KERALA FOLK DANCE
Kerala has a rich variety
of folk dances. They are highly developed and reflect the temperaments and
moods of the localities in music and costume. Nature silently and unobtrusively
has moulded these dances just as the lives of the people who dance them.
Religious colouring is seen
in almost all of these folk dances, even in those performed in connection with
harvests, sowing of seeds, festivals etc., so much so that their secular nature
is always at doubt. There is difficulty in classifying these dances as social,
religious and martial. Many of these dances are performed by men alone, some
exclusively by women. There are also dances in which men and women perform
together. Most of the folk dances are performed to the accompaniment of songs
which are sung by the dancers themselves or occasionally by a group of
musicians. Some dances are performed to the accompaniment of musical
instruments only. In several dances the performers form a circle and clap as
they dance. Sometimes, instead of clapping they strike small sticks which they
hold in their hands. The customs and ornaments are peculiar to the places to
which they belong. The eloquent, effortless ease with which the dances are
executed and the overwhelming buoyancy of spirit are wonderful. In these folk dances
there is no difference between the performers and the audience. Almost all of
these folk dances are simple but beneath this simplicity is a profundity of
conception and a directness of expression which are of a high artistic order.
There are more than fifty
well-known folk dances in Kerala. Of them the Kaliyattom, Mudiyettu, Kolam
Thullal, Kolkali, Poorakkali, Velakali, Kamapadavukali, Kanniyarkali,
Parichamuttukali, Thappukali, Kuravarkali and Thiruvathirakali are the most
popular.
