Muthuswami Dikshitar
Muthuswami Dikshitar (Mudduswamy Dikshitar) (, 24 March 1776 – 21 October 1835), mononymously known as Dikshitar, was a South Indian poet, singer, veena player, and prolific composer of Indian classical music. The youngest member of the Trinity of Carnatic music, alongside Tyagaraja and Shyama Sastri, Dikshitar was born on 24 March 1776 in Tiruvarur near Thanjavur, in Tamil Nadu. His family traditionally traced its lineage to Virinchipuram in the northern part of the state.Dikshitar is credited with around 500 compositions, renowned for their elaborate, poetic descriptions of Hindu deities, and detailed architectural depictions of temples. His music is notable for capturing the essence of ragas in the vainika (veena) style, which highlight the use of gamakas. His works are usually composed in a slower tempo (chowka kala). Dikshitar used the signature name Guruguha (as a mudra) in all his compositions. They continue to be widely performed in Carnatic music concerts.
The musical trinity consists of Dikshitar, Tyagaraja (1767–1847), and Syama Sastri (1762–1827). Unlike the predominantly Telugu compositions of Tyagaraja and Syama Sastri, Dikshitar's works are mostly in Sanskrit. He also composed a few kritis in Manipravalam, a literary style combining Sanskrit and Tamil.
There are two schools of thought regarding the pronunciation of his name. It is generally pronounced ''Muthuswamy Dikshitar''. ''Muthu'' means "pearl" in Tamil, cognate to ''Mutya'' in Sanskrit. It may also be linked to Selvamuthukumaraswamy, a deity of the Vaideeswaran temple in Myladuthurai. However, T. K. Govinda Rao explains in ''Compositions of Mudduswamy Dikshitar'' that "Muddayya" is an epithet of Kumaraswami or Guha. In the 1904 Telugu publication of ''Sangita Sampradaya Pradarshini'', Sri Subbarama Dikshitar refers to him as Mudduswamy. In his composition ''Bhajare re Chitha'' in raga Kalyani, the mudra appears as "Guruguha Roopa Muddu Kumara Jananeem". Provided by Wikipedia
-
1