Music Of Indonesia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Music Of Indonesia

Description:

This music indigenous to the islands of Bali and Java in the Indonesian archipelago ... The music in this context serves as the background for the theatrical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:4959
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: JasonK5
Category:
Tags: indonesia | music

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Music Of Indonesia


1
Music Of Indonesia
  • Balinese Gamelan

2
Gamelan Background
  • This music indigenous to the islands of Bali and
    Java in the Indonesian archipelago
  • Dates back to before the 12th century.
  • The word gamelan is a generic word for an
    instrumental ensemble ranging in size from a few
    small instruments to an impressive set of over
    fifty.
  • There is a great variety of instrumental
    ensembles which perform vibrant, and electrifying
    music with a great degree of precision ,
    artistry, technicality, and skill.

3
Instrumental Functions
  • A. Bossed (knobbed) gongs (punctuaters)
  • B. Bronze kettles (melody and texture)
  • C. Bronze metalophones (melody and textural)
  • D. Bamboo xylophones called (Gambang)

4
Functions (cont.)
  • E. Drums (provide rhythmic support)
  • F. Cymbals (provide rhythmic support)
  • G. The Rebab (two string fiddle) and Suling
    (Bamboo flute) (melody)

5
Gamelan Instruments
  • A. Gangsa - xylophone-like instrument that has
    bronze bars, bamboo resonators, is struck with a
    hammer in one hand while the other follows behind
    to dampen the tones.
  • B. Kendang - Two cylindrical drums. One drum is
    considered male, and the other female - together
    they play a series of interlocking rhythms which
    lead the group and cue changes in the musical
    texture and dynamic.
  • C. Trompong - Another drum - this one a deep bass
    sound which supports the Kendang and outlines the
    time cycle.

6
Instruments (cont.)
  • D. Kempli Gong - small gong that can be
  • at time much like a metronome.
  • E. Cengceng - small cymbals used in faster more
    exciting sections of Gamelan music.
  • F. Suling - bamboo flute used to play melodies
  • G. Rebab - two string fiddle that provides
    supporting role to the melody

7
Religious Background
  • Bronze and Iron are used in the making of the
    metal bars for the keyboard instruments and the
    gongs by specialized artisans or metal smiths -
    this is considered a very sacred and secretive
    occupation.
  • The sacred nature of this occupation is due to a
    religious belief called animism which shares a
    unique relationship with the Hinduism that is
    practice by 90 of the Balinese population.
  • Animism is the belief that all things either
    animal or mineral possess an inherent spirit.
    This spirit is thus transformed from its animal
    or mineral state into that of a musical
    instrument and is still alive in a sense.
    Therefore, the gamelan instruments themselves
    are thought to be sacred, possessing a soul,
    and must be regarded with great respect. Such
    things as stepping over an instrument in the
    gamelan ensemble shows disrespect to this spirit
    and is bad luck.

8
Musical Characteristics
  • The instruments used in gamelan are tuned to one
    of two scale systems
  • 1. Pelog - a five note (pentatonic) scale made
    up of nearly equidistant intervals.
  • 2. Slendro - a seven note scale made up of large
    and small intervals.
  • the slendro and pelog instruments never play
    together, rather a complete orchestra of
    instruments in each tuning system must exist to
    play music.

9
Characteristics (cont.)
  • Paired Tuning - The instruments in the ensemble
    utilize " paired tuning," meaning that two of the
    same instruments in the ensemble are tune
    slightly apart to create a pulsating vibrato or
    "shimmering" sound of slight dissonance. This is
    what gives the gamelan its characteristic
    haunting sound.
  • Compositional techniques - Gamelan music is
    cyclic in nature and based largely on repeated
    patterns of punctuation and time. There is a
    pervasive use of interlocking between individual
    parts to produce rapid figuration of
    mind-boggling speed and precision. Most gamelan
    rely on the interlocking (also known as Hocket)
    technique called "Kotekan" to create its ostinato
    and melodic patterns.

10
Kotekan Types
  • A. Polos - the pattern that falls more on the
    beat than off - it is more stable (less
    syncopated) and is characteristically considered
    female.
  • B. Nangsih ( pronounced SONGSY) - pattern that
    falls more off beat - it is unstable (more
    syncopated) and is considered to be
    characteristically male.

11
Four Types of Kotekan
  • 1. Chandetan - an alternating rhythm in which
    the nyangsih differs from the polos

12
Kotekan types (cont.)
  • 2. Tutugan - an alternating rhythm in which the
    nyangsih melody follows the polos

13
Kotekan Types (cont.)
  • 3. Ochetan - an interlocking rhythm in which two
    separate voices are created where the parts
    meet.

14
Kotekan Types (cont.)
  • 4. Semi - Ochetan - an interlocking rhythm in
    which the parts meet on a unison.

15
Ensemble Types
  • For most gamelan ensemble types the music is
    fixed and composed relying very little on
    improvisation.
  • Gamelan Selunding- a small ensemble made up of 8
    - 10 players-play the older more traditional
    compositions. Usually this music is slow and
    soft.
  • Gamelan Gede - large ensemble that plays also
    more traditional pieces. The instruments are made
    of large Iron bars which are quite loud and are
    played without the dampening technique inherent
    to Kebyar.

16
Ensemble types (cont.)
  • Gamelan Gong Kebyar - Most abundant ensemble type
    on Bali which play very fast, exciting,
    contemporary compositions. Kebyar means literally
    "to burst open" or to "flare up," and grew out of
    the gong gede tradition around 1915 in Northern
    Bali. Kebyar is more episodic than other types of
    gamelan displaying sudden shifts in tempo, style,
    and volume.

17
Ensemble Types (cont.)
Wayan Kulit - Shadow -Puppet drama which
developed in Java in which a Dalong or
puppeteer controls the movements and voices of
up to 50 different puppets and is accompanied by
a unique form of gamelan playing which reacts to
the Dalongs movements and vocalizations.
Gamelan Anklung - gamelan music play
ed on small keyboard instruments comprised of
only four notes. Music is characteristically
light and is an older form of gamelan.
18
Ensemble types (cont.)
  • Kecek - Often referred to as The Monkey Chant,
    this form of music actually mimics the sound of a
    lizard found on Bali which makes the cek sound.
    The performers chanted these lizard sounds in an
    interlocking fashion which creates an unusual
    textural sound. Cyclic punctuating gongs are
    also mimicked with voice. The music in this
    context serves as the background for the
    theatrical drama used to depict stories from the
    Ramayana, a Hindu epic.

19
Wayan Kulit
20
Playing the Kantilan
21
The Trompong
22
Dueling Kendang
23
Gamelan Gong Gede
24
Beach Gathering
25
Banjar Childrens Gamelan
26
Banjar Dancing
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com