Gamelan is traditional ensemble music of Java and Bali in Indonesia, made up predominantly of percussive instruments. The most common instruments are metallophones played by mallets as well as a set of hand played drums called kendhang which register the beat. Other instruments include xylophones, bamboo flutes, bowed instrument called rebab, and even vocalists called sindhen.
Although the popularity of gamelan has declined since the
introduction of pop music, gamelan is still commonly played in formal
occasions and in many traditional Indonesian ceremonies. For most
Indonesians, gamelan is an integral part of Indonesian culture.
They are distinguished by their collection of instruments and use of
voice, tunings, repertoire, style, and cultural context. In general, no
two gamelan ensembles are the same, and those that arose in prestigious
courts are often considered to have their own style. Certain styles may
also be shared by nearby ensembles, leading to a regional style.
The varieties are generally grouped geographically, with the principal division between the styles favored by the Balinese, Javanese, and Sundanese
peoples. The Madurese also had their own style of gamelan, although it
is no longer in use, and the last orchestra is kept at the Sumenep
palace. Sundanese gamelan is often associated with Gamelan Degung, a Sundanese musical ensemble that utilises a subset of modified gamelan instruments with a particular mode of pelog scale. Balinese gamelan is often associated with the virtuosity and rapid changes of tempo and dynamics of Gamelan gong kebyar, its best-known style. Other popular Balinese styles include Gamelan and kecak,
also known as the "monkey chant." Javanese gamelan was largely
dominated by the courts of the 19th century central Javanese rulers,
each with its own style, but overall is known for a slower, more
meditative style than that of Bali. Although Javanese gamelan can be
made from steel, the better instruments are made of cast brass. The two
kinds of instruments are tuned in different ways.
Outside of the main core on Java and Bali,
gamelans have spread through migration and cultural interest, new
styles sometimes resulting as well. Malay gamelans are designed in ways
that are similar to the Javanese gamelan except they lack most of the
elaborating instruments and are tuned in a near-equidistant slendro, often using a western B♭
or C as a tuning basis. Javanese emigrants to Suriname play gamelan in a
style close to that found in Central Javanese villages. Gamelan is also
related to the Filipino kulintang ensemble. There is also a wide variety of gamelan in the West, including both traditional and experimental ensembles.
In oral Javanese culture distinctions are made between complete or
incomplete, archaic and modern, and large standard and small village
gamelan. The various archaic ensembles are distinguished by their unique
combinations of instruments and possession of obsolete instruments such
as the bell-tree (byong) in the 3-toned gamelan kodhok ngorek. Regionally variable village gamelan are often distinguished from standard gamelan (which have the rebab as the main melodic instrument) by their inclusion of a double-reed wind (selompret, slompret, or sompret) in addition to variable drum and gong components, with some also including the shaken bamboo angklung or other instruments not usually associated with gamelan.
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