Puranic Stories · Other Puranas & Sacred Texts

The Story of the Tabla

← Back to Puranic Stories A pair of tabla drums, the Indian percussion instrument connected to this story. Photo: ShubhanTelang / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

A popular but unverified story credits Shree Ganesh with inventing the tabla, splitting a mridangam drum in half while accompanying Shiva's cosmic dance — a charming tale this collection addresses honestly rather than repeating as established fact.

A Well-Documented Older Connection

What is genuinely well established is Shree Ganesh's association with the mridangam itself: tradition holds that when Shiva heard the sound of the mridangam played by Ganesha, he became so moved that he began to dance, giving rise to the very taals, or rhythmic cycles, of Indian classical music.

The Tabla's Actual, More Recent History

The tabla's own origin is separately and more reliably traced to considerably later historical figures, variously credited to court musicians of the early eighteenth century or, in some accounts, the poet Amir Khusrau centuries earlier — with no scholarly consensus pointing to a single inventor, and certainly none pointing to Shree Ganesh himself.

What Devotees Seek

Musicians and devotees can honor the genuine, well-founded connection between Shree Ganesh and rhythm through the mridangam story, while holding the popular tabla-splitting tale for what it is: a beloved piece of modern storytelling rather than confirmed sacred history.