Rāg Lalit | |
---|---|
album cover art |
|
Studio album by Ram Narayan | |
Released | 1989 |
Recorded | December 3, 1987 |
Genre | Hindustani classical music |
Length | 73:43 |
Label | Nimbus |
Rāg Lalit is a studio album by Indian classical musician Ram Narayan, released in 1989. Recorded December 3, 1987, in Wyastone Leys near Monmouth, Wales, the album features a performance of the serene dawn raga Lalit on sarangi. Narayan performs a long non-metrical introduction to unfold the raga, during which he adds a pulse, until he is joined by tabla to perform a composition.
Contents |
The album consists of a single track performance of the raga Lalit. Lalit is commonly described as calm and devotional and is performed at dawn.[1] Neil Sorrel portrayed Lalit as conveying a feeling of instability and connects this to the performance time, when night changes into day.[2]
Rāg Lalit was recorded in a single take in Wyastone Leys near Monmouth, Wales, on December 3, 1987, and includes the tuning of the sarangi's sympathetic strings through plucking.[2] In the performance, Narayan plays a long alap (non-metrical introduction) and a jor (performance with pulse) that increases in speed and range and makes use of gamaks (note oscillations).[2] Suresh Talwalkar, a frequent accompanist of Narayan, joins in playing a gat (composition with rhythmic pattern provided by the tabla) in the rhythmic 16-beat cycle tintal, which is separated into four groups of four beats.[2] When Talwalkar plays a solo, the sarangi repeats the melody.[2] The performance was mastered in England, but not edited.[2] In the same session that produced Rāg Lalit, the 1987 album Rāg Bhūpāl Toṛī, Rāg Paṭdīp was recorded.[3]
The album cover features a 19th-century painting of the goddess Tripura Sundari,[4] also called Lalita. A picture of Narayan playing the sarangi is on the back of the album, along with a quote of Yehudi Menuhin praising Narayan.
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [3] |
New Straits Times | (favorable)[5] |
Allmusic critic Ken Hunt gave the album a maximum five star rating and called it "a magical performance",[3] and R. S. Murthi of the New Straits Times argued that Narayan utilized his musical knowledge on the album to "stunning effect".[5]