Page:The Music of India.djvu/166

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6. Indian Music, by Bhavānrāo A. Pingle, of Kathiawād, Byculla, 1898, pp. xviii. 341. Second edition.

A good accoant of the music of North India with a few examples. 'A mine of information on many details of performance.'

(Out of print.)

7. A Short Account of the Hindu System of Music, by A. C. Wilson (Lady), Lahore, 1904, pp. 48. Gulab Singh & Sons, Lahore.

An elementary account of Hindusthani music. Has a good glossary.

8. Indian Music, by Ananda Coomaraswamy, 1917, G. Schirmer, New York and London. Reprinted from the Musical Quarterly, April 1917, pp. 9.

9. Indian Music, by Shahinda (Begum Fyzee-Rahamin) with preface by F. Gilbert Webb, 1914, William Marchant & Co., London, pp. 96.

A general account of Hindusthani music, with descriptions of a number of Hindusthani rāgas and with a number of raga pictures.

10. Notes on the Principles of Hindu Music, by E. Stradiot. With a collection of nine Hindu melodies. From the Madras Journal of Literature and Science for 1887–88, pp. 28.

A very slight account of southern music.

11. Indian Music, by A. K. Coomaraswamy, an essay in the Dance of Siva, by the same author, pp. 72–81, 5 plates.

An interesting description.

12. Art Manufacture in India, by T. N. Mukharji, F.L.S., Indian Museum, Calcutta. Specially compiled for Glasgow International Exhibition, 1888, Calcutta, 18S8. Superintendent of Government Printing, pp. 451. Musical Instruments of India, pp. 76–96.

13. First Steps in Hindu Music, by H. P. Krishna Rao, Mysore, 1906. Weekes & Co., London, pp. 52.

A very elementary work with a small collection of South Indian melodies in staff notation.