Kali (chhand)

Kali (/kəl/; Punjabi: ਕਲੀ), is a form of Chhand[1][2] (quatrain), a poetry bond under strict rules in Punjabi literature. Kali chhand is also used in singing as a type of Punjabi folk songs where it is also known by its plural form, Kalian or Kaliyan. Although it is not so common in singing, it became a particular genre of Punjabi music.[3] Kali is sung by only few Punjabi singers like Kuldeep Manak, Surinder Shinda and some more, but it was popularized by Kuldeep Manak[4] with Tere Tille Ton written by Dev Tharike Wala (also known as Hardev Dilgir).[5]

ਕਲੀ
Kali
Cultural originsPunjab
Popularity1970s when sung by Kuldeep Manak
Subgenres
  • Suchchi Kali (Punjabi: ਸੁੱਚੀ ਕਲੀ)
  • Amba Kali (Punjabi: ਅੰਬਾ ਕਲੀ)
  • Roopa Kali (Punjabi: ਰੂਪਾ ਕਲੀ)

Types and subgenres

There are three types of the kali chhand: Suchchi Kali, Amba Kali and Roopa Kali.[1]

Suchchi Kali

Suchchi Kali is bond under 42 Maatras.

Amba Kali

Amba Kali is deals within 42 to 45 Maatras.

Roopa Kali

In Roopa Kali Maatras reaches up to 52. The popular kali, Tere Tille Ton, belongs to this type[1]

Dev Tharike Wala and Kuldeep Manak

Dev Tharike Wala and Kuldeep Manak are the first personalities to introduce Kali to a common man. One of the kali, Tere Tille Ton, written by Dev and sung by Manak, became so popular[5] that people started regarding the singer as Kalian Da Badshah (English: King of Kalis).[6] Manak sung only 13-14 Kalian in his career.[1][7] People treated his every song, after Tere Tille Ton, to be a 'kali' as ordinary people don't understands the difference between a song and kali.

Kalian by Kuldeep Manak

The very popular Kali of Manak, Tere Tille Ton, is a Roopa Kali.[1] List of Kalian/Kaliyan sung by Manak:[2]

Written by Dev Tharike Wala
  1. Tere Tille Ton
  2. Chhanna Choori Da
  3. Ranjhe Da Patka
  4. Pind Taan Sialan De Dhee Jammi Chaudhari
  5. Teri Khatir Heere
  6. Sehti Heer Ne Tiari Kar Layi Bagh Di
  7. Charhi Jawani Te Chann Sooraj (Heer Dian Maa Naal)
  8. Ik Din Kaidon Satth Vich (Kaidon Dian Choochak Naal)
  9. Gall Sun Sialan Diye Kurhiye Ni
  10. Ik Din Mil Ke Chaak Nu
Written by others
  1. Amb Da Boota Rehnda.. (Gurmukh Singh Gill, JaboMaajra)
  2. Ni Putt Jattan Da.. (Gurmukh Singh Gill, JaboMaajra)
  3. Sehti Hassdi-Hassdi.. (Dalip Singh Sidhu, Kanakwal)
gollark: But it still seems like a big price delta given that, like you said, they have ridiculous economies of scale.
gollark: I have an old tower server which costs maybe £5/month to run, which provides ~4x the CPU/RAM and ~10x the disk I'd get from a cloud provider at similar pricing, plus I could install a spare GPU when I wanted that. This is a very extreme case since I am entirely ignoring my time costs on managing it and don't have as much redundancy as them.(Edit: also terrible internet connectivity, and colocation would be expensive)
gollark: Possibly also that you can hire fewer sysadmins? But I'm not sure they're that expensive if you have a lot of developers anyway.
gollark: I think the argument for cloud is mostly that it's much faster to scale than "have a bunch of servers in your office", but it seems like you pay an insane amount for that.
gollark: Most of them have tons of managed services plus quick to deploy VMs.

See also

References

  1. dev thrike wala in ik khas mulakat zee punjabi with narinder 3 on YouTube
  2. pa:ਕਲੀ
  3. "Kuldeep Manak - A Tribute". www.punjabipaintings.com. 1 Dec 2011. Archived from the original on 16 January 2012. Retrieved 28 Feb 2012.
  4. "Punjabi folk singer Manak passes away". Ludhiana. The Times of India. December 1, 2011. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  5. Rajpura, Ali (2008). Eh Hai Kuldeep Manak. Ludhiana: Unistar Books Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 978-81-7142-528-0.
  6. Minna Zutshi (1 Dec 2011). "Folk singer Manak dead". The Tribune. Chandigarh. Retrieved 28 Feb 2012. Called the ‘King of Kaliyan’, his music was an unusual mix of faith and tradition
  7. "Bhangra doyen Kuldeep Manak passes away". www.dailypioneer.com. 30 Nov 2011. Retrieved 28 Feb 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.