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Women's Voices from the Mountains
Description

CD6_WOMEN’S VOICES FROM THE MOUNTAINS The women performing here are not professional musicians. These songs are part of the everyday life of women. Women’s songs are often work songs sung while grinding, threshing, and pounding, as a way to while away the tedium of long laborious tasks and provide a rhythm as well as companionship. Women play a key role in rituals, singing narratives and ballads as well as life cycle songs for events such as birth, marriage, and death. Wedding songs form a large part of the repertoire of women in India. This important part of the intangible cultural heritage of India is disappearing with urbanization and migration to cities, and with mechanization that takes away the need for grinding and pounding. Moreover, recorded music and television are taking the place of song. Thus, the recording and documentation of these traditions become more important. Namely, recordings of the voices of the woman in the home and in the fields, who carry out the rituals for their families and the gods who protect them, hold immense value. This is a compilation of women’s songs from the foothills of the Himalayas, Kangra in Himachal Pradesh (the “land of the snows”), and from high up in the Garhwal Himalayas in Uttarakhand (the “northern land”). Though not connected, there are similarities in the themes between the ghasyari songs and khuder of Garhwal and the pakaharu of Kangra. Women sing about their hardships, such as their daily struggles with marriage, absent husbands, and about the friendship among women. These songs do not have any instrumental accompaniment. The songs are from the research conducted by two wo men researchers: Kirin Narayan and Ragini Deshpande. The songs from Kangra are those recorded and collected by Kirin Narayan, who has worked in Kangra, studying women’s songs and stories for many years. The selection presented here is from 1990 to 1991. Ragini Deshpande recorded and collected women’s songs in Chamoli, Garhwal, from 1981 to 1989. As Sangita Devi says quoted by Kiri Narayan, “Everyone can sing, but only when you know pain can you understand the song.”

Audios
Meri Albela

Country : India

0:06:28

Rali songs and explanation

Country : India

0:08:12

Unchi unchi ridiya

Country : India

0:02:04

Jhumelo

Country : India

0:02:53

Barsāti

Country : India

0:05:54

Phula burasa

Country : India

0:02:02

Suhāg song-ek sone salai

Country : India

0:02:04

Asu Ghasyari

Country : India

0:01:56

Nanda Trishuli

Country : India

0:01:40

Ambe dia daliya koyel bole

Country : India

0:05:57

Bārahmāh

Country : India

0:05:33

Pandav puja

Country : India

0:06:33

Chal Rupa burasa

Country : India

0:02:53

Saguna bola

Country : India

0:03:05


Information source
Sangeet Natak Akademi
https://sangeetnatak.gov.in/

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