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RAAG EK RANG ANEK

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EDUTAINMENT

  • RAAG is a melodic framework for improvisation akin to a melodic mode in Indian classical music.
    -While the rāga is a remarkable and central feature of the classical music tradition, it has no direct translation to concepts in the classical European music tradition.
    -Each rāga is an array of melodic structures with musical motifs, considered in the Indian tradition to have the ability to “colour the mind” and affect the emotions of the audience.
    -Each rāga provides the musician with a musical framework within which to improvise.
    -The specific notes within a rāga can be reordered and improvised by the musician.
    -Rāgas range from small rāgas like Bahar and Shahana that are not much more than songs to big rāgas like Malkauns, Darbari and Yaman, which have great scope for improvisation and for which performances can last over an hour.
    -Rāgas may change over time, with an example being Marwa, the primary development of which has gone down to the lower octave compared to the traditionally middle octave.
    -Each rāga traditionally has an emotional significance and symbolic associations such as with season, time and mood. -The rāga is considered a means in Indian musical tradition to evoke certain feelings in an audience. -Hundreds of rāga are recognized in the classical tradition, of which about 30 are common.
    -There are two main classical music traditions, Hindustani (North Indian) and Carnatic (South Indian), and the concept of rāga is shared by both.
    -Rāga are also found in Sikh traditions such as in Guru Granth Sahib, the primary scripture of Sikhism.
    -Similarly it is a part of the qawwali tradition found in Sufi Islamic communities of South Asia.
    -Some popular Indian film songs and ghazals use rāgas in their compositions.
    -The roots of Indian classical music can be traced back nearly two thousand years to its origin in the Vedic hymns of the Hindu temples, the fundamental source of all Indian music.
    -Later on, many musical varieties, like, music for dance, music for instrument, music for vocal rendering, etc., got evolved.
    -So in practice, some musicologists gave importance of tala, some gave importance to the svaras, and some to purity of ragas.
    -RAAG Yaman emerged from the parent musical scale of Kalyan.
    -Considered to be one of the most fundamental ragas in Hindustani tradition, it is thus often one of the first ragas taught to students.
    -Raga Yaman expresses the ultimate humility.
    -The raga has an untainted appeal or urge of shaking off ego, haughtiness and arrogance.
    -One can completely surrender one’s soul to the ultimate, through immersing in the ecstatic melody of Yaman.
    -Prayer and love are complementarily expressed through the rendition of the raga just like the inseparable connection between the moon and moonbeam, or between fish and water.
    -Both the artistes and the audiences can reach the absolute nothingness through meditating the raga.
    -Yaman is the called the king of the entire raga,
    -Yaman means the full moon. -Hazrat Amir Khusrau composed the raga at the time of Khilji dynasty.
    -Raga Yaman is performed at a time when the nature or the universe creates an ambience of complete surrender to the ultimate, after a hectic day.
    -The rasa of Yaman emits when the nature takes all the living beings in her lap with kindness and generosity. -Yaman is a raga through which one can purify oneself with the holy hum of evening prayer at a mosque, temple, pagoda or church.
    -Raga Yaman is an evening raga which is romantic in nature.
    -Some say its origin is from the Persian mode “Ei’man” from which “Yaman” was derived.
    -Others say it has Vedic origins as Raga Yamuna which over time altered as Yaman.

-Raga Yaman generates bhakti, gambhir, shringar and suggestive rasa.

Organizational allergy cure

Organizational allergy cure! Very important for excellence and existence!!

Many organizations suffer due to allergic approach of individuals within such organizations. Unlike normal allergy, it operates strategically and hides from the notice of others without showing symptoms directly on real time. Organization with allergic nature normally carries the disease in leadership roles. Open systems get them addressed and go ahead with allergy cure. Other organizations may replace vital organs in the process thinking it will improve the health of the system but suffer due to the allergic nature that continues further.

To handle the situation periodically is the responsibility of the top management. Allergy comes from exaggeration of fear. Dust allergy for people is an example for such exaggeration. Someone get dust allergy even when thinking about dust.

Organizational allergy can appear in the form of joint pain as well. In both cases, the system suffers due to the undue behavior of the key people. Non co-operative and disruptive attitude comes when people are not comfortable with others. Getting rid of them becomes the target in such cases than achieving the targets.

There are many methods to cure this problem. Creation of interdependency is the best way to cure organizational allergy and arthritis. Incentive schemes on new initiatives that involve entire organization can do wonders in organizational allergy cure. The wise get connected with everyone. Others will restrict themselves into subordinate roles. They can also be inspired by individual incentive schemes.

Handle with care. Human are unpredictably wonderful.     

https://youtu.be/wWW8F7-9aiE

VISWAKARMA-PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE

VISWAKARMA-PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE

-Vishwakarma Jayanti is a day of celebration for Vishwakarma a Hindu god, the divine architect.
-He is considered as swayambhu and creator of the world.
-He constructed the holy city of Dwarka where Krishna ruled, the Maya Sabha of the Pandavas, and was the creator of many fabulous weapons for the gods.
-He is also called the divine carpenter, is mentioned in the Rig Veda, and is credited with Sthapatya Veda, the science of mechanics and architecture.
-The festival is observed primarily in factories and industrial areas, often on the shop floor.
-As a mark of reverence the day of worship is marked not only by the engineering and architectural community but by artisans, craftsmen, mechanics, smiths, welders, industrial workers, factory workers and others.
-They pray for a better future, safe working conditions and, above all, success in their respective fields.
-Workers also pray for the smooth functioning of various machines.
-The term Vishvakarman was originally used as an epithet for any supreme god and as an attribute of Indra and the Sun. -The name Vishvakarman occurs five times in the tenth book of the Rigveda.
-The two hymns of the Rigveda identify Vishvakarman as all-seeing, and having eyes, faces, arms and feet on every side and also has wings.
-Brahma, the later god of creation, who is four-faced and four-armed resembles him in these aspects.
-He is represented as being the source of all prosperity, as swift as thought and titled a seer, priest, lord of speech.
-The later parts of the Rigveda reveals efforts to find a satisfactory answer to the mysteries regarding the origin of the universe, the creation hymns present in these parts of the Rigveda mention individual creator gods as opposed to the collection of gods and their chiefs (Indra, Varuna, Agni, etc.) creating the world.
-In the Rig Veda Vishwakarman is visualised as the Ultimate Reality (later developed as Brahman) ,from whose navel all visible things Hiranyagarbha emanate.
-The same imagery is seen in Yajurveda purusha sukta, in which the divine smith Tvastar emerges from Vishwakarma.
-Hindu scriptures describe many of Vishwakarma’s architectural accomplishments.
-Through the four yugas (aeons of Hindu mythology), he had built several towns and temples for the gods.

  • Among them were, in chronological order, Svarga (Heaven) in the Satya Yuga, Lanka in the treta Yuga, and Dwarka (Krishna’s capital) in the dwapara Yuga.
    -The following are also built by VISWAKARMAS
    -Pushpaka Viman,
    -TRISHUL
    -SUDARSHAN CHAKRA
    -Vajra aayudham
    -Jagannath puri, Temple