
RAJASTHANI DANCES
GET YOUR QUOTE NOW !
Our staff of highly qualified travel
consultants are ready to assist you! Call +91 982 828 9199
24 hours a day through Monday to Sunday.
You can also send us an electronic request by email indianheritage@aol.com |
|

The music and dances of Rajasthan are heady, exciting, hypnotic and
compelling...and very much a part of the eternal appeal of this strange and wondrous
land...
Music and dance consititute the very warp and
weft of life in Rajasthan - indeed the state has very vibrant, highly evolved tradition of
performing arts carefully nurtured and sustained over the centuries.
THE
POPULAR DANCE FORMS
GHOOMAR
This is basically a community dance for women and performed on auspicious occasions. The
famous ghoomar, Rajasthans popular dance gets its name from
ghoomna, the graceful gyrating, which displays the spectacular colours of the
flowing ghaghra, the long skirt of the Rajasthani women.
GAIR
The gair of Mewar has inner and outer circles of dancers who move diagonally
or loop in and out. It is intricate and fascinating. The gair of Jodhpur is
performed in a single file and martial costumes are worn for effect. The
geendad of Shekhawati is similar. Sticks or swords are often used in male
dances, and the Shekhawati dance has the daf accompanying it.
THE KUCCHI GHODI
Free dancing full of zest, with rows of dancers waving colourful pennants makes the Bam
Rasiya of the Braj region spectacular. It is performed at Holi. The Kucchhi
Ghodi or dummy horse dance is performed on festive occasions, by men who are as
colourfully attired, as are their horses.
TERAHTALI
The terahtali is a fascinating dance performed by women, while sitting. The
women have manjeeras (little brass discs) tied with long strings to their
wrists, elbows, waists, arms and a pair in their hands as well. Their male accompanists
sing and play the tandoora while the women, with dexterous and fine movements,
create a strong rhythm with the manjeeras. For added effect, they may hold a
sword between their teeth or balance pots or lighted lamps on their heads.
KALBELIA
The dance of the kalbelia women is vigorous and graceful.
THE FIRE DANCE
An authentic fire dance is performed by the jasnathis of Bikaner and Churu
districts. The accompanying music rises in tempo as the dance progresses, ending with the
performer dancing on brightly glowing embers, which is a breathtaking and deeply
impressive sight.
DRUM DANCE
This is a professional dance-form from Jalore. Five men with huge drums around their
necks, some with huge cymbals accompany a dancer who holds naked sword in his mouth and
performs vigorously by twirling three painted sticks.
THE
DANCING TRIBALS
Music and dance are such an essential part of tribal life that professional musicians and
dancers are profuse. The garasia tribals inhabit the Abu Road and Pindwara
tehsils of Sirohi district and the neighbouring territories of Kotra, Gogunda and Kherwara
tehsils of Udaipur district; Bali and Desuri of Pali district. They have folklore enriched
with folktales, proverbs, riddles and folk music.
WALAR
Walar is an important dance of the garasias which is a prototype of the
ghoomar dance. The beats of the mandal, chang and a
variety of other instruments, which provide a lively rhythm to their dance sequences,
generally accompany their dances.
GOWRI
The most famous bhil dance is the gowari, a dance drama. Troupes
of these dancers go from village to village for a month, during which the nine
functionaries follow a strict regimen. The main characters are Rai Buriya Shiva, his two
Rais, and Katkuria, the comic handyman. Between the enactment of
various episodes, the entire troupe dances around a central spot consecrated to a deity. A
madal and a thali accompany the dance.
The ghoomar is the characteristic dance of bhils. Men and women sing
alternately and move clockwise & anti-clockwise giving free and intended play to the
ample folds of the ghagra.
The music of the primitive group of sahariyas (Sourias) of Shahbad, Kota,
shows Central Indian links, with their songs speaking of Ram and Sita. The fairs of the
Meenas had a lot of free dancing, which is unfortunately on the decline.
Vibrant, zealous, graceful, serpentine, lugubrious and martial, the dance and music of
Rajasthan evoke the desert in all its moods. It is the most lilting tribute to the
spectacular beauty, the pulsating sinuousness and the brutal harshness of the landscape,
and to the hardiness and heroism of the people who live in this 'Land of the Kings' |