The parai is the only instrument that has been burnt by its own players. Reclaiming it as a symbol of resistance, Bengaluru-based Adavi Arts Collective recently celebrated a year of workshops, shows and jam sessions. Adavi recently performed at the Shoonya Centre for Art and Somatic Practices as part of a fundraiser organised by the Hank Nunn Institute.

The founder of Adavi and a parai artiste by profession, Keela Naren explains that the parai is traditionally played at funerals to establish the death of a person because no living body can resist moving to its rhythmic beats. Sure enough, the infectious beats roused the crowd to their feet, with most of the audience dancing by the end of the event. Adavu , in Tamil, literally translates to rhythm, and adavi to forest, but the meaning that the collective attributes to it involves a deeper morphological dive.

Aattam means dance, and can extend to movement; avi means beings. Adavi – dancing beings – is a portmanteau of these words. A parai| Photo Credit:Special Arrangement The collective finds its spirit in a mixture of these understandings, which it describes as “a harmonious nest where swaying trees, sprouting leaves, animals and all beings dance alike, without any boundaries in nature’s rhythm.

” Adavi wishes to help folk and contemporary art forms reach younger generations through a blend of community learning and political discourse. Alongside the electrifying performance at Shoonya, Keela delved into the rich hist.