Please explain me in such a way that I can understand atleast the basics of it.
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Laya is tempo
Tala is beat
So a very common beat is 4/4. It's very common in Western and Indian music. In Western music, it's called 'quadruple time' and in Indian, it is the keherva taal.
You can say "1-2-3-4, 5-6-7-8" at many speeds. The speed at which you say it is the tempo (laya). The pattern that you are saying is the beat (tala).
Originally posted by: cosworthkid007
Its still rocket science😭. I mean, just as a listener, how can one make it whether the laya is correct or not? Does the beat in the background music play an important role in it? Any example say of an A R Rehman track?
perfect example, i was just going to post the same, am glad you are part of the forumNow imagine you're singing a very simple song.
The song simply requires you to sing the word 'mississippi' whenever you hear the clock go 'tock'.
Now if you can keep up with the clock, you're in laya. So your 'mississipis' are in the right tempo coz no matter how many times you say the word, you've timed yourself so that it always 'lands' on the 'tock' sound. You are in laya.
But if you start to lose your timing and some of your mississippis land on 'tick' sounds or you miss a whole 'tick-tock' without saying mississippi, then you are losing the tempo. You are out of laya.
Hope that helps!