The Composers
Vāggēyakāras
The composer-poets who shaped the modern Carnatic kṛti. Each profile carries the historically-attested raga · tāla · opening sahitya for every kṛti, the composer's signature gītī, and the gamaka they made their own.
500 Years of Music
Paramparā · 1500 – 2000
Composer Timeline
- Trinity
- Parijat
- Post-Trinity
1767 – 1847
1775 – 1835
1762 – 1827
1484 – 1566
1813 – 1846
c. 1493 – 1589
1408 – 1503
1890 – 1973
1865 – 1961
1845 – 1902
1810 – 1896
c. 1700 – 1765
1877 – 1945
Click a card to open the composer's kṛti catalog. Hover to highlight the paramparā links.
The Trinity of Carnatic music — Tyāgarāja, Muttuswami Dikshitar, and Syama Sastri — are the most revered composers in the tradition. Their kritis form the core of the Carnatic repertoire.
Tyāgarāja
1767 – 1847Carnatic Trinity (Tri-mūrti) — the foundational period
Saint-composer of Tiruvaiyāru; founder-figure of the modern Carnatic kṛti. Sang exclusively to Śrī Rāma.
- Mudrā
- Signs each kṛti in the abhōga / final charaṇa with his own name as mudrā
- Gītī
- Sādhāraṇī
- Gamaka
- Kampita (sustained oscillation on jīva-svaras)
- Language
- Telugu (with occasional Sanskrit phrases)
- Kṛtis catalogued
- 69
- Full sahitya
- 8
- Source
- Tillaisthanam paramparā
Favoured ragas
Sankarābharaṇam · Kalyāṇī · Tōḍī · Bhairavī · Kāmbhōji
Explore catalog →Signature gītī
Jagadānanda Kāraka· Nāṭa
Muttuswāmi Dīkṣitar
1775 – 1835Carnatic Trinity (Tri-mūrti) — the foundational period
Sanskrit-language saint-composer; codified the Śrī Vidyā tantra in song through the Kamalāmbā Navāvaraṇa, Navagraha, and Pañcabhūta-liṅga sets.
- Mudrā
- Signs with the mudrā "Guruguha" (his own name, also a name of Subrahmaṇya) usually in the charaṇam
- Gītī
- Bhinnā
- Gamaka
- Dhālu-kampana (rolling extended oscillation)
- Language
- Sanskrit (with a handful of Maṇipravāḷam pieces)
- Kṛtis catalogued
- 60
- Full sahitya
- 5
- Source
- SSP (1904)
Favoured ragas
Māyāmāḷavagaula · Tōḍī · Sankarābharaṇam · Hamsadhwani
Explore catalog →Signature gītī
Kamalāmbam Bhajarē· Kalyāṇi
Parijat Masters
The foundational voicesBefore and alongside the Trinity, these masters established the kriti form and the musical grammar that defines Carnatic music today.
Tānsen
c. 1493 – 1589Pre-Trinity — Dhrupad master, Akbar's court
The fountainhead of Hindustani classical music. Court musician to Akbar; creator of the Miān gharāṇā and the rāgas Mālhar, Toḍī, and Darbārī.
- Mudrā
- Does not use a mudrā in the Carnatic sense
- Gītī
- Gauḍī
- Gamaka
- Andolan (slow swing, meend-heavy)
- Language
- Braja-bhāṣā / Hindi
- Kṛtis catalogued
- 4
- Full sahitya
- 0
- Source
- Miān gharāṇā
Favoured ragas
Mēgha · Darbārī · Mālhar · Miyān kī Toḍī
Explore catalog →Annamācārya
1408 – 1503Pre-Trinity — Tallapaka composer of Tirumala
Composed ~32,000 saṅkīrtanas in Telugu in praise of Veṅkateśvara at Tirumala. The earliest major composer of the Carnatic tradition.
- Mudrā
- Does not use a mudrā
- Gītī
- Sādhāraṇī
- Gamaka
- Sphurita (quick touch, like a devotee's trembling hand)
- Language
- Telugu
- Kṛtis catalogued
- 5
- Full sahitya
- 0
- Source
- Tallapaka copper plates
Favoured ragas
Bilahari · Madhyamāvatī · Sāvēri · Bowli · Mukhāri · Kāpi
Explore catalog →
Post-Trinity Innovators
Carrying the tradition forwardAfter the Trinity, these composers expanded the Carnatic repertoire with new ragas, talas, and expressive possibilities.
Thirteen vāggēyakāras are catalogued above — from the foundational Trinity to the Parijat masters who shaped the tradition before and after them. Kṛti texts are audited against the authoritative paramparā sources our iOS catalog already uses.
Each composer's kritis include historically-attested raga, tāla, and opening sahitya. The notation system uses our proprietary gamaka annotations for authentic performance practice.