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Raithane Bhakha
Raithane Bhakha
11 episodes
5 days ago
Raithane Bhakha is a podcast about Nepal's music. There are more than a hundred ethnic communities in Nepal, each one with one or more musical traditions. The podcast is mostly focused on the folk music of these communities, especially on indigenous and ritual music which is rarely played, heard, recorded or commercialized beyond its immediate community. The podcast will also discuss other aspects of Nepal's music. The podcast is produced by Sewa Bhattarai, focusing on songs she collected from the field.
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Music
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Raithane Bhakha is a podcast about Nepal's music. There are more than a hundred ethnic communities in Nepal, each one with one or more musical traditions. The podcast is mostly focused on the folk music of these communities, especially on indigenous and ritual music which is rarely played, heard, recorded or commercialized beyond its immediate community. The podcast will also discuss other aspects of Nepal's music. The podcast is produced by Sewa Bhattarai, focusing on songs she collected from the field.
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Music
Episodes (11/11)
Raithane Bhakha
Sunuwar Syandar Pindar

The Sunuwar community is a community of Kirant people living in East and Central Nepal. Like many Kirant communities, they celebrate the two major festivals of Undhauli and Umbhauli, which they call 'Syandar Pindar'. This is a time to remember and worship ancestors and nature. The festivals are deeply linked with nature, agriculture and nomadic pastoral lifestyle: Umbhauli is celebrated when the animals are taken up or Umbho to the mountains to pasture, and Umbhauli when the animals come down or Undho to the foothills. The episode contains some of the music played at this time, and conversations about the festival, its links with nature, and the gradual marginalization of this lifestyle by the state.

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10 months ago
20 minutes 23 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Sangini - songs of women in East Nepal

Sangini songs are sung by women, especially Brahmin-Chhetri women, in east Nepal and adjoining north-east India. They are sung by groups of women while they are working, or during festivals, weddings, and celebrations. They depict life and the world through women's point of view. They include detailed analyses of social structures and women's place in families and societies. They also include folktales and religious stories.

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11 months ago
1 hour 14 minutes 18 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Dafa Khalahs - Women enter all-male Newa tradition

Dafa Khalahs are traditional Newa music groups in the Kathmandu Valley. Maharjan and Manandhar families have Dafa Khalahs in every tole (locality), which sing traditional, devotional songs, either every day or during certain months. Hitherto, the tradition had been completely male. But that is changing as a small number of women have started entering Dafa Khalahs. Women overcome many challenges to learn and perform this ancient genre, which is helping to revive a rich, centuries-old heritage on the decline.

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1 year ago
1 hour 4 minutes 59 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Mangalini - auspicious women singers

Mangalinis are women who sing auspicious songs for religious rituals. The tradition of women singing auspicious songs for rituals was once widespread among Nepal's Hindu communities, but is declining today. This episode is concerned with the royal Mangalinis employed by Nepal's erstwhile royal family. After the end of monarchy, the women continue to sing for Dashain rituals at Hanumandhoka. Their songs contain elements of folk traditions but were crafted to meet changing priorities of the court. The women's status as 'auspicious' stems from the Hindu reverence of women's powers of creation.

The podcast discusses the royal Mangalinis, their songs, and includes an interview with ethnomusicologist Carol Tingey who researched the Mangalinis. 

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1 year ago
1 hour 4 minutes 12 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Tales tell of travails - Uranw folklore

The Uranws are a unique indigenous community living in South-east Nepal. The small community of just over 40 thousand Uranws is highly marginalized but their culture and language continue to flourish in their dense settlements. The Uranw language (also called Kurux or Kudukh) is Nepal's only Dravidian language, they worship nature and build no temples to worship their deities. In this podcast we discuss their songs, folklore, and mythology, which tell stories of their tenacious survival in face of dominance. Uranw mythology traces their journey though the subcontinent in the past few millennia, expressing their sense of loss of land, status, and privilege which characterizes their present life.

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2 years ago
46 minutes 36 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Love for the Himalayas in Sherpa songs

The Sherpas are famous all over the world for their close relationship with the highest mountains of the world - the Himalayas. This relationship is also reflected in their songs. Many Sherpa songs sing about the Himalayas, praise their beauty, and revere them as sacred places. Also, the songs sing about the relationship between nature and life, and the need to conserve and love the mountains.

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2 years ago
33 minutes 23 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Phapare to Selo - Tamang music with Tamang Dajang

Tamangs live mostly in the Central hills and mountains of Nepal, and their music is rich in rhythm and lore. In this episode, we touch upon various aspects of Tamang music. Phapare songs that are unaccompanied by any musical instruments, and may be sung to the rhytm of the quern stone - indicating that since the dawn of humanity, music has been used by humans to make work bearable. Searching for the roots of Tamang music leads one first to this purely vocal music, followed by the beat of the dhyangro - a drum used by religious leaders. How tracing the dhyangro leads one to the Tamang's religious history, you can find out in the episode. And finally, we end by enjoying the famous Tamang Selo, sung and danced to the beat of the Damfu, which has long been a staple of mainstream Nepali music.

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2 years ago
33 minutes 54 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Soul consolation - Tharu songs from Dang with Basanti Chaudhary

Music not just entertains, but also has the capacity to plumb the depths of human emotions and portray the full spectrum of human experiences. An example of one such song is a bhajhan that is sung to console people after the death of a beloved ones. Singer Basanti Chaudhary brings us this and a few other Tharu songs from Dang. The Tharus are an ethnic community who live in South Nepal, spread from East to West of Terai. Tharus of each region have different and large heritage of music and arts.

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2 years ago
16 minutes 39 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Khunglu - Songs from Pungmo, Dolpa
Dolpa is one of the most remote regions in Nepal, and it takes two days to walk to Pungmo village from the district's only airport. In Pungmo, some music conservationists are trying to conserve their traditional songs. The songs are sung in a language similar to Tibetan, also called Zhang Zhung by the residents, and reflect the wide spectrum of life in the Himalayas. Recently, the musicians from Pungmo collaborated with two musicians from Chile to produce fusion music. This podcast is divided into two parts. 0:00-0:24 is about the songs from Pungmo. 0:24-0:35 is about the Chilean and French connection of the Pungmo music. For this episode, I would like to thank the singers from Pungmo - Pemba Tashi Lama, Soam Lhamu Baijee, Yungdung Sangmu Lama and Pasang Nima Baijee, Pungmo' music conservationist Semduk Lama, Chilean musicians Thomas Carrasco and Moa Edmunds, and videographer Eric Chandra Shrestha for speaking to me, and for their permission to include their music in the podcast.
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2 years ago
34 minutes 26 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Kusundas - the last of the forest kings
Listen to the sounds of Kusunda , a language isolate with no other language in its category, one of the rarest languages in the world with just one native speaker alive. The last Kusunda speaker Kamala Khatri is a resource person for the language Commission's project Kusunda curriculum. Sewa Bhattarai brings excerpts from this audiobook, and speaks to Kusunda language teacher Uday Raj Ale and one of his students Hima Kusunda, who has created a song in this language at the brink of extinction.
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2 years ago
18 minutes 30 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Trailer
This trailer introduces the podcast Raithane Bhakha. Raithane Bhakha is a podcast about Nepal's music. There are more than a hundred ethnic communities in Nepal, each one with one or more musical traditions. The podcast is mostly focused on the folk music of these communities, especially on indigenous and ritual music which is rarely played, heard, recorded or commercialized beyond its immediate community. The podcast will also discuss other aspects of Nepal's music. The podcast is produced by Sewa Bhattarai, with songs she recorded over the years from people of Nepal.
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2 years ago
10 minutes 48 seconds

Raithane Bhakha
Raithane Bhakha is a podcast about Nepal's music. There are more than a hundred ethnic communities in Nepal, each one with one or more musical traditions. The podcast is mostly focused on the folk music of these communities, especially on indigenous and ritual music which is rarely played, heard, recorded or commercialized beyond its immediate community. The podcast will also discuss other aspects of Nepal's music. The podcast is produced by Sewa Bhattarai, focusing on songs she collected from the field.