MRIDANGAM MAGIC, MATHEMATICALLY SPEAKING
By Carolyn Oei, 27 January 2019
Cover image: Mackerel
I’ve often joked with close friends that I might be an Indian princess in exile in a nonya’s body. I take very easily to most things Indian; the food, the music and movies – hell, even my husband is three-quarters Indian.
Maybe it isn’t a joke, after all.
So enamoured am I of Indian culture that when I saw the promo for a Mridangam Carnatic Workshop as part of ARTWALK Little India, I immediately signed up.
The mridangam is a percussion instrument with a bass sound on one end and tuned an octave higher on the other. One usually plays the mridangam with one’s dominant hand against the end with the higher note.
As much as I had listened to Indian classical music previously, I was more familiar with the tabla than the mridangam, which is a key instrument in the Carnatic (or Karnatak) musical style of South India.
We didn’t know what to expect of the workshop, but from its name, we were excited about having a go at banging on a drum.
Much to our elation, we did! But it was all too brief. For the most part of the one-hour workshop, we were taken through an extended and exhausting exercise in mental sums. It was exhausting for me because I really and truly am not mathematically inclined. I just cannot.
Master mridangam tutor, Tripunithura Sreekanth of the Singapore Indian Fine Arts Society, taking workshop attendees through the, literally, one-two-three-four’s of basic Carnatic beats. Photo: Mackerel