Mantra · Shaiva

Shiva Tandava Stotram

जटाटवीगलज्जलप्रवाहपावितस्थले

The cosmic-dance hymn attributed to Ravana. Sixteen verses of panchachamara metre — eight feet per line — whose rhythm is the rhythm of Shiva's tandava: creation, preservation, dissolution.

IAST
Jaṭā-ṭavī-galaj-jala-pravāha-pāvita-sthale
Source
Attributed to Ravana, the king of Lanka (date uncertain; pre-medieval composition)
Deity
Shiva
Tradition
Shaiva

Listen

Public-domain or properly licensed recording. Pour a deepa, sit, then play.

The opening verse

जटाटवीगलज्जलप्रवाहपावितस्थले गलेऽवलम्ब्य लम्बितां भुजङ्गतुङ्गमालिकाम्। डमड्डमड्डमड्डमन्निनादवड्डमर्वयं चकार चण्डताण्डवं तनोतु नः शिवः शिवम्॥

In IAST:

Jaṭā-ṭavī-galaj-jala-pravāha-pāvita-sthale gale’valambya lambitāṃ bhujaṅga-tuṅga-mālikām, ḍamaḍ-ḍamaḍ-ḍamaḍ-ḍaman-ninādavaḍ-ḍamarvayaṃ cakāra caṇḍa-tāṇḍavaṃ tanotu naḥ śivaḥ śivam.

In English (approximate — the rhythm cannot be carried over):

From the forest of his matted locks the sacred river streams, sanctifying the ground beneath. About his throat hangs the tall garland of the serpent-king. Damat damat damat daman — the damaru sounds — and Shiva does the fierce tandava. May that Shiva extend to us all that is auspicious.

The dance the hymn enacts

The Shiva Tandava is unique among Shaiva hymns in that the form of the poem is the content of the poem. Most stotras describe their deity. This one performs its deity. The metre — panchachamara, eight feet of light-heavy alternation per line — produces, when sung at the proper pace, a galloping cadence that is literally the rhythm of the tandava.

Note the third line of the opening verse: ḍamaḍ-ḍamaḍ-ḍamaḍ-ḍaman. That is not poetry describing the sound of Shiva’s damaru. That is the sound of Shiva’s damaru, in Sanskrit syllables, embedded in the poem. The composer has done what only Sanskrit phonology can do — encode the percussion of the deity directly into the recitation.

The story behind the attribution

Tradition associates the hymn with Ravana, the asura king of Lanka and a formidable Shiva-bhakta in the Puranic-Ramayana frame. The story varies in detail across regional traditions, but the canonical narrative runs:

Ravana, intoxicated by his own strength and devotion, attempted to lift Mount Kailasa — Shiva’s mountain abode — to carry it back to Lanka. Shiva, seated atop the mountain with Parvati, pressed his toe gently on the summit. The mountain settled, pinning Ravana’s arms beneath it. In agony and humiliation, Ravana sang — and the song he composed in that crushing moment is the Shiva Tandava Stotram. Hearing it, Shiva was so moved by the technical brilliance and the depth of bhakti that he lifted the mountain and granted Ravana boons.

Whether the historical Ravana (if any) actually composed it, or whether tradition assigns authorship to him for theological reasons — a devil who composes the most beautiful Shiva hymn establishes that Shiva accepts devotion from any direction — is a question philology cannot settle. What matters in practice is that the hymn has been sung in Ravana’s voice for many centuries. Some practitioners imagine the asura’s pinned-arms agony each time they sing it; the intensity of the recitation owes something to that imagined frame.

The architecture across sixteen verses

VerseWhat it celebrates
1The opening tandava — matted locks, Ganga, serpent, damaru
2The Ganga in his hair, the fire in his forehead, the half-moon
3Parvati at his side, the desire that arises and is burnt away
4The dust of his dance perfuming the directions
5The blue-throated one (Nilakantha — who drank the poison)
6The forehead-fire that burnt Kama (god of desire)
7The matted locks again, the moon as ornament
8Praise — when, when shall I worship him in earnest?
9The cremation-ground dance, the auspicious in the inauspicious
10The forest of matted locks — returned to and elaborated
11The moon-ornament, the serpent-ornament, the ash-ornament
12When shall I be free, my hands placed at his feet?
13The third eye, the burnt one (Kama again, dissolved)
14The poison-throat, the ash-smeared body
15The closing benediction — the phala-shruti, the fruit of recitation
16The traditional sign-off (some manuscripts omit)

The structure is not strictly linear. The hymn returns to its central images — hair, Ganga, moon, serpent, ash, third eye — at multiple angles, the way a dance returns to certain figures across its development. By the end the chanter has been turned, by the metre as much as by the content, through every face of the tandava.

On reciting it well

This hymn punishes timidity. Sung quietly and slowly, it feels overlong and strange. Sung at proper speed with the metre held firmly — the damaḍ-ḍamaḍ syllables crisp, the eight feet per line undivided — the hymn rises into a recognisable trance state. Many traditional reciters use the damaru themselves while singing, or sing alongside a tabla locked to the metre.

For a beginner: do not start with the full hymn. Take one verse (the opening is canonical), repeat it daily for a fortnight until the rhythm is internal, then add verse two. Many practitioners take a year to learn all sixteen and consider that pace appropriate. The hymn is not a checkbox.

When to recite

The canonical occasions are:

  • Maha Shivaratri — once a year, at one of the four watches of the night
  • Pradosham — twice a month, at the twilight intensity that suits the hymn
  • Personal practice — when the practitioner needs to break through stagnant devotion and meet Shiva at higher temperature

The hymn is not for soothing. It is for moving. Pair it across the week with calmer companions — Lingashtakam, Rudrashtakam — so that practice has both registers available.

A final note

The closing benedictory verse (phala-shruti) — the fifteenth or sixteenth, depending on the manuscript — promises specific fruits to those who recite the hymn at dusk: prosperity, beauty, fame, and ultimate devotion to Shiva. We pass on the promise without endorsement. The deeper fruit, in our editorial reading, is the one the hymn delivers in the act of recitation itself: the chanter, for the duration of the eight minutes, is no longer chanting about the dance. The chanter is, in some small way, part of it.

When to recite

  • Maha Shivaratri (the canonical occasion)
  • Pradosham (twilight Shiva window)
  • Shravan month
  • Personal practice when intensity is called for

Frequently asked

Did Ravana really compose this?

The hymn is attributed to Ravana in tradition. In the Puranic-Ramayana framing, Ravana — though the antagonist of the Ramayana — was a learned Shiva-bhakta who composed the stotram while pinned beneath Mount Kailasa, which he had tried to lift. Shiva, pleased by the hymn, freed him. Whether the historical Ravana (if he existed) composed it, or whether tradition associates it with him for theological reasons, is unsettled. What is certain is that the hymn is ancient, technically virtuosic, and continuous in oral Shaiva practice for many centuries.

Why is the metre so demanding?

The hymn uses panchachamara — eight feet per line of light-heavy-light-heavy pattern, with rigorous internal rhymes. Read aloud at speed it produces a galloping, almost trance-inducing cadence — exactly the rhythm of the tandava the verses describe. The metre is the dance. Reciting it slowly loses the entire effect; the hymn is meant to be sung at intensity.

How long is it?

Sixteen verses (some manuscripts have seventeen, with the closing verse considered a later devotional addition). At full recitation speed it runs about eight minutes. At a more measured pace, twelve. For comparison, the Rudrashtakam runs four to five minutes; the Lingashtakam, three.

Is it appropriate for daily practice?

Tradition reserves the Shiva Tandava for occasions calling for intensity — Maha Shivaratri, Pradosham, or moments in personal practice when the chanter needs to break through a stagnant register. It is not the hymn for a quiet morning. Daily practitioners typically pair it with a calmer companion like the Lingashtakam, alternating registers across the week.

Why the focus on Shiva's hair?

The opening word jaṭāṭavī — 'the forest of matted locks' — establishes the central image of the entire hymn. Shiva's hair is the cosmos itself: the Ganga falling through it, the moon caught in it, the serpents coiling within it. The dance does not happen on a stage; the dance happens in Shiva's hair, and the hair is the universe. This is why the hymn names the matted locks again and again — every verse returns to them.

Source & citation

Traditionally attributed to Ravana (Rāvaṇa), the asura king of Lanka and a devout Shiva-bhakta in the Puranic-Ramayana tradition. The hymn is anthologised in the Shiva Tandava Stotrāvali and many later devotional collections. No scholarly consensus exists on the composition date; metrical analysis suggests a pre-medieval origin.