Mṛdaṅgam
also known as: mardala · mridanga
Double-headed barrel drum, single-piece jackfruit-wood body. Right head (toppi / valantarai) tuned high and tempered with a permanent black patch (karaṇai) of rice paste and iron filings. Left head (eḍumtarai) tuned lower, conditioned before each performance with a wheat-flour paste that is removed when playing ends.
Family
Membrane percussion
Role
Primary percussion
Exponents listed
3
Origin
Ancient India; described in Bharata's Nāṭyaśāstra (c. 200 BCE – 200 CE)
History & significance
The mṛdaṅgam (Sanskrit mṛd 'clay' + aṅga 'body' — the older form was clay-bodied) is the foundational percussion instrument of Carnatic music, with iconographic depictions in temple sculpture going back to the early common era. The modern wooden-bodied form was standardised by the Tanjavur-Pudukkottai schools in the 19th century.
Palghat Mani Iyer's mid-20th-century concert career codified the tonal vocabulary, mathematical structures, and bāṇi conventions that define contemporary mṛdaṅgam practice. The Pudukkottai school (Dakshinamurthy Pillai → Palani Subramaniam Pillai) provided a parallel tradition emphasising rhythm-as-melody.
In a Carnatic concert
The principal percussion instrument in every Carnatic kacheri. Provides the tāla, accompanies kṛtis, and showcases its own art in the tani āvartanam — an extended percussion solo midway through the concert.
Exponents· 3
Palghat Mani Iyer
1912–1981Padma Bhushan; defined the modern mṛdaṅgam concert idiom; long-time accompanist to GNB, MS, and Semmangudi.
Palani Subramaniam Pillai
1908–1962Doyen of the Pudukkottai school; teacher of Karaikudi Mani and many of the next generation.
Palghat R. Raghu
1928–2009Padma Bhushan; senior disciple of Palghat Mani Iyer.