Raag : Ahir-Bhairav

Ahir-Bhairav

 
Raga Ahir-Bhairav
Thaat Bhairav
Samay Morning
Swaras Used Komal Rishabh and Komal Nishad, all other notes are Shuddha.

Raaga Details
Raaga Ahir Bhairav
 
ThaatBhairavVaadi/Samvaadi
Prahar1 (6 am - 9 am)Important Anuvaadi
AarohaS-r-G-m-P-GmD-n-S' Bhaav
AvarohaS'-n-D-P-m-G-r-S-'n-r-SSaptak-pradhaanata
PakadD-P-m-G-mr-S-'D-'n-r-STanpura Tuning
JaatiSampoorn-SampoornNotation Help

Notation Reference
The following notations are used to describe notes of a raag :
Lower notes are written in lower case and upper notes in upper case. Thus,
 § Shuddh notes are notated as S, R, G, m, P, D, N
 § Komal notes are notated as r, g, d, n
 § Teevra Ma is notated as M
All notes belong to madhya-saptak by default. Notes of mandra-saptak are preceded by ' sign, and notes of taar-saptak are succeeded by ' sign. For instance 'N means Ni of mandra-saptak, and S' means Sa of taar-saptak.
A comma represents a pause.

A Statistical Analysis of Raga Ahir Bhairav 

Soubhik Chakraborty, Rayalla Ranganayakulu, Shivee Chauhan, Sandeep Singh Solanki and 
Kartik Mahto 


Keywords 

Multinomial distribution; raga; relative frequency; statistical analysis 

1. Introduction 
Although mathematics and music have been linked since the time of the ancient Greeks 
(Benson 2006), the link between music and statistics has been relatively recent, thanks to the 
progress in computer technology and the avaibility of digitized scores (musical notation). 
Unlike Western classical music where the scores are fixed, Indian classical music is quite 
extempore. This means we can only analyze such a performance provided it is recorded first 
(so that the score can be fixed). In spite of the power which statistical methods bring to 
modeling, it is still quite a challenge to statistically model a performance of Indian classical 
music given that, despite the binding rules of the raga (fixation of notes, typical note 
combinations and how they are to be used in a raga etc.) the artist still has infinite freedom to 
express himself. The present paper gives a statistical analysis of a vocal rendition of the raga 
Ahir Bhairav rendered by a trained vocalist and D. Mus. from Banaras Hindu University, 
India.1
 A raga, the nucleus of Indian classical music, is a melodic structure with fixed notes and a 
set of rules characterizing a certain mood endorsed through performance (Chakraborty et al. 
2008a). Here, the melodic structure refers to sequences of notes often with micro-pitch (sruti) 
alterations and articulated with an expressive sense of timing. Longer phrases are built by 
joining these melodic atoms together leading to a tonal hierarchy (Chordia and Rae 2007). For 
more on tonal hierarchy in North Indian music, we refer the reader to Castellano et al. (1984). 
 Before going into the analysis, we take a look at some of the basic features of Indian 
Classical music in general and raga Ahir Bhairav in particular.
The notes in the raga are called swars. The seven swars Sa, Re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha and Ni in 
Indian music correspond to Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La and Si respectively in Western music. The 
stay notes permissible in a raga are called nyas swars. The terms Vadi, Samvadi, Anuvadi, 
Alpvadi and Vivadi swars refer to, respectively, the most important, the second most important, 
the important but not vadi or samvadi, the unimportant or weak, and the non-permissible notes 
respectively. Ragas can be grouped according to thaats depending on the manner in which 
permissible notes are fixed. This is similar to the notion of mode in Western music. There are 
ten thaats in North Indian classical music and many more in the South. The ten thaats are 
Bilawal, Kafi, Khamaj, Purvi, Bhairav, Kalyan, Todi, Marwa, Bahairavi and Asavari. For 
Example, {Sa, Sudh Re, Komal Ga, Sudh Ma, Pa, Sudh Dha and Komal Ni} represents the 
Kafi thaat and accordingly, ragas Bageshree and Bhimpalashree both belong to this thaat as 

they use these notes. Not all ragas can be easily placed in a thaat, however. E.g. our own
example, Ahir Bhairav itself creates a confusion! Ragas are also classified according to jati
depending on the number of notes allowed in ascent (arohan) and descent (awarohan). The 
terms Aurabh, Sarabh and Sampoorna refers to five, six and seven notes being used 
respectively. For example, Ahir Bhairav in our case is a Sampoorna-Sampoorna raga as it 
allows seven notes in ascent and seven in descent (detailed later). The pakad (catch) is a 
defining phrase or a characteristic pattern for a raga describing its movement. For example, 
{Pa Ma Ga Ma Ga} is a tell-tale sign of raga Bihag.
2


In Western music, a piece of music is in a certain key, i.e., it uses the notes of a particular 
major or minor scale. The harmonies and counterpoint3

 developed using those notes are 
crucial. In contrast, Indian classical music does not emphasize harmony and does not feature 
counterpoint. The interest and complexities lie in melodies and rhythms. A typical Indian 
classical music performance features a single melody instrument or voice (in case of voice, it is 
shadowed by one or more accompanying melody instrument like a harmonium, a sarangi or a 
violin) accompanied by percussion such as a tabla and a drone (generally Sa-Pa or Sa-Ma, in 
exceptional cases Sa-Ga or Sa-Dha) providing a harmonical base (well, this is perhaps the only 
place we have a harmony!) rendered by tanpura. The artist generally “stars” with an alaap in 
which the raga is elaborated without percussion and then plays a song-like composition called 
“gat” where the percussion begins. The drone is present throughout the performance. (For more 
on Indian Classical music, see Menon (2007) and Priyamvada (2007). Readers familiar with 
Western music but new to Indian music will benefit from Jones (2009).) 

2. Analysis of the Raga Ahir Bhairav 

<See the online version to listen> 

Raga: Ahir Bhairav4
 Musical features: 

Thaat: Not specific, generally taken as “Mishra Bhairav” 
Arohan (ascent): S r G M P D n S 
Awarohan (descent): S n D P M G r S 
Jati: Sampooorna-Sampoorna (7 notes allowed in ascent and 7 in descent) 
Vadi Swar (most important note): M 
Samvadi Swar (secondmost important note): S 
Prakriti (nature): Restful 
Pakad (catch): S, r G M, G M r, n D, n r S 
Nyas Swar (Stay notes): M and S 

Time of rendition: morning (pre-dawn) 
example, Ahir Bhairav itself creates a confusion! Ragas are also classified according to jati
depending on the number of notes allowed in ascent (arohan) and descent (awarohan). The 
terms Aurabh, Sarabh and Sampoorna refers to five, six and seven notes being used 
respectively. For example, Ahir Bhairav in our case is a Sampoorna-Sampoorna raga as it 
allows seven notes in ascent and seven in descent (detailed later). The pakad (catch) is a 
defining phrase or a characteristic pattern for a raga describing its movement. For example, 
{Pa Ma Ga Ma Ga} is a tell-tale sign of raga Bihag.
2
 
 
In Western music, a piece of music is in a certain key, i.e., it uses the notes of a particular 
major or minor scale. The harmonies and counterpoint3
 
 developed using those notes are 
crucial. In contrast, Indian classical music does not emphasize harmony and does not feature 
counterpoint. The interest and complexities lie in melodies and rhythms. A typical Indian 
classical music performance features a single melody instrument or voice (in case of voice, it is 
shadowed by one or more accompanying melody instrument like a harmonium, a sarangi or a 
violin) accompanied by percussion such as a tabla and a drone (generally Sa-Pa or Sa-Ma, in 
exceptional cases Sa-Ga or Sa-Dha) providing a harmonical base (well, this is perhaps the only 
place we have a harmony!) rendered by tanpura. The artist generally “stars” with an alaap in 
which the raga is elaborated without percussion and then plays a song-like composition called 
“gat” where the percussion begins. The drone is present throughout the performance. (For more 
on Indian Classical music, see Menon (2007) and Priyamvada (2007). Readers familiar with 
Western music but new to Indian music will benefit from Jones (2009).) 
 
2. Analysis of the Raga Ahir Bhairav 
 
<See the online version to listen> 
 
Raga: Ahir Bhairav4
 Musical features: 
 
Thaat: Not specific, generally taken as “Mishra Bhairav” 
Arohan (ascent): S r G M P D n S 
Awarohan (descent): S n D P M G r S 
Jati: Sampooorna-Sampoorna (7 notes allowed in ascent and 7 in descent) 
Vadi Swar (most important note): M 
Samvadi Swar (secondmost important note): S 
Prakriti (nature): Restful 
Pakad (catch): S, r G M, G M r, n D, n r S 
Nyas Swar (Stay notes): M and S 
Time of rendition: morning (pre-dawn) 
2.1. Statistical Analysis 
 
What is the importance of modeling from a musical perspective? It is only through modeling 
that we can answer questions such as “what is the probability for the next note to be a vadi or a 
samvadi swar?” By a vadi swar is meant that note which plays the most significant role in 
expressing the raga. A samvadi swar similarly is the second most significant note. When we 
say that a vadi swar is so called as it plays the most significant role in expressing the raga, 
what it tells us, apart from elaborating the mood characterizing the raga, is whether the raga is 
purvanga pradhan (first half more important) or uttaranga pradhan (second half more 
important), depending on whether the note in question is one of the notes from Sa to Pa or 
from Ma to Sa. As Ma and Pa fall in both the halves thus created, expert guidance is needed to 
decide the more important half in case the vadi swar turns out to be one of these two notes. 
Also the vadi swar gives us a rough idea of the ideal timing of the raga’s rendition. For a 
purvanga pradhan raga, such as Pilu, the timing broadly is 12 a.m.. to 12 p.m. For an 
uttaranga pradhan raga, such as Bhairav, the time period is somewhere between 12 p.m. and 
12 a.m. (Chakraborty et al. 2008a) 
 
In the book Music and Probability (Temperley 2007), David Temperley has investigated music 
perception and cognition from a probabilistic point of view by means of extensive usage of 
Bayesian techniques. 

When an artist is rendering a raga, it is not possible to say definitely which note will come 
next. One can, still, assign a probability for a particular note to come. Now, let us direct our 
attention to a particular note say Sa (or Do), the tonic. One question of interest is: at every 
instance, does Sa have the same probability of occurring? The same question can be raised for 
every other note permissible in the raga. If this probability is fixed, our model is multinomial, 
otherwise quasi-multinomial (see also the appendix). Additionally, independence of notes 
overall is also required, but this is weaker than mutual independence and hence, as we shall 
see, generally fulfilled. If the performer is a novice and can use a wrong note (vivadi or varjit 
swar) by mistake, such a possibility, W (for wrong), should also be kept in mind to make the 
list of possible notes exhaustive. One then asks for W’s probability as well! This is not required 
here as we are analyzing an accomplished vocalist. Since a note can be vadi, samvadi, anuvadi, 
alpvadi or vivadi with respect to a raga, it is logical that its probability is raga-dependent. For 
example, Pa, being alpvadi in Bageshree, will have a small probability there, but in Kafi the 
same note has a high probability (one musical school holds Pa as vadi in Kafi; another school  4
holds Komal Ga as vadi; even if Pa is not a vadi, it definitely is anuvadi). Again, Pa is vivadi 
for Malkauns, and hence its probability there is zero. 

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