Kanakangi


Kanakangi is a ragam in Carnatic music. It is the 1st Melakarta rāgam in the 72 melakarta rāgam system of Carnatic music. It is called Kanakāmbari in the Muthuswami Dikshitar school.

Structure and Lakshana

It is the 1st rāgam in the 1st chakra Indu. The mnemonic name is Indu-Pa. The mnemonic phrase is sa ra ga ma pa dha na. Its structure has all shuddha swaras, as follows :
  • [Arohana|]:
  • [Avarohana|]:
It is a sampurna rāgam – a rāgam that has all seven swaras and is often dubbed the shuddha scale, owing to its swarasthanas. It is the shuddha madhyamam equivalent of Salagam, which is the 37th melakarta.

Asampurna Melakarta

Kanakāmbari is the 1st Melakarta in the original list compiled by Venkatamakhin. The notes used in the scale are the same, but the ascending scale is different. It is an audava-sampurna raga.
  • [Arohana|]:
  • [Avarohana|]:

''Janya'' rāgams

Kanakangi has a few janya ragams associated with it, of which Karnātaka shuddha sāveri and Lavangi are a little popular.
See List of [Janya Ragas#Kanakangi|List of janya rāgams] for a full list of Kanakangi's janyas.

Popular compositions

Few compositions have been composed in this austere Ragam of which some are as listed:
kanakAmbari kAruNyAmRtalahari in Rāgam KanakAmbari by Muthuswamy Dikshitar
Sri Gananatham Bhajamyaham by Thyagaraja
Kanakangaka Sukha Guha by Koteeswara Iyer - having composed a kriti in every melakarta raga in his magnum opus Kanda Ganamutham
Sreesa Putraya is a composition by Dr. M.Balamuralikrishna, is part of a series of compositions he created in every Melakartha ''Rāgam .
Varnam - from '' by
Varnam - Gananatham Smarami is a composition by Akkarai Sornalatha
Varnam - Gananatha Nin is a composition by Madurai N Sivaganesh
Ullam Urugi is a composition by Suddhananda Bharathi

Related rāgams

This section covers the theoretical and scientific aspect of this rāgam.
Kanakangi's notes when shifted using Graha bhedam, yields Kamavardani. Graha bhedam is the step taken in keeping the relative note frequencies same, while shifting the shadjam to the next note in the rāgam.