Kia ora, friends—imagine strumming a guitar by a Taranaki beach at dusk, waves keeping time, but picture instead a Rajasthan desert, where a sarangi wails under a vast starlit sky, its mournful notes carrying tales of longing, or a Chennai concert hall, where a mridangam thumps a rhythm that pulses through the crowd like a living heartbeat. This is the 47th note in our 100-article journey through Bharat Is Not for Beginners, a remarkable trek that’s taken us deep into the heart of a land rich with tradition and innovation. Now, we’re tuning into Bharat’s sacred sound—its musical innovations and living melodies—where every chord, every beat, is a taonga, a treasure passed down from ancient chants to the vibrant tunes of today. This isn’t just about music; it’s Bharat lifting its whakapapa, its heritage, with a harmony that resonates across time.
Bharat doesn’t treat its music as a casual affair—it crafts it with soul, with intention. This isn’t a dusty collection of old records gathering cobwebs; it’s a vibrant hui, a gathering of ragas, rhythms, and resonances that stretch from the sacred fires of Vedic rituals to the electric hum of modern studios. This land is a living concert, a resonant pulse that’s stirred its people through morning prayers, harvest dances, and quiet moments of reflection, all with a keen ear for melody and a deep respect for its power. This isn’t for those after a quick jingle or a passing tune—it’s an exploration of a civilisation that’s made its sounds a remarkable legacy, a thread that ties its past to its present with grace and strength.
The Vedic Chant: Music’s Sacred Beginnings
Let’s step back to 1500 BCE, when the earliest melodies took shape. The Rigveda, one of Bharat’s oldest texts, isn’t just a collection of hymns—it’s a sonic tapestry, its sama chants rising alongside the crackle of yajna fires, where priests offered ghee and rice to the gods. These weren’t random notes; they followed swaras—seven tonal steps—that flowed like a rishi’s breath, each pitch carefully placed to align with the cosmic rhythm, a concept known as rta. By 1000 BCE, the Samaveda refined this further, turning chants into a musical system, a sacred score where every intonation was a bridge between the human and the divine.
Instruments joined the chorus early on. The veena, a plucked stringed beauty, emerged as a companion to these chants, its wooden body carved to echo the yajna’s sanctity. Drums like the dundubhi thumped in battle hymns, while flutes—simple bamboo bansuris—whistled pastoral tunes in villages. By 500 BCE, a text called Natyashastra laid down the law: music wasn’t just sound—it was raga, a framework of notes to stir specific moods, from the calm of a monsoon evening to the fire of a warrior’s resolve. Later, around the 13th century, Sangita Ratnakara catalogued talas—rhythmic cycles—matching beats to the stars’ dance, a celestial timing that wove music into the fabric of life.
This wasn’t a casual hum—it was nada, the essence of sound itself, seen as a sacred force. Musicians weren’t mere players; they were keepers of a divine gift, their melodies a hui that linked Bharat’s spirit to the heavens with a rishi’s grace and a deep wairua, a spiritual resonance that still echoes today.
A Whānau of Melodies: Music Across the Land
Bharat’s music isn’t a single note—it’s a whānau, a family of sounds, each region adding its own flavour to the mix. In Rajasthan’s arid sands, the Manganiyar folk sing with raw power, their kamaicha—a bowed string instrument—wailing tales of love and loss under a moonlit sky, a desert symphony that’s been passed down through generations. Travel south to Tamil Nadu, and you’ll hear Carnatic music, a refined tradition where the veena’s pluck and the mridangam’s beat weave intricate ragas, filling temples and homes with a sound as old as the Sangam poets who once sang of rivers and kings.
In Bengal, the air hums with Rabindra Sangeet, songs crafted by Rabindranath Tagore, whose lyrics marry the gentle flow of rivers to a modern lilt, a melody that won him a Nobel nod. Punjab’s bhangra brings a different energy—its dhol drums thump a joyous rhythm, born from harvest celebrations, a Sikh taonga that gets feet moving in fields and streets alike. Kerala’s Sopana Sangeetham offers a quieter grace, sung on temple steps with a slow, devotional cadence, its notes rising like incense smoke along the coast.
Gujarat’s garba spins with a lively clack of dandiya sticks, a circular dance that mirrors the yajna’s communal spirit, while Kashmir’s Sufiana Kalam blends the santoor’s delicate chimes with Persian influences, a mountain melody that soothes the soul. Assam’s Bihu tunes celebrate spring with flute and pepa horn, a tribal hui in the northeast’s green hills. From the gondhal chants of Maharashtra’s villagers to the urban qawwali of Sufi shrines, Bharat’s melodies are a whānau—diverse, deep, and truly impressive, each carrying its own story, its own heartbeat.
Musical Mana: Sound Meets Spirit
Bharat’s music isn’t just for the ears—it’s got mana, a sacred weight that runs through every note. Those early sama chants weren’t background noise—they were offerings, lifting prayers to Agni, the fire god, with a precision that turned sound into a spiritual act. A raga like Bhairav, played at dawn, isn’t just pretty—it’s prana, life’s breath, stirring the day awake with a Vedic pulse. Bhajans, devotional songs to Krishna or Rama, carry a personal warmth, their simple refrains a tika, a mark of devotion, sung by villagers and city folk alike.
The idea of Nada Brahma—sound as the divine—sits at the heart of it all. Music isn’t separate from the universe; it’s the universe humming, a rishi’s insight that ties every swara to Brahman, the infinite. Festivals amplify this mana—Diwali fills the air with kirtans, where harmonium and tabla join voices in a joyous racket, celebrating light over dark. Navratri’s garba beats echo through Gujarat’s nights, a rhythmic hui that binds communities in dance and song.
Daily life hums too—farmers sing lok geet, folk tunes, as they thresh wheat, their voices carrying tales of rain and love across the fields. In homes, lullabies soothe tamariki with a gentle raga, while street performers strum ektara for a coin and a smile. Sound wasn’t an add-on here—it was wairua, a sacred gathering that tied Bharat’s spirit to its scales, strings, and beats, a living nada brahma that flows through every corner of life.
The Global Hui: Melodies Reach Out
Bharat’s music has never been shy—it’s travelled far, sharing its resonance with the world. By 200 BCE, the veena’s twang and raga’s structure slipped along the Silk Road, influencing Persian courts, while South India’s Carnatic scales found echoes in Thailand’s pi phat ensembles. Mughal rulers brought qawwali in the 13th century, a Sufi sound that sang its way to Central Asia, blending Desi devotion with Persian poetry in a soulful hui.
Fast forward to the 19th century, and British ears perked up—Ravi Shankar’s sitar caught the Beatles’ fancy, George Harrison weaving raga into “Within You Without You,” a Vedic note on a global stage. Today, it’s a worldwide gathering—NZ’s got bhangra nights in Auckland clubs, the dhol’s thump getting Kiwis grooving with a local twist. In Wellington, you might catch a sitar recital at a community hall, its strings singing a Desi story to a Pākehā crowd.
Bollywood’s carried the torch too—think of Lagaan’s “O Rey Chhori,” where folk melodies meet cinematic flair, or Dil Se’s Chaiyya Chaiyya, a qawwali-tinged beat that’s danced its way from Mumbai to Matamata. Kiwi composers are taking notes, blending Carnatic’s precision into fusion tracks, while sufi rock bands like Junoon echo from Lahore to Levin. From Grammy wins to Nelson jam sessions, Bharat’s melodies are a friend—clear, soulful, and truly far-reaching, a Vedic sound that’s found a home in the global whānau.
The Modern Rāka: Melodies Keep Playing
Colonial times tried to quiet the tune—Western scales and hymns pushed in—but Bharat’s music stood its ground. Post-1947, the waka turned with gusto. A.R. Rahman redefined the game, weaving raga into synth beats—his Roja soundtrack in 1992 brought Tamil melodies to the world, and Slumdog Millionaire’s “Jai Ho” nabbed an Oscar, a rishis’ remix for the 21st century. Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy’s Taare Zameen Par score tugs heartstrings with a modern bhajan vibe, proving the old can dance with the new.
Folk’s gone digital too—Baul singers from Bengal stream their mystic tunes on YouTube, their ektara twang reaching listeners from Kolkata to Kaitaia. Bhangra’s evolved with Punjabi MC’s “Mundian To Bach Ke,” a global hit that fuses dhol with hip-hop, while Carnatic prodigies like Sanjay Subrahmanyan keep mridangam alive in concert halls and podcasts. Instruments innovate—electric sitars hum in fusion bands, and tabla apps teach talas to tamariki worldwide.
Kiwi friends are all in—Wellington hosts Desi sitar workshops, while Auckland’s church choirs try bhajans for a harmonic twist. It’s not a relic locked in time—it’s a live rāka, Bharat’s musical mana playing strong from Vedic sama to urban tracks, a harmony that keeps evolving, keeps ringing out.
Why the Sound Stays Sweet
What keeps this music alive and kicking? Bharat’s devotion runs deep—nanas sing bhajans at dawn, their voices a thread to the past, while kids tap mridangam in after-school classes, learning talas with a grin. Maestros guard ragas like treasures, passing them down with the care of a Hurricanes ruck protecting the ball. It’s Vedic at its core—those swara notes, that rta flow, still hold it tapu, a sacred trust that’s never faded.
Communities keep it real—village lok geet nights, urban kavi sammelans where music meets poetry, and temple kirtans that draw crowds with harmonium and hope. UNESCO’s clocked it as intangible heritage, but it’s the people who maintain the kaupapa—strumming veena in backyards, mixing talas in studios, teaching raga to the next generation. It’s not just sound—it’s whakapapa, a melody Bharat’s played since the rishis first lifted their voices to the sky, a song that refuses to fade.
Why It’s a Resonant Yarn
Why tune back into Bharat’s sacred sound? Because it’s a resonant yarn—tunes that lift spirits, heal hearts, and spark joy, a remarkable tale that deserves a long listen. It’s taonga—sama chants older than the Treaty waka, raga scales glowing with Vedic fire—and it’s alive, ringing out from Kaikoura’s shores to anywhere the wind carries it. For us in Aotearoa, it’s a hui, a gathering—hear a sitar’s cry, feel a bhangra’s bounce, catch Bharat’s spark in every note.
This music bridges worlds—past and present, village and city, Bharat and beyond. It’s in the qawwali that fills a shrine with longing, the Carnatic that steadies a morning prayer, the Bollywood beat that gets a wedding jumping. It’s not just music; it’s wairua, a spiritual force, and Bharat’s got it humming strong, a sound that invites us all to listen, to feel, to join the chorus.
Excerpt
That’s 47 notes in our 100-article rāka of Bharat Is Not for Beginners, and Bharat’s still singing—a land of remarkable gifts. Keep your ears tuned as we play through more of its taonga. Join us tomorrow for Article 48: “Bharat Is Not for Beginners – The Living Canvas Returns: Bharat’s Artistic Innovations and Living Visions”, where we’ll paint back into the hues that colour a civilisation’s dreams.
