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Dawn Morning Afternoon Dusk Night Midnight

Raga & Word

Yaman

also known as Kalyan, Iman

Dusk · First Prahar of Night All seasons Longing · Romantic · Serene Kalyan Thaat

Swara details

Aaroh N R G M D N S'
Avaroh S' N D M G R S
Vadi Ga (G)
Samvadi Ni (N)

Listen

Yaman · alap excerpt

The feeling

Yaman arrives at dusk with light still caught in the room. It is longing without despair, romance without noise, a window opening after the day has finally softened.

A short history

One of the foundational evening ragas of Hindustani music, Yaman belongs to the Kalyan thaat and is often among the first ragas taught — not because it is simple, but because it teaches restraint, grace, and luminous patience.

Pakad

N R G, R G M D, N R S'

Jati

Sampurna–Sampurna

Resting notes

Ga, Ni

Avoid

Sa-Pa emphasis in ascent

How to listen

Let the first phrases arrive slowly. Notice how the tivra Ma brightens the room without making it loud. Yaman is not a dramatic confession; it is the feeling of almost saying something and choosing tenderness instead.

Writing it inspired

The lamp at the window

By the time the first note rose, she had already forgiven the evening. Outside, the city folded its shutters. Inside, one lamp remained awake.

Microfiction

The lamp at the window

“By the time the first note rose, she had already forgiven the evening.”

Letter

Unsent at dusk

“Some apologies arrive as light, not language.”

Poem

Kalyan after rain

“A city rinsed clean, one balcony awake, one name still warm.”