Rudra blues
My taste in music was and is heavily influenced by Bob Dylan. One of my motivations for coming to the US of A more than 20 years ago was to see Dylan. That was checked off within a year after showing up here. Okay, that was not the primary reason!
Most of you also know my penchant for runon sentences and my liking for using not so easily pronounceable words in conversation.
It is very much possible that my memory, vocabulary, run on sentences etc. all have roots in my childhood. As a toddler I used to sit patiently on my grandfathers lap for hours and listen to him recite scriptures. To this day that is my most favorite memory of him.
Jr. and the little one are always amazed by my memory and I keep telling them that if they just listen to certain sounds, there is a benefit to their brain and the way they can register things. It is true that I don't have any personal experimental proof of this with the western scientific method, but this is based on what the smart elders in my family concur with and it is possibly working in my favor. Nevertheless, not everything needs a proof this way as some experiements go on for generations over thousands of years! Maybe this is one such experiement in progress where these chants are taught?!
Jr. now knows almost 80% of the Chamakam and recites it with the correct pronunciation. I am not asking her to recite it, but just sit next to me when I recite. So far, so good..
We (Jr. and me) had an idea to do a video of the last stanza with some inspiration from Dylan's Subterranean Homesick blues.
It is funny that she was introduced to Dylan before she was introduced to Chamakam..
Here is the result..
You will see a video here somday where Jr. recites the entire thing. On a side note, we had a funny incident at home a few months ago when she was conscious of her accent when it came time to pronounce some words. Given that she knows neither Hindi or Sanskrit and only Tamil, she was not comfortable reading it in English.
My initial reaction was to enroll her in Sanskrit class in hopes that she will pick up the Devanagari script and that did not work out. Did find something else to motivate her.. A video where a bunch of Caucasian folks recite Rudram with perfect intonation (catch it from the 55second mark) that taught Jr. that it has nothing to do with where you are born and what your native tongue is and it is just a question of practice and finding a good teacher!
I called it the Rudra blues because sometimes listening to this or chanting this makes me miss my grandfather and the Kapaleeshwarar temple and also sends me back to simple and innocent days from my past. Then again, watching the kids pick it up makes me feel that some goodness is being transferred to the next generation!
Reader Comments (1)
Sundi ... you tend to give everything your signature touch ... keep going! :) ...I have read about Malcolm Gladwell's link between Chinese doing well in Math and the phonetics of their number system .... but with respect to our thing ... I have only heard Thaatha and appa telling about a link between the sound patterns generated by vedas and the benefits they have on us .... also Thaatha used to have his own rhythmic way of reciting vedas and ramayanam ... i am yet to see someone who recites the same way .... thaatha once shared with me about his experiences in learning vishnu sahasranamam and a few other shlokas from his grandfather who was a ganapadigal ... may be he picked it from him .. or may be he evolved his own style over the years ... but no one would probably ever know .... btw ... the 3.5 yr old Dylan's rendition was so cute :)