While those into south Indian classical music treat Neelambari as a sleep-inducing raga, quite a few outside the system would perhaps wonder whether drowsiness wasn’t anyway the defining feature of Carnatic in its entirety. For those unable to get a hang of (or are disinterested in) its aesthetics, the compositions of Thyagaraja and Co are invariably soporific. The sedation is still higher a quotient with Hindustani, according to many in the Deccan—and this category sufficiently includes Carnatic lovers themselves. The vintage music upcountry is often so slow that its express idea is to lull the listener, they might say.