Search for a command to run...
Purpose: The period preceding the Carnatic Trinity represents a formative phase in South Indian musical and devotional history, during which bhakti functioned not merely as emotional piety but as a mode of philosophical articulation. This study examines Telugu devotional music from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries as a sophisticated vehicle for transmitting metaphysical, ethical, and theological ideas to the common devotee. Methodology: In this paper, the exploratory qualitative research method is used. The relevant information is collected using keyword-based search in Google search engine, Google Scholar search engine, and AI-driven GPTs. This information is analysed and interpreted as per the objectives of the paper. Results/Analysis: This paper studies the works of Annamacharya, Tallapaka Tirumalamma, Kshetrayya, Bhadrachala Ramadasu, and Narayana Teertha and seeks to establish that Telugu bhakti music represented a parallel alternative philosophical discourse to the śāstric traditions. Surrender (or śaraṇāgati), divinity, ethical selfhood, and emotional realism are components of the vernacular lyrics, musical structures, and performative contexts. Temple worship, court patronage, and public processions (or ucchavrities) facilitated the wide circulation of these compositions and their embedding of philosophy into the lived experience of the religious. By interpreting pre-Trinity Telugu devotional music as a vernacular philosophy, this paper seeks to problematize the impenetrable boundaries of emotion and intellect, devotion and metaphysics. Originality/ Values: The study demonstrates that long before the formal classicism of the Carnatic Trinity, Telugu composers had already established a robust philosophical ecosystem where song functioned as theology, ethics, and pedagogy for the masses. Type of Paper: Exploratory Research.