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The sensual & the ecstaticMUSIC REVIEW
International New York Times
Last Updated IST
REVIVALIST The Manganiyar Seduction musicians from  Rajasthan, led by Daevo Khan, at the Rose Theatre.
REVIVALIST The Manganiyar Seduction musicians from Rajasthan, led by Daevo Khan, at the Rose Theatre.

With “The Manganiyar Seduction,” which arrived belatedly at the Rose Theatre recently after a visa-related delay, came still another facet of spirituality: communion with God achieved in a manner embracing the sensual and the ecstatic.

This rapturous approach to the eternal has touched many a Western lay person through the fervour and delight involved in its expression. “The Manganiyar Seduction,” a 70-minute theatrical presentation, conceived by Indian director Roysten Abel, appeals partly for similar reasons.

The soul of Abel’s presentation is traditional music preserved and performed by the Manganiyars, a caste of hereditary singers and instrumentalists based in Rajasthan. Though the community is Muslim, it embraces Hindu deities and festivals. Accordingly, in Abel’s work, two shorter songs — Halariya, a Hindu celebration of Krishna’s birth, and Neendarli, a traditional expression of a wife’s love for her husband — are woven into the fabric of Alfat Un Bin In Bin, a Sufi devotional based on poetry by Bulleshah.

The 38 musicians, all men in turbans and robes, and all Muslim apart from one Hindu, sat or kneeled in red-draped cubicles, stacked in four tiers and illuminated when their occupants performed. Opening with a lonely wail and drone played on a throaty bowed kamancheh, the music flowed in waves of melismatic singing, shimmering bowed sarangi, fluttering murli, pulsating dhols, a brilliantly twangy morchang and other instruments, surging to powerful climaxes before subsiding to build anew.

The more elaborate portions of “The Manganiyar Seduction” were co-ordinated by Daevo Khan, who served as a conductor, a dancer, and a soloist on castanets.

Though many audience members around me were frozen in rapt attention during the performance, I found it impossible to sit still. So buoyant and compelling were the work’s lively rhythmic currents. And after a thunderous finale, the instantaneous ovation that followed was as tumultuous as what had come just before.

For all its noble intent in bringing the Manganiyars’ eloquent music to a global audience, Abel’s show is potentially just as much a populist spectacle. Despite its elevated source material, you could imagine “The Manganiyar Seduction” settling comfortably into some Off Broadway house.

Seriously, think of it: 38 musicians, enchanting audiences with devotional sounds nightly. Now that is a seductive idea.

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(Published 11 December 2010, 18:28 IST)