The politics of classical recitals: A rasika’s tryst with classical art
In the second entry, a look at how the rasika, or the
connoisseur comes to be
Where the artists and the stage contribute in creating
the spectacle of a classical art recital, it is the rasika or the
connoisseur who is co-constitutive in infusing class, hierarchy and power
relations into a cultural pursuit. Class distinctions and hierarchies are
articulated in the difference imagined between the ‘audience’ and the ‘rasika’
so that while a classical recital might be open to all, it is only the
connoisseur who is seen to embody those artistic faculties essential for an
earnest critique and appreciation of the classical art.
Local contexts of caste and class are at play in
producing differentiated rasikas in specific locations formulated on the
axis of power structures dominant in that region. For instance, in Maharashtra,
a lavani recital staged in Kolhapur merits a rasika of the
landowning class because here, the dance form can not only be enjoyed and
revelled in but is also considered to be high art. Upper caste, rich men can
afford the luxury of the lavani, and enjoy its sensual pleasures not always
accessible in the same ways to the lower classes.
Contrarily, in the nationalist Brahminical set-up of
Pune, lavani is far from being high art, rather it is elevated to the
status of ‘folk’ dance only when the mantle of performing the lavani is
taken up by a renowned ‘classical’ artiste. Categories of classical and folk,
high brow and low brow are thus in flux, perpetuated by socio-political
structures that determine the processes with which a dance like lavani can acquire legitimacy,
status and dignity in varied regions.
Thus, along with the art and the site of the
performance, it is also the perspective of the audiences that gives form to an
imagined notion of what a classical recital ought to be. A rasika is
thereby not born, but produced through a set of social, political and cultural
markers that not only establish class and caste distinctions but also are
suggestive of varied definitions of modernity.
In the earlier entry, I drew a comparison between the
scale and fame of Shaniwarwada and Sawai Gandharwa with concerts like the NH7 Weekender
or the Sunburn Festival. A similar comparison between the audiences who attend these
different festivals throws up distinctions right from the manner in which they
are addressed. Those attending a music concert or a rock show are part of a ‘crowd,’
the ones attending a lavani and tamasha are often the sahibs
or the sheths and those sitting down for an evening of classical music
and dance are the rasikas.
It is assumed that intellect, artistic inclinations
and the right appreciation of art are attributes inherent in the rasika
where by the varied khayals, bandish and thumris are appropriately
enjoyed and revered. In a typical Hindustani classical recital, how well the khayal
is received by the audience suggests the virtuosity of the performer and thus forms a
large chunk of the recital. On the other hand, the thumri sang towards
the rear end of the performance simply adds a bit of poetry and lyric to the raag.
A true rasika is mindful of this hierarchy within art itself and knows enough to immerse oneself completely in the khayal, while enjoying
the thumri simply like a tiny sweet treat at the end of a particularly
grand meal.
As such, the sensibility of a rasika who
inevitably belongs to a particular caste and class group, is so formulated that
for the true connoisseur art transcends entertainment – assumed to be the main reason
that compels undergrads blithely unaware of what 'real' art constitutes, to attend weekenders – to become a highly stimulating,
intellectual pursuit.
Here I am reminded of the Italian philosopher Antonio
Gramsci’s conceptualisation that what is beneficial for the elites is deemed to
be beneficial for all. Because through the production of such a rasika, classical
art is also asserted as real, Indian art that those of a massy artistic leaning
ought to aspire to. The audiences who attend two of Pune’s grandest classical
recitals inevitably belong to such middle and upper-class households that can
truly appreciate this celebration of Indian art. Within these families, children are most often
than not engaged in acquiring training in these high arts like Kathak and Bharatnatyam or Carnatic and Hindustani sangeet.
The glorious choreographies thus presented at the
Shaniwarwada dance festival then connote the brilliance of the artist and the praise
of the rasika. This too is achieved in a particular manner such that the
दाद
does
not constitute hooting or whistling (that would be too ungentrified). But when rasikas
enjoy a particular composition, they must exclaim ‘Waah!’ or ‘Kya baat hai!’
or burst into applause following a touching abhinaya rendition that evokes the romance
of Radha and Krishna or celebrates the victory of Rama over Ravana.
As a student of Kathak, I have been attending
classical dance recitals for as long as I can remember. During this time, I have
been educated in mastering the particular expressions and body language which
denote pleasure or disappointment in a recital and have also learnt the
subtleties of sartorial choices, what is known in the Natya Shastra as
the aharya abhinaya, that mark out the rasika from your average film
going, concert attending audience.
Simply put, class is produced not through money,
cultural practices of having vada pav at Shaniwarwada and coffee at Sawai
Gandharva are not enough and dressing appropriately for a classical concert
befits the most ardent rasika. This means that jeans and skirts are strict
no-nos and a kurta-salwar is the ideal outfit for young girls to wear at classical recitals.
The older, upper-class, caste audiences who can afford
to buy expensive season’s passes are decked up in chiffon, cotton and silk
sarees (here I direct you to Ashika’s
ponderings on the cotton saree for a glimpse of how saree produces socio-cultural
distinctions), jewelry and perfume. The men too, dress-up in their formal
best where as the boys who are students of the performers don on kurtis
as well.
That is not to say that modernity has not had its own
particular influence on classical art. Recital durations have become shorter,
choreographies have simplified and the distance between the artist and her
audience has widened. It is evident in the historical trajectories of
performing art that viewers could make a pharmaish or request for a
particular composition to be sung or danced. The relics of such practices are
evident in the pharmaish composition that is now a part of the
overarching recital which indicates that there existed such connections between
the performers and their audiences. Now there is silence, between the rasika
and the dancer, changing notions of cultural spectacles ban such an
interaction, particularly in a dance performance which might evoke memories of
the erstwhile courtesans or devdasis.
Modernity has also transformed the connoisseur, the
earlier urge to sit through a mehfil that stretches into midnight has
been replaced by a desire for a performance that concludes by late evening. Here too,
class operates in distinct ways so that while the middle-class audience might
head on for pav bhaji after attending the Shaniwarwada, the upper-class elites
would find their way out of the traffic to a fine-dine restaurant away from the
crowded, busy city area.
The two grand festivals in Pune, a city which also
hosts the NH7 weekender, are speaking to a mass of people who prefer Bollywood
music over live Hindustani and Carnatic concerts and contemporary over the classical
to suggest that their enduring presence means that they are not only modern and
relevant but simultaneously high art rooted in true Indian culture and values.
*
Image courtesy: nadroop.org
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