Sohini is a raga in Hindustani classical music in the Marwa thaat. Alternate transliterations include Sohani and Sohni. Like Bahar, it is a small raga, with not much space for elaboration. It emotes the feel of longing, of passive sensuousness.
Thaat | Marva |
---|---|
Time of day | Before sunrise |
Arohana | S G M̄ D N Ṡ |
Avarohana | Ṡ N D, G M̄ D G M̄ G Ṟ S |
Pakad |
|
Vadi | D |
Samavadi | G |
Synonym |
|
Technical Description
editTall, virgin, charming, her eyes like lotuses, ears clustered with celestial flowers, Sohini is a lovely form. She holds a lute and her songs are amorous
Rāga kalpa druma, p. 19[1]
The raga is of audav-shadav nature, i.e., it has five swaras (notes) in the arohana (ascent) and six in the avarohana. Rishabh (Re) is komal and Madhyam (Ma) is tivra , while all other swaras are shuddha. Pancham (Pa) is not used.
The vadi swara is Dha, and samvadi is Ga. The rishabh is weak, but Gandhar (Ga) is strong, unlike Marwa. It is an Uttaranga pradhan raga, with the higher notes on the saptak (octave) being used more frequently.
Samay (Time)
editRaga Sohini is associated with very late night / pre-dawn, the last or eighth period of day, roughly from 3-6AM. (3 AM - 6 AM) : 4th Prahar of the Night : Sandhi-Prakash Raag[2]
Film Songs
editSong | Movie | Composer | Singers |
---|---|---|---|
Kuhu Kuhu Bole Koyaliya | Suvarna Sundari | P. Adinarayana Rao | Mohammad Rafi & Lata Mangeshkar |
Jhumati Chali Hava | Sangeet Samrat Tansen | S. N. Tripathi | Mukesh (singer) |
Prem Jogan Ban Ke | Mughal-e-Azam | Naushad | Bade Ghulam Ali Khan |
Jivan Jyot Jale | Grahasti (film) | Ravi (composer) | Asha Bhosle |
Kanha Re Kanha | Truck Driver(1970 film) | Sonik-Omi | Lata Mangeshkar |
Note that these are composed in the Carnatic ragam Hamsanandi, which Sohni sounds similar to.
Further information
editIt is somewhat similar to Marwa and Puriya ragas in the same thaat,[3] and also to Basant in the Poorvi thaat.
References
edit- ^ Daniélou, Alain (1968). The Rāgas of northern Indian music. Barrie and Rockliff, London. p. 334. ISBN 0-214-15689-3.
- ^ "Raag Sohani - Indian Classical Music". Tanarang.com. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
- ^ Parrikar, Rajan (18 February 2002). "The Marwa Matrix". The South Asian Women's Forum. Archived from the original on 29 March 2010. Retrieved 16 December 2009.