Par e Sur
editor: Lars-Christian Koch
interpreter: Agni Bag - Khageshwar Bag - Lalo Bag - Ranjit Bag - Savasan Bariha - Thebasan Bariha - Achut Behera - Ananda Benya - Tarachan Bhaira - Kirodho Borhei - Ramesh Gurka - Bhaja Kumbhar - Bhaja Mahanand - Gaura Mahanand - Prashanna Mahanand - Uddhaba Mahanand - Sukru Meher - Luchan Mohanan - Mangulu Mohanand - Nortam Mohanand - Biranchi Padhan - Alekha Panigrahi - Sudarsan Raut - Ghanasysam Seth - Thobiro Seth - Alekh Tandi - Bulku Tandi - Gupala Tandi - Jagdis Tandi - Nilaboni Tandi - Samsundor Tandi - Sorda Tandi
audio recording: Lidia Guzy
booklet writer: Lidia Guzy
Sounds of the Goddess from the Bora Sambar Region of Eastern India
Museum Collection Berlin
Publisher: Wergo
Edition: CD - 112-page booklet, slipcase
Order number: SM 17132
Price: 23,50 €
including VAT and plus delivery-
Rebecca Saunders
Stirrings Still -
Carsten Hennig
Massenbewegung -
Lars-Christian Koch
Lestari
Description:
The connection between the earthly-social and the transcendental worlds of the gods and the dead as well as the crossing of the threshold between life and death are always enacted in the Bora Sambar Region of western Orissa through music, specific ritual instruments and ritual mediators, the musicians.
The sound of the instruments and the specific rhythm of the traditional ritual music represent the respective language of local goddesses. Together with the voices of the priest-musicians they are an expression of the communication between the world of the living, the world of the gods and the world of the dead.
The recordings for this CD - a co-production with the Berlin Ethnological Museum - were made between 2003 and 2006 in western Orissa, Eastern India and published on WERGO for the first time. Lidia Guzy, who is also responsible for the extensive liner notes, recorded this music during her 14-months-long fieldwork in the course of her research project "Music and Dance Traditions of Sambalpur/western Orissa". During this research on the immaterial culture of western Orissa, she documented unknown, forgotten or endangered musical traditions of the socially marginalized Ganda musicians and of the various non-Brahmin priest-musicians of the region.
Content:
Binjhal Music:
Karma (vocal)
Karamsani puja par (rhythm during the worship of goddess Karamsani)
Biha git (marriage song)
Ganda baja (Sounds of the Goddess):
Ganda baja / Devta Nacha par (rhythm of the gods’ dance)
Nachinya par (marriage rhythms)
Sulha par (holy rhythms of the goddesses)
Dhunkel Performance:
Bandana (Prayer)
Music of the Non-Brahmin Priests:
Bhalu bans (the bear’s flute)
Brahma veena: Daan chheka dino git (songs during funeral rituals)
Brahma veena: Purana beena git (old Beena song)
Dambru: Ganga Sradha git (commemorial song for the dead)
Devgunya: Devta Nacha (the dance of gods) - Devgunya: Sambalpuri par (rhythm of the Sambalpur region)
Sarangi Performance:
Tika Govind Chandra Kathani (story about the king Govind Chandra)
Sanchar:
several sanchar rhythms
Radha git (song for the worship of Radha)
Krishna guru party:
Karma git (song)
sanchar at a family planning educational meeting
sanchar used to honour Krishna
Krishna guru git (song in honour of god Krishna)
Further information to this edition:
Back_Slipcase_SM_17132.pdf
Search here
Basket
Advanced Search
Help
Further questions?
Have a look at our help section for answers to the most frequently asked questions.









