Rama Vaidyanathan’s Bharatanatyam recital was a studied effort, if a little subdued. The senior dancer chose a few compositions outside the Bharatanatyam repertoire, and presented them in her distinct style, while retaining their integrity.
The music, recorded with senior musicians such as Sudha Raghuraman (vocal), G. Raghuraman (flute), Dr. S. Vasudevan (nattuvangam), and Manohar Balatchandirane (mridangam), was of a high order, notwithstanding the patchy recording.
The opening Shabdam, ‘Thillai ambalam’, ragamalika, misra chapu, by Thanjavur Arunachalam Pillai, was stretched to afford further scope to the dancer. Simple nritta patterns set to music alternated with passages of the nayika yearning to be with Nataraja, the dancing god of Chidambaram.
Rama took artistic liberties to spice up some pieces. Syama Sastri’s ‘Samini rammannave’ (Anandabhairavi), the only piece in which the composer deals with madhura bhakti, was the centrepiece. In this composition, the pallavi loosely translates as, ‘Please ask my Swami to come here’, and Rama‘s creativity in presenting the lines as, ‘Please bring him to me; I cannot say his name, I will give you clues…’ enhanced its appeal.
Similarly Rama’s artistry shone when she portrayed the Charanam line, ‘I cannot take Kama’s love darts any more’.
Clever delineations
Some clever delineations marked the segment where the nayika asks her lotus-eyed friend why she is being as indecisive as a pendulum instead of carrying her message to Varadaraja. She repeated the sequence at the end of the varnam, threading the composition together. Another arresting part was the Garuda Sevai in the anupallavi.
In ‘Sati ninnu gelichenu’ (tuned by Sathiraju Venumadhav in Karnaranjani, khanda chapu), Rama added a plausible context to Annamacharya’s words, ‘The lady wins over you… Find it in you to praise her…’ The imaginative dancer interpreted it as the poet counselling Venkateshwara after his tiff with Lakshmi.
Rama had her fill of rhythmic challenges in the khanda jathi-ata tala varnam that had a delayed eduppu. The jathis (Subodh Sridhar) were just right, with a ‘thakadimi thakita’ thread running through them, especially in the trikala jathi. Rama executed them with perfect timing, footwork and agility.
‘Vittala namachi shala bharli’, an abhang by Jagadish Kebuthar, tuned by Sudha in Sohini, Adi, concluded the well-planned concert.
The Chennai-based writer reviews classical dance.
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