Ancient Tamil poetry sung to Carnatic music?

Topic started by Kazhuku (@ spider-wq071.proxy.aol.com) on Wed Jul 25 23:28:37 .
All times in EST +10:30 for IST.

So far, most of the Tamil texts sung in Karnatik music that I have heard come from mediaeval or early modern Hindu poetry, from the
period that was heavily influenced by Sanskrit. It is also easy to find the greatest modern poet, Bharatiyar, set to Karnatik music. In any case, my favourite Karnatik singers perform texts that are no older than a few centuries.

With the great wealth of ancient Tamil poetry --
Sangam poems from the Ainkurunuru, the urintokai, the Pattuppattu;
narrative poems like the Cilappatikaram;
even the Tirukkural --
I would like to know if any Karnatik vocalists are performing such ancient pre-Hindu Tamil poetry.

The development of Carnatic music as we know it in the present took shape in the days of Tyagaraja, at a time when Sanskritized Tamil
poetry flourished with devotional Hindu themes for deities like Krsna, Rama, etc. Tamil literature, after all, with ANTAL and the
Azhvars, was the first to initiate the Bhakti movement in the early mediaeval period that later swept all India. So it is understandable how the Karnatik tradition relies on this genre of poetry.

But I have thought with the revival of Tamil consciousness and ancient Sangam poetry and Murukan hymns, that it might be adapted to Karnatik music. Has this ever been done? Is it possible? I imagine that to authentically revive ancient Tamil songs one would wish to restore the
use of ancient instruments mentioned in that poetry, such as the yazh.


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