Practice Challenges

Small note sets, graded patterns, and the reason each one sounds good. Master three notes before you chase all seven.

About Khamaj
 Ni Sa  Re 3 notes per beat → 6,561 possible 8-beat patterns. You will never run out — the challenge is finding the musical ones.
Level 1 · Four-beat cells
The Sigh
Re
Sa
×
 Sa 
1
 Sa 
2
 Re 
3
 Sa 
4

Touch the upper note, fall home. Re is a whole step away — a soft, rounded landing on Sa.

Level 1 · Four-beat cells
Rising Landing
Sa
Nị
×
 Ni
1
 Ni
2
 Sa 
3
 Sa 
4

Approach from below, twice, then settle. Nị sits a bare semitone from Sa — the strongest pull there is; every resolution up lands like a sigh.

Level 1 · Four-beat cells
Doubled Pulse
Re
Sa
×
 Re 
1
 Re 
2
 Sa 
3
 Sa 
4

Doubled notes are the jhala engine — tension held twice as long. Re is a whole step away — a soft, rounded landing on Sa.

Level 1 · Four-beat cells
The Orbit
Re
Sa
Nị
×
 Sa 
1
 Ni
2
 Sa 
3
 Re 
4

Circle the anchor from below then above; ending off-anchor leaves the loop breathing — a question every repeat.

Level 1 · Four-beat cells
Falling Through
Re
Sa
Nị
×
 Re 
1
 Sa 
2
 Ni
3
 Sa 
4

A full descent through home: over, on, under, on. Gravity is the raga's natural direction.

Daily invention rule: discover one new combination per day and write it down. Loop each cell for 2–3 minutes at a steady tempo before moving on — no speed until the intonation of every note is dead-accurate.