Last week was the aradhana of
Puradara Dasa, the greatest composer in the field of Carnatic music.
Though we know about
Purandara’s songs and his life and times in the Vijayanagar capital of Hampi, not
much is known about his sons and why and how his compositions came to be lost.
Purandara is supposed to have
composed four lakhs and seventy five thousand songs. But only a thousand of
them survive.
What happened to the rest and
how were they lost. Where are the original compositions or notings if any. These
issues are all still in the realms of
mysteries and are yet to be resolved.
However, there are a few
facts which are not well known and which may have a bearing on further research
on Purandara, his family and compositions. These are not mere conjectures and there
are records to back them up.
When Achuta Deva Raya took
over the reigns of the Vijayanagar
Kingdom , Purandara Dasa had
warned him about the excesses being committed and he had also spelt out the
dangers of people leading a Epicurean life.
Neither the Emperor nor his
subjects paid any heed to the warning the catastrophe was very quick in coming
in the form of the Battle of Takilokta or Rakasa Tangadi. (Talikota is near
Bijapur in north Karnataka. However, the actual battle between the Vijayanagar and
Muslims was fought at two villages called Rakasa and Tangadi in 1565. The
battle saw the complete rout of the Vijayanagar Army and the beheading its 92-year-old
King, Rama Raya.)
The Muslim Armies of
Golconda, Ahmednagar, Berar and Bijapur marched upto Hampi and completely destroyed
the city. Purandara had died an year earlier in Hampi itself in 1564. By then,
his Guru, Vyasa Theertha had passed away in 1539 AD and Purandara was survived
only by his friend Kanaka Dasa.
When Purandara passed away,
the mantle of continuing the Dasa tradition fell of his son Madhwapathi Dasa
and of course Kanaka. When Hampi fell, Madhwapathi was still in the City,
safeguarding his father’s compositions and reciting them along with his own
compositions. He had along with him his two brothers-Hebbana Dasa and Lakshmana
Dasa.
However, when news reached Hampi
about the death of Rama Raya and of the march by the combined Muslim armies, Tirumala
Raya abandoned Hampi and fled, leaving the people to fend for themselves.
While Tirumala Raya locked
himself up with treasures at the Chandragiri fort near Tirupathi, Madhwapathi
Dasa and a few of his fellow composers along with his brothers moved to
Purandhar Gadh near present day Pune and settled down there.
Madhwapathi and his brothers took
with them whatever he could lay their hands on in their house and in the temple
his father frequented-his father’s compositions, a few notations and family
artifacts.
Did the three brothers learn
Marathi at Purandara Ghad or did they come back to Chandragiri when the
Vijayanagar Empire subsequently rehabilitated itself. These are questions which
are yet to be answered.
All we know is that several
hundred compositions were discovered in Purandara Ghad and brought to Mysore more than 200
years ago. These compositions were in Marathi and after they were brought to Mysore , they were
translated into Kannada.
A majority of the compositions
were in Batteesa Raga or the group of 32 ragas that he restricted himself to.
What poses difficulty for a
deeper research in Dasa Sahitya is the absence of written records of those
ages. The Dasa tradition of composing and singing was mainly oral. A composition
was sung and it was handed down from one Dasa to another.
Purandara’s songs too were orally
passed on from generation to generation. Of course, Vyasa Theertha gave it the
sanctity of religious texts and Purandara’s songs were heard regularly even in
temples in Tirupathi and Udupi and Hampi.
Another problem in sifting
fact from fiction is that Purandara did not have any formal disciple. The Dasa
tradition, which collapsed in 1565, once again revived under Vijaya Dasa and we
still have a tremendous body of literature to fall back upon. But still there
were no written records and the Dasa tradition continued to be an oral one.
It was only in the 19th century that the first tentative steps of taking down notations and putting the compositions on paper started. This tradition was started by Karigiri Rao ofMysore who was a disciple
of Mysore Sadashiva Rao. These notations
are in the 32 ragas enumerated by Purandara.
It was only in the 19th century that the first tentative steps of taking down notations and putting the compositions on paper started. This tradition was started by Karigiri Rao of
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