Krsna Kirtana Songs
est. 2001 www.kksongs.org
Home
à Music Center à Instrumental Guides à Harmonium Guide
Chapter 10: Tala:
The Indian Rhythmic Cycle
This chapter came from the KKSongs Tabla Guide. However, understanding rhythm is very
important in being able to accompany someone, including yourself, if you are a
singer. The focus on harmonium is the mother of music, melody. However, in
studying the mother melody, we must understand and appreciate the father of
music, known as the rhythm. The rhythmic form of Indian music is the tala. Here is the Chapter on Tala.
“… Welcome to the second cluster of this journey in
the world of tabla. This is perhaps one of the most
common and most interesting sections. In the previous unit, we talked about the
alphabet and sounds of tabla. The fundamental bols and sounds very important for tabla
will be used together to make rhythms and many interesting elements.
In Indian music, generally, there are three
elements. The elements are the melody, drone, and the rhythm. The melody is
provided by an instrument of the sushir vadya (blown air), tantri vadya (plucked stringed instruments) and vitat vadya (bowed instruments).
These three instruments have the ability to play Indian melodious modes known
as ragas. A simple definition of
raga provided here can never do full justice to define what a raga really is.
The second element is the drone. The drone is a simple note held constantly. The function of
the drone is to help provide a constant pitch. This helps vocalists find their tonic.
Drones are found in instrumental music either by a drone instrument or in the
melody instrument itself. The tanpura and sruti box are the most commonly used instruments to act as
drones.
The final element is the rhythm. The proper word for
rhythm is tala.
This comes from the Hindi word, “tali” meaning
“clap.” This provides the time when the raga is played. Tabla
is a tala episode. Pakhawaj,
mridanga, khol, and dholak are other instruments used to keep tala.
Western music tends to describe rhythm in measures.
For instance, every measure in a song can have four beats. In Indian music, we
describe rhythm as cycles. A piece can be in a rhythm of sixteen cycles. Let us
examine the elements of the tala.
The tala can be viewed
best as a unit circle read clockwise. The beginning of the circle indicates the
start of the cycle. Each cycle has beats. The Indian word for beat is matra. A cycle has a fixed number of matras. The first matra
indicating the start of the cycle is known as the sam. By convention, the sam is represented by an “X.” The circle is thus divided by
measures called the vibhag.
The Western concept holds each measure bearing an equal number of beats. Vibhags, on the other hand, may or may not hold equal
numbers of matras. Notice on Figure 10.1, the unit
circle. Assume there is a sixteen matra tala.
Figure 10.1
Notice at matra 1, the “X”
representing the sam is indicated there. Since there
are sixteen matras, and four vibhags,
we can assume that each vibhag has four matras. 1+4=5. Matra 5 starts the
second vibhag. 5+4=9 Matra
9 starts the third vibhag. 9+4=13. Matra 13 begins the final vibhag.
After matra 16, the cycle repeats. One completed
cycle is known as an avartan.
When we discuss the vibhag
nature of this tala, we say, “This tala is divided 4-4-4-
On Figure 10.1, there are numbers 2, 0, 3, and “X.”
These are accent numbers. Generally, the sam is the matra with the highest accent. This is thus, indicated with
an “X.” The number 2 and numbers after 2 represent stress or accents. These are
called accent numbers. The accent
number 2 and accent number 3 do not represent weight or the amount of stress.
The accent numbers simply represent position. Shown on Figure 10.1, accent
number 2 is placed on matra 5. This denotes matra 5 having an accent. Similarly, accent number 3 is
placed on matra 13. This means that matra 13 has an accent. If a matra
contains a zero, this denotes that the matra has no
accent. In this case, matra 9 has no accent.
When describing talas, a
clapping, waving convention is used. The sam and
accent numbers receive claps. Therefore, the sam and
accent numbers are known as talis. When
reciting the tala, the matra
with tali is given with a clap of hands. The zero
number has no accent. It is considered an empty weighted matra.
The matras with zero number are known as khalis. Khalis receive a wave of hands. This is the most accepted
approach to describing talas, more than the unit
circle shown on Figure 10.1. To use the clap-wave approach for the following tala, you recite and act the following words:
“CLAP 2, 3, 4, CLAP, 2, 3, 4, WAVE, 2, 3, 4, CLAP,
2, 3,
When you actually recite the tala
using claps and waves, and then play the actual tala
on tabla, it is very amazing to see how similar the
clap-wave notation and the actual tabla sounds. When
describing talas in the future, the clap-wave method
will be described along with the tala.
Some artists, to emphasize the number of bols, will count based on accumulating matras.
For instance.
“CLAP 2, 3, 4, CLAP 6, 7,
8, WAVE 10, 11, 12, CLAP 14, 15,
This works too. Either way serves the purpose of
keeping accents, vibhags, and matras
per vibhag in tact.
CLASSIFICATION
OF TALAS
By the number of matras in
a tala, a general assumption of the flow can usually
be made. In Indian music, we discuss the classification of tala
length, by considering its multiples. Usually, this classification allows many
substitute talas for the same composition. The
classification of the tala is called its jati. Jati literally comes from the Hindi word meaning “caste.”
Tisra jati means that the tala has a
cycle with a multiple of three matras. Catastra jati means
that the tala has a cycle with a multiple of four matras. Khanda jati indicates a multiple of five matras.
Misra jati
indicates a multiple of seven, and a rare jati, sankirna,
indicate a multiple of nine. A tala with nine matras, even though it is a multiple of three, has a higher
priority with nine. Usually, a number with multiple choices for jatis would opt for a higher jati.
The only exception is twelve matra talas. Prime number talas are
named to the nearest jati. For instance, an eleven matra tala is classified as a khanda jati, since ten, a
multiple of five, is the closest. The tala used in
Figure 10.1 is catastra jati.
Be sure to understand these concepts very well.
These will be used very extensively in our development of building tala knowledge. …”
UPDATED: June 18, 2009