D for dayro
Updated On: 02 January, 2016 08:16 AM IST | | Krutika Behrawala
This evening, enjoy Gujarati folktales, Kathiawadi songs and colloquial jokes at an event in Malad

“You must have heard the Shiva chant, Om Namah Shivay, but do you know how we chant in the Charani dialect?” asks 45-year-old artiste Kishoredan Gadhvi, a member of the Charan community of Gujarat, known for its literature and poetry. Gadhvi doles out a fast-paced rhythmic verse, and while the words can’t be deciphered, the foot-tapping rhyme is music to the ears. This evening, Gadhvi, along with three artistes — Kamlesh Barot, Harsha Barot and Nirav Barot — will enthrall city crowds at the ongoing Malad Festival with a three-hour performance. The quartet is a part of the Rang Kasumbal Dayro group. “Earlier, such performances were done in front of the kings. If it was held in the day, it was known as a mehfil, and if it was during nighttime, we called it the dayro,” he shares.

A typical Gujarati dayro setting
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