Vitality and Sustainability of Traditional Music

Survey of Devotional Singing Groups (dāphā khalaḥ) in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal

Authors

  • Nutandhar Sharma
  • Richard Widdess

Keywords:

Newar music, Kathmandu Valley, sustainability, devotional singing, participatory music

Abstract

Dāphā bhajan is a participatory genre of Hindu–Buddhist devotional music, sung by groups of farmers and other Newar singers in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. It is deeply integrated with local neighbourhood communities, but owing to recent disasters (the 2015 earthquake, the 2020–2022 Covid-19 pandemic) and ongoing cultural changes, its sustainability is in doubt. In 2022–2023 the authors conducted a survey of selected groups to investigate the performers’ perspectives.  In this preliminary report we find that dāphā groups showed resilience in recovering from the recent disasters, the main effect of which was to exacerbate ongoing systemic problems. Chief among these is the difficulty of recruiting and training new members, to which some groups are responding with innovative solutions. But a range of other interconnected issues also emerged. We conclude that although many groups exhibit continuing vitality and an integrated relationship with the local communities in which they are embedded, their dependence on traditional models may be unsustainable without a degree of change.

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Published

04-Oct-2024

How to Cite

Sharma, N., & Widdess, R. (2024). Vitality and Sustainability of Traditional Music: Survey of Devotional Singing Groups (dāphā khalaḥ) in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. HIMALAYA - The Journal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies, 43(2), 149–154. Retrieved from https://journals.ed.ac.uk/himalaya/article/view/9012

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