Opening a concert of abhangs is like stepping into a river that has been flowing for centuries: the water is older than any single voice, and yet each new singer shapes its course. I’ve always been drawn to that living continuity — how a single line of saint-poetry can outlast empires and yet arrive at a listener’s heart as if it were whispered this morning.
A Signature Program: Abhangwari
For the past eleven years, a signature concert series called Abhangwari has become a place where that river is both honored and remade. Led by a respected Hindustani classical vocalist known for his deep engagement with Marathi repertoire, Abhangwari treats abhangs not as museum pieces but as living songs: structurally rooted in classical training, emotionally open, and arranged to welcome listeners who may be new to the form.
What Abhangwari does well is hold two impulses in balance. On one hand there is rigorous classical grounding — careful attention to raga, to the unfolding of a melodic line, to the discipline of rhythm. On the other hand there is a storyteller’s generosity: phrasing that opens the meaning of a verse, dynamics that let the poetic line breathe, and an accessible presentation that bridges concert-hall refinement and devotional warmth.
Why Abhangs Endure
Abhangs are the devotional poems and songs that emerged from the Marathi bhakti tradition. Composed by saint-poets across centuries, these songs are at once personal prayers, social critiques, and philosophical epiphanies. Their language is earthy and direct. Their metaphors—of hunger, of pilgrimage, of a single-minded devotion—travel easily between the intimate and the cosmic.
A short, familiar line captures that intimacy: "Tuka mala vichara nako." It is a fragment that points to a larger posture: do not dissect the devotion; honour its urgency. Abhangs like this have a clarity and a compression of feeling that composers and performers return to again and again.
How the Program Interprets Abhangs
When I listen to an abhang presented in a program like Abhangwari, I notice several musical choices that make the old words feel immediate:
- Classical grounding: The melody often sits within a raga’s expressive world. That gives a tonal logic and a palette of micro-ornamentation (meend, gamak, and subtle ornamentation) that deepen the line.
- Emotional architecture: The singer shapes phrases with dynamics and timing so that the poem’s turning points breathe. A pause, a slowed descent, or a sudden rhythmic lift can reframe a single couplet.
- Respect for tradition: Arrangements rarely erase the original form. The performer acknowledges song structure and devotional intent, even when adding new accompaniments or harmonic textures.
- Accessibility: Between full-fledged classical elaboration and a straight render lies a middle path — enough improvisation to thrill connoisseurs, enough clarity to invite newcomers.
What audiences and cultural observers often remark upon is this generosity: concerts that educate while they enchant, that make listeners feel they are both guests and family.
Reflections on Eleven Years
A cultural program that reaches its eleventh year has done more than survive; it has cultivated repeat attention, refined its voice, and become a reference point. Continuity matters in musical traditions for practical reasons — repeated practice, returning musicians, the slow building of repertoire — and for cultural reasons: repetition creates a collective memory.
Longevity allows Abhangwari to do more ambitious things. It can map a saint-poet’s arc across seasons, present thematic cycles (love and renunciation, social conscience, the intimate divine), and give listeners a sense of development rather than a single snapshot. That cumulative effect is how traditions renew themselves: through sustained, careful attention rather than sudden reinvention.
The Experience in the Room
There is a hush that falls when a well-known abhang begins. The room leans forward not because the words are unfamiliar, but precisely because they are so familiar — and we want to see how the performer will read them today. I have seen listeners visibly moved, and I have seen young people hear an abhang for the first time and come away with bright, questioning faces. Cultural critics have noted that such programs help rescue saint-poetry from ossification, returning it to a performance context where meaning and music can rediscover each other.
A Short Suggested Listening List
If you want to begin or deepen your listening, here are five suggestions to carry with you — a mix of saint-poets and abhang traditions to explore:
- Abhangs of Tukaram — start with any recording that emphasizes voice and simple tala.
- Abhangs of Dnyaneshwar — contemplative songs that often blend philosophy and everyday image.
- Abhangs of Namdev — devotional intensity with a singing style that traveled across regions.
- Abhangs of Eknath — earthy, ethical, and richly storied compositions.
- Live recordings or curated sets from Abhangwari — to hear how these songs are shaped in a contemporary concert idiom.
(Seek respected concerts and archival recordings; each rendition will reveal different colors of the same song-world.)
Closing Reflection
Saint-poetry has a timeless power because it is, at root, practice as much as text. The words live only when sung, argued with, rested upon, misremembered, and re-sung. Programs like Abhangwari — quietly persistent and artistically careful — are the places where that practice continues.
If we think of an abhang as a small, urgent prayer thrown downstream, then a program like this is the repeated hand that throws it again and again. Eleven years is not merely a number; it is the measure of patience, of audience trust, and of cultural stewardship. In the end, the saints’ lines remain timeless precisely because living performers keep offering them back to us, in voice and music scaled to our present ears.
Suggested call to action: attend a live performance when you can, and compare recordings across generations — listen for the way the same verse changes its shape with each voice.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
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