Kañjirā
also known as: kanjira · ganjira
Small frame drum, ~17 cm in diameter, jackfruit-wood frame with a single skin head and three or four small jingles. Players moisten the skin during play to dynamically retune.
Family
Membrane percussion
Role
Secondary percussion
Exponents listed
2
Origin
South Indian folk tradition; brought into Carnatic concerts in the late 19th century
History & significance
The kañjirā entered the concert stage through Pudukkottai Dakshinamurthy Pillai in the late 19th century. Despite its small size and folk origin, the modern repertoire — speed, mathematical complexity, dynamic range — rivals any percussion instrument in the world.
The 20th-century master G. Harishankar (1958–2002) defined the modern technical ceiling on the instrument before his early death.
In a Carnatic concert
Third-tier percussion alongside mṛdaṅgam and ghaṭam. Plays a short solo segment in the tani.
Exponents· 2
Pudukkottai Dakshinamurthy Pillai
1875–1936Concert pioneer; transformed the kañjirā from village instrument to art-music percussion.
G. Harishankar
1958–2002Modern master; brought the kañjirā to extreme tempos and technical complexity.