Veṇu
also known as: Carnatic flute · kuzhal · puḷḷāṅkuzhal
Transverse bamboo flute. The Carnatic concert flute has 8 finger-holes (vs. the typical 6–7 on the Hindustani bāṃsuri) — the extra holes allow the full range of gamakas required for Carnatic ornamentation. Concert flutes are tuned across a wide pitch range from C# (the highest, used for fast pieces) down to A (the deepest, used for slow ālāpana).
Family
Wind
Role
Melodic lead
Exponents listed
3
Origin
Pan-Indian, ancient (associated with Kṛṣṇa-bhakti)
History & significance
Although ancient as a folk instrument, the Carnatic concert flute was systematised as an art-music instrument in the late 19th and 20th centuries. Sarabha Sastri (1872–1904) was the first major concert flautist; his early death cut short what could have been a defining career.
The 8-hole concert flute design and the modern Carnatic flute technique were largely the work of T.R. Mahalingam — known universally as 'Mali' — whose innovations in fingering, breath control, and gamaka idiom remain the foundation of contemporary practice. His disciple N. Ramani extended the tradition through a long international career.
In a Carnatic concert
Solo concert instrument or melodic lead. Often paired with violin as accompaniment.
Exponents· 3
Sarabha Sastri
1872–1904First major Carnatic concert flautist; established the flute as an art-music instrument.
T.R. Mahalingam ('Mali')
1926–1986Designed the 8-hole Carnatic concert flute and codified its technique; the foundational modern voice on the instrument.
N. Ramani
1934–2015Padma Bhushan; senior disciple of Mali; long international concert career.