Bali: Gamelan Semar Pergulingan:Gamelan of the Love God
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Artist:
Various Artists
Label: Nonesuch Category: Music Average customer rating: Format: Original recording remastered Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 075597972023 EAN: 0075597972023 ASIN: B00007M57G Release Date: 2003-01-28 |
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This recording is great, but..........2004-05-25
Sensational Sounds!.......2003-12-15
Colin McPhee with a few handful of musicians kept the gamelan semar pegulingan alive and its so wonderful to see the music being preserved and handed down from teacher to student as well as father to son. Old compositions being handed down and taught so that it may never be lost. I found the music to be quite relaxing especially the tuning which made it very light and airy because of the jinggling of the metallophones, the wonderful sound of the flute which gave it a unique timbre making the music more alus "refined" as it is. This is the best music I have come so far in regards to gamelan semar pegulingan. The beating of the drums and the clatters of the cymbals gently swaying as the musicians play and ornamentate on the metallophones as well as the trompong (one single musician playing a set of kettle gongs mounted on a horizontal frame, played with beaters).
The music and tracks are very wonderful, each of them carefully explained about what the music is and what the purpose is though. I found it full of information and very helpful to read as well, there are some small photographs of the instrumentation and also some of the musicians too. I enjoyed many of tracks and they seemed to be popular compositions that I have heard on other cd recording of the gamelan semar pegulingan. The most well known version of a famous dance piece known as legong kraton is the most popular. There are different genres and also different version of it. In this recording the introduction is different from compared to the one recorded by David Parson in Vol. The Music of Bali: Tirta Sari - Legong Gamelan. Slightly shorter but the same theme running through the whole piece which I found every enjoyable. Though a little loud in this version, there is no narration of the story in kawi (Old Javanese langauge - which is used in Balinese dance drama or theatre). However it has retained that gracefullness that I see in the young little legong kraton dancers as the whole story is enacted though. The climax builds to the end of the story when the Prince Lasem goes and fights his enemy whom he had abducted Princess Langkasari or Rangkasari from. In the short and fast tempo cycle the music becomes very fast and one can hear the gender (metallophones played with two beaters suspended over bamboo resonators) ornamentate the music and also emphasize the sudden movements of the dance and the battle scenes. The gong agung punctate loud but short beats, creating heavy booming tones which is typical of Balinese music. Very wonderful piece composed in regards to this heavenly dance. Danced by young girls at the ages of 7-10. The legong dancers retire by the time they start puberty.
Other recordings contain pieces that have originated from gambuh dance drama like tabuh gari which a piece performed which signaled the end of a performance. This piece contains performances on the trompong which is the lead instrument as well, elaborating its melody above the core melody which I often enjoy the metallic gong ringing. There are other pieces that were composed by the great Wayan Lotring who said he often dreamt about compositions and melodies for the gamelan semar pegulingan music. While others were tradition pieces that have been around for generations, some pieces have been revived and given a whole new playing style even though the playing style maybe different. However the music itself is still good.
The closest music of gamelan semar pegulingan that I would have to say has the same instrumentation would have to be Music of Bali: Gamelan Semar Pegulingan from the Village of Ketewel recorded by Wayne Vitale, Gamelan Semar Pegulingan of the Village of Binoh from World Music Library. These three cds I would have to recommend in regards to wanting to hear some really good semar pegulingan music. The all come from different parts of Bali but their tuning is pretty different from each other which I like at least you get some variations on regards to the tones and pitches of each orchestra. I give this cd the thumbs up. Sweet and divine music from the Balinese God of Love is indeed sweet like honey straight from a beehive.
Exquisite.......2003-10-31
My other favorite recording is one called "Best of Gamelan Bali," a 6-track CD. Despite the rather tacky title, it is actually quite amazing but not available on Amazon. I believe my father got it in Bali. If anyone has recommendations, I would greatly welcome an email: akuhn@berklee.net
If you were to only own one Explorer disc..........2003-05-09
The music presented here will capture your mind and your spirit, and will whisk them away to a time and place far removed from the doldrums of everyday life. No matter where you are, or what your situation, you'll feel that warm tropical breeze overtaking your senses from the first notes, to well beyond the triumphant finale. The well-written liner notes afford tremendous insight into the Balinese gamelan style, both from a technical and a cultural vantage point. Finally, the digital remastering is a work of art that makes the music shine on even the worst stereo systems.
I now own the entire Nonesuch Indonesia series, and am currently halfway through the Africa series as well. Thanks to this CD, I've been turned on to a music that I had never heard of in my 25 sheltered years of life. However, I'll be collecting gamelan extensively from now on. If you're only going to own one disc in the Explorer series, this is it.
Arguably the most beautiful sound in Bali.......2003-04-02
The famous gamelan heard on this recording was kept in composer/ethnomusicologist Colin McPheeýs house in Bali during the 1930s, when he was collecting material for his authoritative work, ýMusic in Bali.ý It is pictured therein, as well as in McPheeýs charming autobiography about those days called ýA House in Bali.ý McPheeýs chauffeur and musical guide was I Made Lebah, one of Baliýs greatest musicians, who directs the present ensemble.
In the early 1960s, some of Dr. Mantle Hoodýs graduate students at UCLA, who had studied with Colin McPhee in the last years before his death in 1964, found their way to Bali and became acquainted with Lebah. Inevitably we all began to ask about the famous Semar Pegulingan, wondering what had become of it. Anak Agung Gde Mandra, a member of the local nobility who owned the instruments and who had been the groupýs drummer in the 1930s, conceived the idea of restoring the gamelan after some thirty years of neglect, and the instruments were collected (some, famously, from beneath Made Lebahýs bed!), refurbished, and Mandera sent them to a banjar in the south of Pliatan village, where Lebah recruited a group, largely of young men in their teens, to start learning the old repertoire.
Those men are now aging, but the group, which visited Europe and Japan in its heyday, continues to play. The present recording, however, the first ever made of the group in 1971, reflects the youthful vigor of the players in its early days. More than that, the repertoire recorded here is what Made Lebah had played at McPheeýs house in the 1930s. This recording, then, is a kind of time warp back to that wonderful period in Bali before the Second World War, when such people as McPhee, Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, Miguel Covarrubias, Walter Spies, and others were creating the legend of a paradise on earth called Bali.
Later on, one of the senior players in the group, Made Grindem, along with others, decided to update things by adding pieces in a newer kebyar-influenced style to the repertoire, and Made Lebah departed. However, the pieces he brought to the group, some of them from the old palace musician, Guru Lunyuh of Payangan village, McPheeýs informant, and from McPheeýs friend, the composer I Lotring of Kuta village, are still played as Lebah taught them, and remain the foundation of the Teges repertoire as it exists today.
On this recording are old pieces like Tabuh Gari and Sinom Ladrang, Lotring's famous evocation of the syncopated music of the gambang xylophone ensemble, and the complete music for a legong, Bali's reknowned classical dance, usually performed by three highly trained little girls. In this case it is the music for the Playon story, not the Legong Lasem, which is most frequently heard today. Although the legong music is now more often played on the larger gong kebyar gamelan, the more delicate gamelan pelegongan, which adds two gender instruments to the semar pegulingan ensemble, is the instrumentation for which is was conceived, and conveys its spirit most perfectly.
I feel proud to have made this recording of the rare and exceedingly beautiful Gamelan Semar Pegulingan from Teges village, and can recommend it as an aural link to the past world of the late Colin McPhee, my teacher, and the late Made Lebah, my dear good friend, sorely missed.
Dr. Robert E. Brown
Center for World Music
San Diego, California...
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