separates many of these texts.  Within the last millennium things are pretty clear.  In the millennium before that, the texts be­come fewer, but we are still able to interpolate what was happening in the intervening per­iods.  But as we ap­proach the Vedic period, our ab­ility to interpolate and connect the few surviving texts be­comes al­most im­pos­sible.  The inability to bridge the gaps bet­ween the Vedic texts and many post-Vedic texts is sig­ni­fi­cant.  We are un­able to establish any clear links bet­ween Vedic music and contemporary classical music.

Iconography – We are fortunate that vir­tually every aspect of life is depicted upon the walls of Hindu temples.  This provide a documents con­cerning aspects of life which are quite literally “set in stone”.  The pop­ular­ity of music­ians and dan­cers as trad­itional themes, gives us information con­cerning the mus­ical cul­ture of antiquity.  Although there is a lot of information con­cerning mus­ical in­stru­ments of the period, it just does not quite fill in the gaps

Overall Significance – When we put all of the evidence together, we get the following pic­ture.  Although we get tantalising glimpse of the mus­ical cul­ture of antiquity, we just do not have evidence to either confirm nor deny a Vedic con­nec­tion with contemporary classical music.  But we must not forget that due to the ext­reme age of the Vedas, it would not be rea­sonable to even expect to find clear unambiguous links.



It Is Inconceivable There Is Not a Vedic Connection

Vedic influence is felt in al­most every aspect of In­dian life.  This is not to say that contemporary life has not change with the passage of time and exposure to non-Indian and non-Vedic influences, but it does mean that Vedic influences are still felt in day-to-day life.  Given this, is it conceivable that no Vedic influence would be felt in In­dian music.  I think that most would agree that this is not likely.


Models For Vedic Influence

It ap­pears that the greatest error found in the In­dian mind­set is not the belief that there is a Vedic influence in Classical In­dian music, but the man­ner of this Vedic influence.

The pre­vail­ing model of this influence is shown in the following diagram.

the gen­erally held belief is that contemporary classical music is der­ived from the Vedas by a pro­cess of dif­fer­entiation

Although this model is the pre­vail­ing one among practising music­ians and the lay pub­lic, it is highly flawed.  It is a model that is based solely upon the principal of dif­fer­entiation.  It to­tally ignores the pro­cess of amalgamation.

Musical amalgamation is a pro­cess whereby disparate mus­ical influences come together to create new mus­ical forms and practices.  Musical amalgamation is ext­remely com­mon.  Both Hindustani, as well as Carnatic music, may be seen as amalgamations of var­ious folk, classical, and for­eign mus­ical elements.  If we wished to express contemporary Hindustani music in terms of these var­ious influences, we would get the following model.

A more accurate description of the re­la­tionship bet­ween modern north In­dian music and the Vedas is through a pro­cess of amalgamation

It is inter­est­ing to note that the development of Carnatic music is surprisingly si­mi­lar to the development of Hindustani music .  One difference is that the Persian, Arabic, and Sino-Asiatic influences are less.  More impor­tantly, the folk influences are very dif­fer­ent due to the dif­fer­ent mus­ical cul­tures found in the Dravidian peo­ples of the south.

We bring up the pro­cess of mus­ical amalgamation as a supplement to the widely held view of dif­fer­entiation; it is not a replacement.  At first it ap­pears that having both pro­cesses together is very complicated.  Actually it is not so complicated.  One may look at the confluence of amalgamation and dif­fer­entiation as be­ing si­mi­lar to a giant pool into which var­ious mus­ical influences are added and from which mus­ical genre are der­ived.  This may be expressed in the following diagram.

When the pro­cesses of amalgamation and dif­fer­entiation are combined it resembles a pool

We are the first to admit that this model is also simplistic.  How­ever, it is a simple base that may be refined by aca­demics to what­ever level of precision that may be de­sired.  Conversely, it may also be simplified with­out introducing too much distortion.


Conclusion

It ap­pears that there must be some type of con­tri­bution of the Vedas to contemporary mus­ical cul­ture and practice.  The mus­ical practices of the Vedas were long ago added to the ge­ne­ral pool of In­dian mus­ical cul­ture, from which countless folk, classical, and pop­ular musics were der­ived.  This Vedic mus­ical cul­ture was in turn enriched by un­fa­thom­able num­bers of in­di­ge­nous folk, tribal, as well as the mus­ical cul­tures of every country that had any contact with India.