A note on Thaats

Many modern musicologists believe that there are only 10 usable Thaats in modern Northern Indian music. Although there are many popular Raags today, that do not comply with this theory. Pundit Bhatkhande devised a system to assign Thaats for such Raags based on their usage of the following notes:

‘r’ and ‘d’ komal
‘R’ and ‘D’ shudh
‘g’ and ‘n’ komal

The above division of Raags is born out of the ‘Raag-Time Theory’. This system works fine as long as one is well versed in both theories (Thaat system and Time Theory). Mathematically this system has no value. The Thaat System was devised on usage of notes in a certain fashion (mathematically). A Raag should not have any notes that do not exist in its parent Thaat. To find the solution to this problem, we are going back to the original Thaat system. According to which there are 32 Sampooran Thaats. This Ragkosh is based on that theory. Still,
special attention has been paid to mention the popular Thaat for those Raags which have been categorized under another than their original Thaat.

Back to the Thaat List.

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Raagkosh

A note on Ragkosh

Raags in each Jati and Thaats are categorized alphabetically. To write this list completely in plain text, some of the notation rules have been amended. Please use the following keys to read this list:

1. Natural notes: S R G m P D N S* represent “tone-tone-semitone-tone-tone-tone-semitone” (natural scale).
2. Vikrat Notes: Flats (Komals) are in lower case, such as: “r, g, d, n” and Sharp or Tivar Madhyam (only Madhyam is Vikrat when Tivar) is in upper case with an apostrophe such as: “M’”
3. Middle Suptak (Septave) Notes: these notes are written without any markings. S r R g G m M’ P d D n N
4. Lower Suptak Notes: These Notes are followed by a period, such as: N., d., P.
5. Upper Octave notes: These notes are followed by a star, such as: S*, r*, G*
6. Visit this post to read more about the Thaat system. And, reference to this post to view 32 Thaats.
7. Visit this post to find the definitions of various words used in this list.
8. Read about nine Jaites of Raags here.

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

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List of Jaties

Please pick one of 9 Jaties below. To read more about Jaties, read this post.

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

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List of Thaats

Thaats

Please read a note on Thaats here. Please pick a Thaat below:

  1. Asavari – S,R,g,m,P,d,n,S*
  2. Bakulabharan – S,r,G,m,P,d,n,S*
  3. Bhairav – S,r,G,m,P,d,N,S*
  4. Bhairavi – S,r,g,m,P,d,n,S*
  5. Bhavpirya – S,r,g,M’,P,d,n,S*
  6. Bilaval – S,R,G,m,P,D,N,S*
  7. Chakarvak (Ahir Bhairav) – S,r,G,m,P,D,n,S*
  8. Charukeshi – S,R,G,m,P,d,n,S*
  9. Dharamvati – S,R,g,M’,P,D,N,S*
  10. Dhenuka – S,r,g,m,P,d,N,S*
  11. Gauri Manohari – S,R,g,m,P,D,N,S*
  12. Hemvati – S,R,g,M’,P,D,g,S*
  13. Kafi – S,R,g,m,P,D,n,S*
  14. Kalian – S,R,G,M’,P,D,N,S*
  15. Khamaj – S,R,G,m,P,D,n,S*
  16. Kirvani – S,R,g,m,P,d,N,S*
  17. Kokilpirya – S,r,g,m,P,D,N,S*
  18. Latangi – S,R,G,M’,P,d,N,S*
  19. Marva/Gamanpirya – S,r,G,M’,P,D,N,S*
  20. Namnarayani – S,r,G,M’,P,d,n,S*
  21. Natakpirya – S,r,g,m,P,D,n,S*
  22. Pooravi – S,r,G,M’,P,d,N,S*
  23. Rampirya – S,r,G,M’,P,D,n,S*
  24. Rishavpirya – S,R,G,M’,P,d,n,S*
  25. Sahinder Madhyam – S,R,g,M’,P,d,N,S*
  26. Sarsangi – S,R,G,m,P,d,N,S*
  27. Shadvidhmargani – S,r,g,M’,P,D,n,S*
  28. Shanmukhpirya – S,R,g,M’,P,d,n,S*
  29. Suryakant – S,r,G,m,P,D,N,S*
  30. Swaranangi – S,r,g,M’,P,D,N,S*
  31. Todi – S,r,g,M’,P,d,N,S*
  32. Vachaspati – S,R,G,M’,P,D,n,S*

To see how thaats relate to each other, please visit this page:

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Raagkosh

Raagkosh – Alphabetical list (S-Z)

Please pick a letter:

A, B, C, D, E, F,
G, H, I , J, K, L,
M, N, O, P, Q, R,
S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

 

S

T

U

V

W

X

Y

^ Top

Z

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Raagkosh

Raagkosh – Alphabetical list (M-R)

Please pick a letter:

A, B, C, D, E, F,
G, H, I , J, K, L,
M, N, O, P, Q, R,
S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

M

N

O

P

Q

R

^ Top

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Raagkosh

Raagkosh – Alphabetical list (G-L)

Please pick a letter:

A, B, C, D, E, F,
G, H, I , J, K, L,
M, N, O, P, Q, R,
S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

 

 

G

H

I

J

^ Top

K

L

Click here to pick a Thaat (parent Scale)
Click here to pick a Jati (note count)
Click here to see the entire list alphabetically

You may also use the search feature on this blog to find a Raag.

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Raagkosh

Making Thaats with Tetrachords Part IV

In the last two posts we have learned to make 32 Thaats from 8 Tetrachords. Now here is an interactive movie to put them altogether. Study these three posts, find the pattern of note changes. Once you understand the sequence how notes are moving from natural to flats (and fourth sharp), it will never leave your memory again.

[iframe width=”100%” height=”300″ src=”https://www.sangtar.com/canvas/170203-tetrachords-32thaats.html”]

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Advanced Theory

Making Thaats with Tetrachords Part III

0194-trinity.jpg

Making the next 16 Thaats with 8 Tetrachords:
In the last post, we put together our 8 Tetrachords and figured that there are 16 available combinations. That made our first 16 Thaats. Now to make the next 16, we will have to make only one change in each, that is the position of the fourth or Madhyam.
All Thaats in the last post, had a natural Madhyam, now we are going to use Tivar Madhyam or sharp fourth. Here in a simple table, I am going to write each Thaat’s Tivar Madhyam counterpart Thaat right in front of it. I will present all 32 Thaats in a flash movie in the next post:

Natural Madhyam Thaat
Vikrat
Tivar Madhyam Thaat
Vikrat
1. Bilaval
none
to 17.. Kalian
M’
2. Sarsangi
d,
to 18. Latangi
M’, d,
3. Khamaj
n,
to 19. Vachaspati
M’, n,
4. Charukeshi
d, n,
to 20. Rishavpirya
M’, d, n,
5. Suryakant
r,
to 21. Gamanpirya
M’, r,
6. Bhairav
r, d,
to 22. Pooravi
M’, r, d,
7. Chakarvak
r, n,
to 23. Rampirya
M’, r, n,
8. Bakulabharan
r, d, n,
to 24. NamNarayani
M’, r, d, n,
9. Gauri Manohari
g,
to 25. Dharamvati
M’, g,
10. Kirvani
g, d,
to 26. SahinderMadhyam
M’, g, d,
11. Kafi
g, n,
to 27. Hemvati
M’, g, n,
12. Asavari
g, d, n,
to 28. ShanMukhPirya
M’, g, d, n,
13. Kokilpirya
r, g,
to 29. Svaranangi
M’, r, g,
14. Dhenuka
r, g, d,
to 30. Todi
M’, r, g, d,
15. Natakpirya
r, g, n,
to 31. ShadvidhMargani
M’, r, g, n,
16. Bhairavi
r, g, d, n,
to 32. Bhavpirya
M’, r, g, d, n,

sangtar.com > Music Theory > Advanced Theory

Making Thaats with Tetrachords Part II

Making The First 16 Thaats with 8 Tetrachords:

In the last post we saw that there are 4 poorvang Tetrachords and 4 Utrang Tetrachords.

By combining the upper and the lower Tetrachords, we can get 16 (4×4) unique scales.

The scale structure will be as shown below:

Tetrachord Number
Poorvang
Utrang
Thaat Names
Vikrat
1. Bilaval
1
+
1
none
2. Sarsangi
1
+
2
‘d’
3. Khamaj
1
+
3
‘n’
4. Charukeshi
1
+
4
‘d’, ‘n’
5. Suryakant
2
+
1
‘r’
6. Bhairav
2
+
2
‘r’,’d’
7. Chakarvak
2
+
3
‘r’,’n’
8. Bakulabharan
2
+
4
‘r’, ‘d’, ‘n’
9. Gauri Manohari
3
+
1
‘g’
10. Kirvani
3
+
2
‘g’,’d’
11. Kafi
3
+
3
‘g’,’n’
12. Asavari
3
+
4
‘g’, ‘d’, ‘n’
13. Kokilpirya
4
+
1
‘r’, ‘g’
14. Dhenuka
4
+
2
‘r’, ‘g’,’d’
15. Natakpirya
4
+
3
‘r’, ‘g’, ‘n’
16. Bhairavi
4
+
4
‘r’, ‘g’, ‘d’, ‘n’

The scales will look as shown below:

1. Bilaval:

Bilaval is the combination of Bilaval Tetrachords from the both sides (1+1).

Bilaval
Bilaval
1. S R G m
+1. P D N S*

2. Sarsangi:

Sarsangi is the combination of Bilaval & Sarsangi Tetrachords (1+2).

bilaval
sarsangi
1. S R G m
+2. P d N S*

3. Khamaj:

Khamaj is the combination of Bilaval & Khamaj Tetrachords (1+3).

bilaval
khamaj
1. S R G m
+3. P D n S*

4. Charukeshi:

Charukeshi is the combination of Bilaval & Charukeshi Tetrachords (1+4).

bilaval
charukeshi
1. S R G m
+4. P d n S*

5. Suryakant:

Sutyakant is the combination of Surykant & Bilaval Tetrachords (2+1). Suryakant is also known as Anand Bhairav.

suryakant
Bilaval
2. S r G m
+1. P D N S*

6. Bhairav:

Bhairav is the combination of Surykant & Sarsangi Tetrachords (2+2).

suryakant
sarsangi
2. S r G m
+2. P d N S*

7. Chakarvak:

Chakarvak is the combination of Surykant & Khamaj Tetrachords (2+3). Chakarvak is also known as Ahir Bhairav.

suryakant
khamaj
2. S r G m
+3. P D n S*

8. Bakulabharan:

Bakulabharan is the combination of Surykant & Charukeshi Tetrachords (2+4).

suryakant
charukeshi
2. S r G m
+4. P d n S*

9. Gauri Manohari:

Gauri Manohari is the combination of Gauri Manohari & Bilaval Tetrachords (3+1).

Gauri Manohari
Bilaval
3. S R g m
+1. P D N S*

10. Kirvani:

Kirvani is the combination of Gauri Manohari & Sarsangi Tetrachords (3+2).

Gauri Manohari
sarsangi
3. S R g m
+2. P d N S*

11. Kafi:

Kafi is the combination of Gauri Manohari & Khamaj Tetrachords (3+3).

Gauri Manohari
khamaj
3. S R g m
+3. P D n S*

12. Asavari:

Asavari is the combination of Gauri Manohari & Charukeshi Tetrachords (3+4).

Gauri Manohari
3. S R g m
+4. P d n S*

13. Kokilpirya:

Kokilpirya is the combination of Kokilpirya & Bilaval Tetrachords (4+1).

kokilpirya
Bilaval
4. S r g m
+1. P D N S*

14. Dhenuka:

Dhenuka is the combination of Kokilpirya & Sarsangi Tetrachords (4+2). Dhenuka is also known as Pilu.

kokilpirya
sarsangi
4. S r g m
+2. P d N S*

15. Natakpirya:

Natakpirya is the combination of Kokilpirya & Khamaj Tetrachords (4+3).

kokilpirya
khamaj
4. S r g m
+3. P D n S*

16. Bhairavi:

Bhairavi is the combination of Kokilpirya & Charukeshi Tetrachords (4+4).

kokilpirya
charukeshi
4. S r g m
+4. P d n S*

Please note that all these Thaats have ‘Komal Madhyam’. Which is also know as Natural Fourth or Shudh Madhyam.
Making the rest of the 16 Thaats is easy now. Just change the Madhyam to Tivar in all the above. We will talk about those in the next post.

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