gawati

Raga Gawati (Gavati / Gaoti): Structure, Variations, and Identity

Raga Gawati (also known as Gavati, Gawoti, or Gaoti) is a relatively rare raga in Hindustani classical music. It is often associated with Raga Bheem, and in many traditions, the two are treated as the same or very closely related.

What makes Gawati interesting is that it does not have one fixed structure. Instead, it exists through multiple interpretations across gharanas.

Is Raga Gawati the Same as Raga Bheem?

There are two broad views:

  • Some musicians consider Gawati and Bheem to be the same raga
  • Others differentiate them through phrase usage and occasional swara treatment, especially in the upper octave

In practice, the overlap is strong enough that they are often treated as interchangeable.

Ustad Rashid Khan sings Raga Gawati

Is Raga Gawati the Same as Raga Bheem?

A commonly taught structure is:

  • Thaat: Kafi
  • Jati: Audav – Sampurna (vakra in descent)
  • Time: 12 PM to 3 PM

Swaras:

  • Komal Nishad
  • Rishabh and Dhaivat are omitted in ascent
  • Rest are Shuddha swaras

Aaroh:

ni, Sa Ga Ma Pa ni Sa’

Avroh:

Sa’ ni Dha Pa Ma Ga Pa Ma Ga Ma Re Sa
ni, Sa Pa, ni, Sa

This is one structured version, but not the only one.

https://youtu.be/aNKMX9sW7HE?list=RDaNKMX9sW7HE

Pt. Shivkumar Sharma performs Raga Gawati

Key Swara Treatment

The handling of Komal Nishad is central to the raga:

  • In the upper octave, Nishad is often taken as a kan-swar from Sa’
    • Ga Ma Pa (Sa’)ni Sa’
  • In descent, Nishad is often skipped in straight phrases
    • Sa’ (Pa)Dha Pa
    • Ga Ma Re Sa
  • In fast taans, Nishad appears more directly:
    • Ga Ma Pa ni Sa’ ni Dha Pa Ga Ma Re Sa

This selective use gives the raga its character.

Ustad Shahid Parvez performs Raga Gawati

Important Phrases (Chalan)

Some commonly used movements:

  • ni, Sa Ga Ma Pa ni Pa (Sa’)ni Sa’
  • Sa’ (Pa)Dha Pa Dha Ma Pa
  • Ga Ma Re Sa
  • Re ni, Sa
  • Pa, ni, Sa Ga Ma Re Sa

Another way to understand the descent is through paired movements:

  • ni Sa
  • Dha Pa
  • Ma Pa
  • Ga Ma
  • Re Sa

Alternate Interpretations

1. Kalyan-Ang Touch

Some musicians introduce a slightly different colour:

  • Occasional use of Ma in a vakra way
  • Phrases like:
    • Ga Ma Pa (Sa’)ni Sa’ (Pa)Dha Pa
    • Dha Ma Pa Ga Ma Re ni, Sa

This version doesn’t fully sit in Kalyan, but borrows its flavour.

2. Use of Komal Gandhar in Upper Octave (Bheem Distinction)

Some differentiate Bheem by including:

  • A touch of Komal Gandhar in the taar saptak
    • Sa ga Re Sa

However, this is not consistently applied and can also appear in Gawati renditions.

Relationship with Bhimpalasi

Gawati and Bheem are sometimes linked to Bhimpalasi, but they differ clearly:

  • Re and Dha are more prominent here
  • Ma is weaker and often used in a vakra manner
  • Movement is more segmented and phrase-based

Mood and Character

Gawati carries:

  • A calm, composed feel
  • A light devotional quality
  • A subtle mix of contentment and slight longing

It works really well through small, well-placed phrases.

Pt. Ajoy Chakraborty sings Gawati

Why Raga Gawati Is Rare

  • No single standard structure
  • Strong dependence on chalan over scale
  • Requires clarity and restraint

It’s often described as a raga that grows on you with time.

Closing Thoughts

Raga Gawati sits slightly outside the usual grid of classification. You can outline it, but you can’t fully fix it.

It’s less about listing the swaras, and more about how they are connected. And that’s where the raga really begins to make sense.

Featured Artist: Anagha Sukhatankar

Anagha Avadhut Sukhatankar is an 11-year-old sitar player from Belgaum, Karnataka, who has been learning music for the past five years.

She began her training under her grandmother, Smt. Arundhati Sukhatankar of the Kirana Gharana, building a strong foundation early on. For the last two and a half years, she has also been learning from Ustad Shakir Khan of the Etawah Gharana.

Alongside her training, she has been performing regularly, and has also delivered a TEDx talk. Also, she has been awarded the prestigious CCRT scholarship for the year 2024-25.

Her journey so far reflects what steady guidance and consistent riyaaz can do over time.

In this video, Anagha beautifully performs a bandish in Raga Gawati: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DV-niHIgmuf/?igsh=eW96b3JxM3lsNnF6

References:

https://meetkalakar.com/Artipedia/Gavati

https://ragajunglism.org/ragas/gaoti/

https://tanarang.com/raag-bheem/

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