Sargam is the
Hindustani or North Indian
equivalent to the western
solfege. Sargam is
practiced against a
drone and the emphasis is
not on the
scale but on the
intervals, thus it may be
considered
just intonation. The same
notes are also used in
South Indian
Carnatic music.
The notes, or swar, are Shadj,
Rishabh, Gandhara, Madhyam, Pancham, Dhaivat, Nishad. When
singing these become Sa, Re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, Ni, and sargam
stands for "Sa-Re-Ga-Ma". Only these syllables are sung, and
further designations are never vocalized. When writing these
become, S, R, G, M, P, D, N. A dot above a letter indicates
the octave higher, a dot below the octave lower. A line
below a letter indicates it is flat or komal, an
acute accent above a letter indicates it is sharp or
tivar. Natural is called shudda. Re, Ga, Dha, and
Ni may be either shudda or komal; Ma may be either shudda or
tivar and is then called tivra Ma. Sa and Pa are immovable
(once Sa is selected), forming a just
perfect fifth.
In certain forms of indian classical and
qwualli, when a rapid, 16th note sequence of the same note
is to be sung, sometimes different sylables are used in a
certain sequence to make the whole easier to pronounce. For
example instead of "sa sa sa sa sa" said really quickly, it
might be "sadadalisadadali" which lends itself more to a
quick and light tongue movement.
See also