Chitravina: India musical instrument
The chitravina, which is also known as chitra veena or mahanakata vina is a 20 or 21- stringed fretless lute that is used for Carnatic mus...
http://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/12/chitravina-india-musical-instrument.html
The chitravina, which is also known
as chitra veena or mahanakata vina is a 20 or 21- stringed fretless lute that
is used for Carnatic music. Around the 1800s and the early part of the 1900,
the musical instrument started to be known as gotuvadyam, which was conferred
upon it by Sakha Rama Rao from Thanjavur that was responsible for bringing the
musical instrument back to the scene of concert. Presently, the musical
instrument is performed primarily in the southern part of India, but the origin
of it can be traced back to the Bharata’s Natya Shastra, where it is mentioned
as a 7-stringed fretless musical instrument.
source of picture: es.wikipedia.org
The gottuvadhyam has pass through
many developments and today, it is among the more popular solo musical
instrument in the Carnatic music. The musical instrument is usually seen in
collaborative world music concert and the north-south Indian jugalbandis. The
fretless nature of this musical instrumentmakes it the closest musical
instrument to vocal standards. There are six primary strings that are used for
melody and that pass over the top of the musical instrument, three drone
strings and about twelve sympathetic strings that are running parallel and
beneath the main strings of the instrument.
The approach to tuning this instrument
is in some ways analogous to the sitar, in others analogous to the Saraswati
veena, though is in many distinct ways. The musical instrument is performed with
a glide like a Hawaiian steel guitar and the north Indian vichitra veena. The 1st
two fingers of the right hand of the player are normally used with the plectrum
to pluck the metal melody strings while a cylindrical block produced out of
hardwood, buffalo horn, glass, steel or Teflon held by the left hand of the
player is used to side along the strings to differ the pitch. Sakha Rama Rao
used to call the slide ‘gotu’ and hence the name ‘gotu vadyam’.
This musical instrument was made
popular in the southern part of India by Sakharam Rao of Tiruvidaimarudur. The
instrument was later taken up and made more popular by Gotuvadyam Narayan
Iyengar that was a palace music player of the old state of Mysore. Chitravina
N. Ravikiran, his grandson, plays the musical instrument and is known to be the
inventor of a version of the instrument known as ‘navachitravina’.