The two classical traditions of Indian music, the Hindustani system of the north and the Carnatic system of the south, both built on the common framework of raga (melody) and tala (rhythm) but differing in style and patronage history.
- Common roots: both descend from the Sama Veda and the Natya Shastra, and both use raga (melodic mode) and tala (rhythmic cycle); the seven notes (sapta swaras) are shared.
- Hindustani music absorbed Persian and Central Asian influence from the medieval period; it emphasises improvisation (alap), gharanas (stylistic lineages) and forms like dhrupad, khayal, thumri and tarana.
- Carnatic music is more composition-driven and devotional, built around the kriti; it remained closer to its temple roots with less external influence.
- The Carnatic Trinity: Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar and Syama Sastri (early 19th century), composers of the bulk of the kriti repertoire.
- Instruments: Hindustani uses the sitar, sarod, santoor, shehnai and tabla; Carnatic uses the veena, mridangam, ghatam, nadaswaram and the violin (adapted).
- Carnatic uses 72 parent scales (melakarta ragas); Hindustani organises ragas under the thaat system (commonly ten thaats).
The Hindustani-Carnatic distinction, the Carnatic Trinity, gharana versus melakarta systems, and instrument-to-tradition matching (tabla and sitar versus mridangam and veena) are standard culture facts.
Both share ragas and talas, so the difference is one of degree (Hindustani more improvisational and Persian-influenced, Carnatic more composed and devotional); the "Trinity" belongs to the Carnatic tradition, not the Hindustani.
North Hindustani (Persian-influenced, gharanas, khayal) versus south Carnatic (composition-led, kriti, the Trinity), both on raga and tala.