๐ต Introduction to Music
Notes, scales, rhythm, tempo, octaves and fundamentals.
๐ต What is Music?
Music is organized sound โ combining melody (swar), rhythm (taal), and harmony to create an aesthetic experience. It is one of the oldest forms of human expression.
Three pillars of music:
โข Swar (Note/Pitch) โ the frequency of a sound. Higher frequency = higher pitch. Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni in Indian music; Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti in Western (solfege).
โข Taal (Rhythm) โ the pattern of beats in time. Provides the time structure. Teen Taal has 16 beats, Dadra has 6.
โข Raag/Scale โ a set of notes arranged in ascending (aaroha) and descending (avroha) order that gives a composition its mood and character.
Tempo โ speed of music. Measured in BPM (Beats Per Minute).
Vilambit (slow) โ Madhya (medium) โ Drut (fast) in Indian classical.
Largo โ Andante โ Moderato โ Allegro โ Presto in Western.
Octave โ distance between one note and the next note of the same name (double the frequency). Sa in lower octave (Mandra) โ Sa in middle (Madhya) โ Sa in higher (Taar).
Indian: Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni (7 shuddha swaras) + komal/tivra variants = 12 notes total. Oral tradition. Raga-based. Improvisation is central. Taal governs rhythm.
Western: C D E F G A B (7 natural notes) + sharps/flats = 12 notes. Written notation on staff. Scale-based (major, minor). Harmony and chords important.
Similarity: Both have exactly 12 notes in an octave. Sa = C, Re = D, Ga = E, Ma = F, Pa = G, Dha = A, Ni = B (approximate mapping in natural scale).
Frequency (Hz) โ vibrations per second. A above middle C = 440 Hz (international standard).
Amplitude โ loudness. More amplitude = louder sound (measured in decibels, dB).
Timbre โ tone quality โ why a sitar and flute playing the same note sound different.
Duration โ how long a note is held.
Human hearing range: 20 Hz โ 20,000 Hz. Music typically uses 27 Hz โ 4,186 Hz.
The Music Spectrum โ Swar & Taal
AnimationSa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni โ 7 shuddha swaras form the basis of all Indian classical music.
Music Concepts Explorer
InteractiveSa (Shadja) = C | Re (Rishabh) = D | Ga (Gandhar) = E | Ma (Madhyam) = F | Pa (Pancham) = G | Dha (Dhaivat) = A | Ni (Nishad) = B
Full names mnemonic: Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni = Saregama = name of famous music company!
Why Sa and Pa are Achal (fixed/immovable):
โข Sa is the tonic โ the base note from which all other notes are measured. It is the anchor of the raga. Its frequency defines the scale.
โข Pa is the perfect fifth of Sa โ the most consonant interval (3:2 frequency ratio). Together Sa-Pa form the most stable harmonic relationship.
โข All other notes (Re, Ga, Ma, Dha, Ni) have variants: komal (flat โ lower pitch) or tivra (sharp โ higher pitch), giving us 12 total notes.
12 notes in Indian system:
Sa | Komal Re | Shuddha Re | Komal Ga | Shuddha Ga | Shuddha Ma | Tivra Ma | Pa | Komal Dha | Shuddha Dha | Komal Ni | Shuddha Ni = same 12 chromatic notes as Western music.
Swara (Indian music): Similar to a Western note but defined by its relationship to Sa (the tonic). Sa, Re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, Ni. Each swara has a specific emotional character. A swara is both a note and an aesthetic unit.
Shruti (microtone): Much finer divisions of the octave. Indian classical theory recognizes 22 shrutis per octave โ more than the 12 semitones used in Western equal temperament. This gives Indian music its characteristic "in-between" notes that cannot be played on a piano but can be sung or played on a sitar/violin.
Relationship: Shruti > Swara > Raga. Multiple shrutis map to one swara. Multiple swaras make a raga.
The 22 shrutis are theorized in Natya Shastra (Bharata Muni, ~200 BCE) โ one of the oldest music theory texts in the world.