Tāl laboratory

This "laboratory" allows to dissect, explore and interact with some of the most representative tāls used in Hindustani classical music. Read the instructions below.

Instructions

Note: This tool still is work in progress and might experience some malfunctions. For an optimal performance, it is advised to use it in a computer (its use in tablets and cellphones might be too slow and cause synchronization problems) and with the browser Chrome.

  1. To start, choose a tāl from the dropdown menu. The number in brackets shows each tāl's mātrās. Once a tāl is chosen, its corresponding cycle appears as a big circumference. Each circle along this circumference represents a mātrā. The one on the top always correspond to the sam. Bigger circles that are accompanied by a hand gesture indicate the first mātrā of a vibhāg. Colored circles indicate tālī and the empty ones indicate khālī. The icon claping hands indicates that its corresponding mātrā is marked by a clap, and the icon waving hand indicates that its corresponding mātrā is marked with a hand wave.
  2. Syllables along the tāl circumference indicate the bol that the tablā performs in that position of the tāl cycle. The sound that the tablā plays can be listened to by clicking each bol.
  3. To listen to the full ṭhekā of the tāl click the "Start!" button. A red button along the tāl circumference shows its progress. An increasingly dark color shadow indicates the metrical tension that the tāl builds during its development, and its resolution when it reaches the sam. The slider at the bottom allows to adjust the number of "mpm" or "mātrās per minute," which is specified in a marker at the left of the slider. To listen again to the sound of each bol the playing of the tāl's ṭhekā must be stopped.
  4. As long as you become familiarized with the tāl's structure, you can deselect the options "ṭhekā", to hide the bols, "cursor", to hide the red cursor, and "tāl", to hide the mātrās.

This tool was created by Rafael Caro Repetto in the Musical Bridges project.

The representation of tāl used here is inspired in the one developed and used by RagaSphere.

All the content in this website is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Creative Commons License

The code is available under GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 in the Hindustani Tools GitHub repository.