Mysore Vasudevachari
Mysore Vasudevachari
Mysore Vasudevachari
Contents
5 See also
Vishnu which incidentally is also his mudra or signature. True to his Vaishnava heritage
and the Thyagaraja shishya parampara to which he belonged, most of his compositions
are in praise of Lord Rama. In addition to Kritis and Keertanas, he also composed
Varnams, Thillanas, Javalis and slokas. His admiration for the trinity of Carnatic music
specially Thyagaraja resulted in Srimadadi Thyagaraja Guruvaram in Kalyani, Shri
Ramachandra (a ragamalika) and two other ragamalikas in praise of Muthuswami
Dikshitar and Shyama Sastri. Vasudevachar's compositions are thus like sugar candy
which gives one instant pleasure and yet lingers on in the mind and heart long after.
He is also credited with two writings in Kannada, one of them an autobiography called
Nenapugalu (memories) and Na Kanda Kalavidaru (the musicians I have met) in which
he wrote the biographies of many well known musicians.
Mysore Vasudevachar also taught in Rukmini Devi's Kalakshetra, (founded in 1936). He
was already quite old by then, but thanks to Rukmini Devi he agreed to shift to
Kalakshetra. He became the chief musician in Kalakshetra and helped in setting the
Ramayana to music. He died in 1961 at the ripe old age of 96. He lived a simple and
austere life devoted to the study of Sanskrit and music.
S. Rajaram, his grandson worked at Kalakshetra eventually taking charge of the
institution at Rukmini Devi's request. Vasudevachar had composed the music for only the
first four kandas and it was left to Rajaram to finish the work. An accomplished musician
and Sanskrit scholar, he was amongst the few musicians, the sole repository of
Vasudevachar's compositions. He died on June 2, 2009.
S. Krishnamoorthy, his other grandson worked at All India Radio(A.I.R) and has
translated his grandfather's memoirs into English. He's also published a memoir of his
own.
Compositions
Composition
bhajana
sEyarAda SrI
rAmuni
Raga
Tala
dharmavati rUpaka
brOcE vArevaru
kamAs
rA
Adi
Type Language
Telugu
Telugu
Audio Links
Vairamangalam Lakshminarayanan (Part 1) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5WNYzUXbe4
Vairamangalam Lakshminarayanan (Part 2) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcS0nExnwHk
MS Subbulakshmi http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aqd9Pmksx8s
Mangalampalli Balamurali Krishna http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2QkYh9Eesc
Bombay Sisters - http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=eHwqrpXxHms
girijA ramaNA
natajana
sharaNA
gambhIra
nATa
Adi
Sanskrit
gOkula nilaya
abhEri
kRpAlaya pAlaya
Adi
Sanskrit
TM Krishna - http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=3fHEVqhre7o
mAmavatu SrI
saraswatI
Adi
Sanskrit
mari mari
vaccunA mAnava
janma
nIkEla daya rAdu
rAmacandrA
nimishamainA
shrI rAmaA yana
rAdA
Ra Ra Rajeeva
Lochana
vara lakshmI
namOstu tE
Sri
Chamundeshwari
Hindola
kAmbhOji Adi
Telugu
kadana
Adi
kutUhalam
Telugu
sAma
Adi
Telugu
Mohanam Adi
Telugu
gourI
rUpaka
manOhari
Sanskrit
bilahari
Sanskrit
Adi
Musical Background: He learnt music from Patnam Subramanya Iyer in Tiruvayyar and from
Vina Padmanabhayya.
Region: He was born in Mysore, Karnataka and lived in Tiruvayyar and Chennai, Tamilnadu.
Contribution: He has composed about 200 songs. He was adept in all the creative aspects of
Carnatic music, namely, raga alapana, neraval, kalpanaswara, tanam and Pallavi. He was also
proficient in handling Hindustani ragas, besides being a great teacher. His compositions have
been published in two books entitled 'Vasudeva Keertana Manjari' and 'Navaratna Ragamalika'.
He has composed swarajatis, tillanas, varnams and a tala-ragamalika, covering the 35 talas. He
is also known for the group of 24 songs with different names of Lord Vishnu, ragamalikas on the
Trinity and the music he set for the Ramayana ballet, choreographed at Kalakshetra.
Theme: Devotional
Languages used: Sanskrit, Kannada and Telugu.
Signature: His mudra was Vasudeva.
Popular Compositions: Brochevarevarura (Khamas), Devadideva (Sunadavinodini), Bhajare re
manasa (Bhimplas) etc.
Mysore Vasudevacharya
(1865-1961)
Mysore Vasudevacharya was a towering musical personality encompassing a part of the
last century and major part of this century-having lived for 96 years. He is a composer of
great merit, tracing his musical lineage to Saint Tyagaraja through Manambuchavadi
Venkatasubbayyar and Patnam Subramania Iyer.
Young Vasudeva learnt music initially from Veena Padmanabhayya of Mysore. Having
come to know of his precocious talents in music, the Maharaja of Mysore arranged for
the teenager, Vasudeva be sent to Tiruvaiyaru to learn music under Patnam Subramania
Iyer. There Vasudeva started his gurukulavasam at his mentor's. After he finished this
stint in Tiruvaiyaru, Vasudeva came back to Mysore and he was appointed as an Asthana
vidwan of the Royal court in Mysore palace. Much later in his life, he came to Madras on
the invitation of Rukmini Arundale to join the faculty at the famed Kalakshetra school of
music and fine arts. He became the principal of the school eventually. His contemporaries
at the Kalakshetra were stalwarts like Tiger Varadachariar, Veena Krishnamachariar and
Mazhavaraya-nendal Subbarama Bhagavatar.
He was a prolific composer -with more than 200 compositions which include pada
varnas, thana varnas, kritis, javalis, tillanas and ragamalikas. He has used Telugu and
Sanskrit as the media for his kritis. Vasudevacharya's lyrical Telugu used in his kritis is
more chaste than that of composers of his time. For his compositions, he has used many
common ragas plus several unusual ragas like Megharanjani, Sunadavinodini,
Pushpalatika, Shudda salavi etc. He has also employed several types of talas such as
chaturasra rupaka, tishra rupaka, adi, ata, tishra triputa, khanda triputa, mishra triputa,
mishra jampa , etc. in his compositions.
Vasudevacharya has composed captivating chittaswaras for some of his kritis. Two
examples will suffice here- 'Ra-ra-rajeeva lochana' in raga Mohana and 'Sri
Chamundeshwari' in raga Bilahari. It is noteworthy that Vasudevacharya has elevated the
stature of minor ragas like Abheri (Bhajare re manasa), Behag (Bhavayeham
Raghuveeram) and Khamas (Brochevarevarura) by composing major kritis in them. Note
that these kritis were composed at the turn of 20th century even before these ragas were
popularly rendered. He introduced kakali nishada for his Khamas instead of the
conventional kaishiki nishada as in Saint Tyagaraja's Khamas. Vasudevacharya's Khamas
is eqaully appealing raga also. Around 1930's, Maharajapuram Vishwanatha Iyer rendered
Vasudevacharya's kriti- 'Brochevarevarura' in Khamas with much polish in his concert.
Vasudevacharya, who happened to be at the concert remarked to Vishwanatha Iyer "My
composition like a simple girl was metamorphosed into a beautiful damsel. That is how
well you beautified the composition with your embellishments".
Vasudevacharya had a number of disciples trained while he was in Mysore and later in
Madras. He published 150 of his compositions himself. Recently, a set of 21 cassettes
containing more than 140 compositions of Vasudevacharya has been commercially made
available. The kritis of Vasudevacharya are appealing and I wish more vidwans present
these kritis in their concerts.
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delightful.
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