Music of Tripura
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Music of India: Topics | |||||||||||
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Timeline and Samples | |||||||||||
Genres | Classical (Carnatic and Hindustani) - Rock - Pop - Hip hop | ||||||||||
Awards | Bollywood Music Awards - Punjabi Music Awards | ||||||||||
Charts | |||||||||||
Festivals | Purandaradasa Aradhane – Kanakadasa Aradhane – Hampi Sangeetotsava – Sangeet Natak Akademi – Thyagaraja Aradhana – Cleveland Thyagaraja Aradhana | ||||||||||
Media | Sruti, The Music Magazine | ||||||||||
National anthem | "Jana Gana Mana", also national song "Vande Mataram" | ||||||||||
Music of the states | |||||||||||
Andaman and Nicobar Islands - Andhra Pradesh – Arunachal Pradesh – Assam – Bihar – Chhattisgarh – Goa – Gujarat – Haryana – Himachal Pradesh – Jammu – Jharkhand – Karnataka – Kashmir – Kerala – Madhya Pradesh – Maharashtra – Manipur – Meghalaya – Mizoram – Nagaland – Orissa – Punjab – Rajasthan – Sikkim – Tamil Nadu – Tripura – Uttar Pradesh – Uttaranchal – West Bengal |
Tripura is a state of India that has produced a wide variety of folk music. The musician Hemanta Jamatia gained major renowned beginning in about 1979, when he became a musical representative for the independist Tripura National Volunteers.
[edit] Tripuri Folk music
Tripuri's use the musical instruments like Kham made of Bamboo, Flute, Sarinda, Lebang made of bamboo and [[bamboo cymbal]].