Music
Glistening
Tones of the Gamelan
For anyone
interested in music - from the casual listener to the professional.
composer - Bali presents a musical landscape that stretches
far beyond the island's diminutive physical dimensions. Few
places in the world can boast such a rich and varied musical
environment. And while the sheer number and variety of ensembles,
performances and compositions is in itself quite extraordinary,
it is the superb quality of the music that elevates this tradition
into a class all its own.
Over the
centuries, Balinese musicians have developed a musical language
in which layers of melody and complex figurations are interwoven
to produce a unique tapestry of sound. The music is rehearsed
to perfect synchrony by musicians in village gamelan percussion
orchestras. On almost any evening, one can hear the bell-like
tones of the gamelan - from the high, shimmering melodies
of the metallophones to the deep, resonant tones of the gongs
and drums - drifting across the rice fields as villagers prepare
for yet another temple ceremony.
Music
in Balinese culture
In
Bali there is a fundamental integration of the performing
arts into daily social and religious activities. No celebration
or gathering is complete without music and dance. In Balinese
religious life, where an elaborate calendar requires an extensive
range of ceremonies to be performed, there is a consensus
that each event must be accompanied by' musical performances.
Such performances serve to entertain the gods as well as the
human participants, enabling both to return home after the
ritual with a feeling of well being and contentment.
Because
of the constant and widespread demand for musical performances,
a very large number of music and dance troupes is active on
the island (one recent estimate put the total at well over
1500). Music is practiced and developed incessantly by these
groups in order to maintain a high standard of tech, unique
and to develop an integration between musicians and dancers.
This astonishing
degree of musical activity not only maintains the tradition,
but also extends it. New works are constantly being created
and premiered before village audiences eager for new combinations
of sound, and movement. If these pieces are deemed worthy
by the players and the audience, they are added to the existing
repertoire and may even gain island-wide popularity. The Balinese
view this as "a grafting of new flowers onto the old
tree" rather than a break with tradition - an attitude
that insures the vitality of the arts here.
These ideals
find clear expression today in the Indonesian Academy of Music
and Dance (STSI) in Denpasar, where many of the island's best
performers, composers and choreographers work to develop and
transmit their arts to a new generation. STSI also serves
as the focal point for an international community of artists
and scholars interested in the Balinese performing arts.
Musical
organizations
The
term gamelan refers not only to the instruments but also to
the groups of musicians who play them. People participate
in these groups from a very young age, and one is often surprised
to hear intricate pieces being performed by children's groups
in which the average age is only 12 years. In the villages,
stitch groups may be formed for special festivals only to
be disbanded as soon as the festival is over. Most groups
play together for a long time, however - some for as long
as 40 or 50 years with unchanged membership. Some groups even
outlive their original membership and continue to exist as
autonomous village institutions for hundreds of years.
Organizationally,
music and dance troupes in Bali are deeply rooted in the banjar
- the fundamental unit of community within the Balinese village
or town. Its guiding principle and philosophy is that any
group must strive to exist as a coherent unit rather than
as a collection of individuals. In Balinese music, this attitude
of cooperation is essential, and individual virtuosity is
always far overshadowed by the ideal of unity and perfect
synchronization of the various parts. Much more so than in
Western music, a single part or Musician cannot stand alone,
but is integral to the whole. For this reason, solo performance
is nonexistent in Bali.
Anyone
with sufficient interest may join a gamelan, and groups are
composed of farmers, merchants, civil servants, etc. Although
the academy in Denpasar is giving birth to a new generation
of professionals, music remains by and large a non-professional,
village endeavor.
While the
immediate motivation to form a new group may vary - an upcoming
celebration, a festival competition with another banjar, or
a specially commissioned hotel performance, for example -
in general the Balinese simply love to play, and a first rehearsal
often finds more players ready to join in than there are positions
in the orchestral typical cooperative banjar fashion, even
the extras take part in the sekaha (club), however. They will
become helpers (for moving or maintaining the instruments)
or alternate players.
With the
exception of large hotel or other tourist performances, little
money is made from the performances. All proceeds are put
into a common fund for tuning and maintenance or acquisition
of new instrunents, as well as for dance costumes or an occasional
dinner for the sekaha members. Excess funds are divided among
the members just before Galungan.
Instruments
and tuning
There is
an amazing diversity of musical ensembles and genres found
on Bali. Some 15 to 20 different forms have been documented,
and the list grows longer as a younger generation of composers
experiments with new combinations and types of instruments.
The ensembles range in size from the small gender wayang,
a quartet of musicians who play the demanding accompaniment
to the wayang kulit shadow play, all the way up to the massive
gamelan gong, whose 35 or 40 members perform the ancient and
stately ceremonial pieces required for village rituals.
A variety
of materials are used in the production of instruments. Most
gamelan consist of bronze keys in carved wooden frames suspended
over bamboo resonators, together
with a
number of bronze gongs, drums, cymbals, flutes and an assortment
of smaller percussion instruments. But there are bamboo gamelan
ensembles as well - entire orchestras composed of bamboo marimbas
or flutes.
Perhaps
the most impressive of these is the gamelan jegog, found exclusively
in the western district of Jembrana. In a jegog ensemble,
the largest bass instruments are made from bamboo tubes measuring
up to 12 inches in diameter and 10 feet in length. When struck
with a large, padded mallet, they produce low tones of incredible
purity and depth that can often be heard for miles around.
The gamelan
selunding is a rare and sacred ensemble, with keys made of
iron and simple trough resonators. Special ceremonies and
offerings surround its use, as the keys are thought to possess
spiritual powers. Some selunding melodies are considered extremely
sacred, and may not be played or even hummed except on certain
ritual occasions.
In fact,
however, all gamelan instruments, no matter how or where they
are played, are believed to contain a spiritual power which
must be respected with proper offerings and rituals, depending
on the occasion and the date within the Balinese calendar.
No Balinese would ever think of stepping over an instrument,
for example, for fear that the spirit that inhabits it might
be insulted.
By far
the most common type of gamelan is the gong kebyar - a bronze
orchestra consisting of a number of metallophones, tuned gongs,
cymbals, flutes and drums. As in a Western orchestra, these
instrument families are further subdivided depending on the
range, musical function and playing technique of the instruments.
For example,
the highest-pitched metallophones (gangsa) are used to play
rapid interlocking figurations and melodies. The mi range
metallophones (calung or jublag) play the pokok or core melody,
while the bass instruments (jegogan) reinforce the stressed
pokok tones and mark the longer phrases.
A row of
tuned gongs played by four musicians called the reong executes
another for of figuration and rhythmic accentuation. The kempli,
a small gong, keeps the beat - a difficult task in this syncopated
and rhythmically complex music. The larger gong an the medium-sized
kempur and kemong pr vide punctuation of the phrases at importance
junctures. Leading them all is a pair of drummers (accompanied
by the cymbal or ceng-ceng player), who direct the entire
group with changes in tempo, accents and dynamics.
Bronze
gamelan instruments are all hand forged in Bali by highly
respected gong smiths using age-old techniques. Each orchestra
is laboriously tuned by filing an hammering the keys and gongs
to match pentatonic or 5-tone scale (and more rarely septatonic
or 7-tone scale) that is unique that particular set of instruments.
While ensembles of a similar type will be tune approximately
the same scale, there is no uniform standard of reference.
This is a clear, expression of the Balinese belief in each
gamelan's individual spirit. Every ensemble in other words,
has a unique character which must be allowed to emerge from
the metal.
Each tone
in this Balinese tuning system, which may follow either the
so-called pelog or selendro scales found also in Java, has
a corresponding tone tuned slightly higher or lower, so that
when struck together the two notes produce a pulsating, tremolo
effect. this "paired tuning" is responsible for
the shimmering quality so characteristic of the Balinese gamelan.
Musical
structure
Balinese
gamelan music is an intricate blend of sonorities, created
in a densely patterned, contrapuntal web of sound. Enhanced
by the tremolo effect of the paired tuning system, the music
shifts and vibrates rapidly - some have compared it to the
nightly choruses of crickets and frogs in the Balinese rice
fields.
Working
in an oral tradition (no notation is used), musicians have
evolved a complex language based on the concept of kotekan
or interlocking parts. In this system, the intricate melodic
figuration of the music is never played by a single musician,
but is divided instead into two complementary parts (called
sangsih and polos). When played together the two dovetails
to form the composite figuration.
Aside from
the sheer sonic complexity that kotekan patterning gives the
music, it also allows the orchestra to play at dazzling tempos
- enough to defy even the most nimble-fingered classical pianist.
Adding to the contrapuntal richness of the music is the fact
that several kinds of interlocking parts may be played simultaneously
in the various families of the orchestra. All of these parts
relate directly to a central or core melody (pokok) around
which they are woven.
In Balinese
dance performances, the drums or kendang form a critical link
between dancers and musicians. Through an intimate knowledge
of both dance and music (drummers often perform and teach
dance as well as music), the lead drummer is able to provide
signals to the other musicians that translate the detailed
cues of the dancer's movements into musical gestures.
To achieve
the requisite degree of synchronization, both within the music
and in its relationship to the dance, requires long hours
of rehearsal. As mentioned above, the language of Balinese
music has evolved almost entirely without a notational system.
Instead, the various parts of each gamelan composition are
learned by imitation.
In rehearsals
the teacher repeats each musical fragment until, through repetition
by the student, it is mastered. The parts are then combined
and unified to form a synchronous whole, and the interlocking
figurations become a single composite pattern. Practice and
years of experience give the piece subtle shadings of dynamics
and tempo, and match its movement with every gesture and accent
in the dance.