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Lesson 5: Important Practice Phrases
The entire session will deal with practicing on
how to play bols, strengthen ones hand, and learn
very important phrases commonly used in khol cycles.
This is in hope that you have committed each bol name
and method playing to memory. If you want to review that in summary, click the Bols
page. If you want to look at each bol more
informatively, then you may go back to appropriate lesson and review it.
USEFUL PHRASES
These phrases here will be important and are used a
good number of times when playing. Take the time to play these and commit these
phrases to memory. Since they will be used extensively, you will benefit from
mastery of these.
1. SRILA PRABHUPADA’S
PRACTICE RELA
This is your first rhythmic piece you are learning
through this khol series. Therefore, it is quite
befitting to learn the practice cycle that came from Srila
Prabhupada’s archived mridanga
lesson. In the introduction to the tape, he taught the bols
“ki ti tā
and ghe ti tā.” From this, he designed a very useful practice beat
that helps one get coordinated with the hands, practice how to easily change bols, correct timing of bols, and
develop tempo changes. This is not a rhythmic cycle used in kirtana.
Hence, this is known as an example of a rela. (A rela is a storm of bols with some successive theme to it).
First learn the following:
ka ti tā
gha ti tā
Practice these very simple phrases. Knowing how to
play these phrases crisply and in proper meter will allow you to play Srila Prabhupada’s practice rela nicely.
The rela is as follows:
ka ti tā
ka ti tā ka ti tā ka tā
(PAUSE)
gha ti
tā gha ti tā gha
ti tā gha tā (PAUSE)
What does this PAUSE
after the final tā in both lines mean? It means
that after tā, there is nothing played for one
beat.
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 1: Prabhupada
Practice Rela
OTHER PRACTICE PHRASES:
After beginning our course of rhythms with Srila Prabhupada’s practice
cycle, there are many phrases that are not only found in rhythmic cycles, but
they also help to provide strength with one’s hand. It is recommended to take
each practice phrase and play it continuously for at least five to ten minutes.
With regular practice, the phrases will be remembered in the motor cortex of
your brain. When summoned in the future, you would be able to play these
effortless or modify them if needed.
There are many more practice exercises that exist
besides these eight. However, these eight will be sufficient to understand the
rhythms and cycles presented in this course.
2) ti ra ki ti
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 2: ti ra
ki ti
3) ti tā ki ti
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 3: ti tā ki ti
4) ti ra ki ti
ra ka
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 4: ti ra ki ti
ra ka
5) ti ra ki ti
tā ka
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 5: ti ra ki ti
tā ka
6) dhā (PAUSE) ti ra ghi
ti
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 6: dha – ti
ra ghi ti
7) ghe ti ghe tā
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 7: ghe ti ghe tā
8) ka tā ka ti
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 8: ka tā ka ti
9) ra ti tā
ti
·VIDEO CLIP 5 – 9: ra ti tā ti
It is highly recommended that you to stop and look
back. You have learned the most important letters of the alphabet (i.e. bols) of the khol. You also
learned some phrases and words in this lesson. The next unit will begin the
heart of the course; the rhythmic cycles.
UPDATED: November 27, 2013