Monday, October 11, 2021

Out today... Sarangi Style in Hindustani Music

Dear colleagues and friends,

On behalf of the International Music Education Research Centre (iMerc) Press, I am delighted to announce the publication of Sarangi Style in Hindustani Music by Dr Nicolas Magriel.

This is an absolutely monumental (614 pp.) volume dedicated to the Sarangi, the main bowed instrument of Hindustani music.


The Sarangi has three gut melody strings that are stopped by the left-hand cuticles or the skin above the nails. Around 36 sympathetic strings give a haunting echo. Traditionally the sarangi's public role has been to provide melodic accompaniment for vocal music, but its players have always practised and performed solo sarangi in their homes and at musicians' gatherings. The constraints posed by the sarangi's unusual construction and technique have given birth to a unique instrumental manifestation of vocal music.

This beautifully illustrated book attempts to answer these questions: What is sarangi music? In what ways does it reflect or differ from the vocal music on which it is based? In what ways do the unique features of the sarangi and its technique affect its capacity to emulate vocal music? The approach is empirical, supported by extensive sargam transcription and analysis of video-recorded music and informed by the author's fifty years of experience as a student, performer and teacher of the sarangi and Hindustani vocal music. The discussion is supplemented by around 170 online video files and 555 audio examples. Most of these materials are supplied in both normal-speed and half-speed versions.

Due to the difficulty of its technique and to the lingering stigma of its historical association with courtesan culture, the sarangi declined in popularity throughout the twentieth century. Many sarangi players became vocalists; several of the most influential Hindustani vocalists of the twentieth century came from the sarangi tradition. Hence there is a wider relevance in enquiring into the nature of vocal music as taught and performed by sarangi players.

There is much here to engage those interested in musical style and musical enculturation. And there is much that will be of practical value to students of Hindustani music, especially sarangi players, including information about the sarangi's history, construction and maintenance. Organological appendices include images and discussion of 321 sarangis. This book also gives a rare glimpse into the home life and cloistered musicianship of hereditary sarangi players.

Please feel free to circulate this information amongst your ethnomusicological circles, colleagues and friends and also use the following links on the various Amazon stores, globally.


With best wishes,
Evangelos

Dr Evangelos Himonides, FRSA, FBCS CITP
Professor of Technology, Education, and Music
University College London