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{{short description|Malay musical ensemble and dance}} {{short description|Malay musical instrument and dance}}
{{Infobox Instrument {{Infobox Instrument
| name = Malay gamelan
|color1=#FFD700
| names = ''Gamelan Melayu''
|color2=#FFEC8B
|name= Malay Gamelan | image = SUKTRA Gamelan Musicians.jpg
| image_size = 270px
|names= ''Gamelan Melayu'' or ''Joget Pahang''
| caption = A Malay gamelan performance
|image= SUKTRA Gamelan Musicians.jpg
| developed = ] (present-day ])<ref>{{cite web |title=The Malay Gamelan |url=http://themalaygamelan.jigsy.com/ |website=themalaygamelan |access-date=11 November 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The History of Gamelan's Origin |url=http://gamelannerds.yolasite.com/history.php |access-date=11 November 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Menabuh Gamelan Melayu|date=8 July 2019|url=https://kebudayaan.kemdikbud.go.id/bpnbkepri/menabuh-gamelan-melayu/|access-date=29 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title= Gambang Mentuda Diambang Kepunahan|date=30 July 2019|url=https://kebudayaanindonesia.net/gambang-mentuda-diambang-kepunahan/|access-date=29 December 2020}}</ref>
|image_size = 270px
| classification = *]
|caption= A Malay gamelan performance in Malaysia
|developed= ]<ref>{{cite web |title=The Malay Gamelan |url=http://themalaygamelan.jigsy.com/ |website=themalaygamelan |accessdate=11 November 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The History of Gamelan's Origin |url=http://gamelannerds.yolasite.com/history.php |accessdate=11 November 2020}}</ref>
|classification=
*]
*] *]
*] *]
|range= | range =
|related= | related =
| articles = * ]
|musicians=
|articles=
* ]
}}
{{Infobox music genre
| bgcolor = goldenrod
| color = white
| name = Gamelan ensemble
| stylistic_origins = ]
| cultural_origins = ]<ref>{{cite web |title=The History of Gamelan's Origin |url=http://gamelannerds.yolasite.com/history.php |accessdate=11 November 2020}}</ref>
| instruments = Gamelan
| popularity =
| derivatives =
| subgenrelist =
| subgenres =
| regional_scenes =
| other_topics =
}} }}
{{Music of Indonesia}}
{{Music of Malaysia}}
The '''Malay Gamelan''' (]/]: ''gamelan Melayu''; ]: {{Script/Arabic|ݢاميلن ملايو}}) is a style of music originated from ], performed in ethnic ]-populated regions of ] (particularly in ], ] and ]) and ] (particularly in ], ] and ]) as well.


==Etymology==
The '''Malay gamelan''' (]: '''''gamelan Melayu'''''; ]: '''ݢاميلن ملايو''') which exists today in ] (particularly in ], ] and ]) is basically from royal passed down through heritage. The Malay gamelan has developed an identity that is distinct from the ], ] and ] ]. According to the ''Kamus Dewan'', gamelan is a set of musical instruments derived from several types of hammered instruments, such as saron, bonang, gambang, gong and others.<ref name="DBP-Gamelan">{{Cite web|url=https://prpm.dbp.gov.my/Cari1?keyword=gamelan|title=Carian Umum - Gamelan|website=prpm.dbp.gov.my|lang=ms|access-date=2020-11-11}}</ref>
The word of '''{{lang|jv|Gamelan}}''' derived from the term in {{langx|jv|ꦒꦩꦼꦭ꧀|'''gamel'''}}, which means "hitting" or "striking" refer to playing of ] or the act of striking with a ], '''''+ an''''' (]-forming ]).<ref>{{Cite web|title=History and Etymology for gamelan|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gamelan#:~:text=%3A%20an%20Indonesian%20orchestra%20made%20up,gongs%2C%20xylophones%2C%20and%20drums)|access-date=17 December 2020|work=Merriam-Webster}}</ref><ref name=sumarsam>Sumarsam (1998). . Middletown.</ref><ref name="Lindsay">Lindsay, Jennifer (1992). ''Javanese Gamelan'', p.10. {{ISBN|0-19-588582-1}}.<!--ibid later--></ref> While the word of '''{{lang|ms|Melayu}}''' refer to the ] which had its correlation to ].<ref>{{citation | last = Milner | first = Anthony | title = The Malays (The Peoples of South-East Asia and the Pacific) | pages = 18–19| publisher = Wiley-Blackwell | year = 2010 | isbn = 978-1-4443-3903-1 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Reid|first=Anthony| journal=]|title=Understanding Melayu (Malay) as a Source of Diverse Modern Identities| volume=32|issue=3|year=2001|pages=295–313|doi=10.1017/S0022463401000157|pmid=19192500|s2cid=38870744}}</ref>


== History == ==History==
Malay Gamelan developed in conjunction with Malay Joget Gamelan. In the mid-18th century, a team of court dancers and musicians was sent from central Java to the island of Penyengat, the royal island capital of the ] empire (present-day ]). Javanese style court dance and music were, therefore, introduced at the Istana Kuning (the Yellow Palace), the Penyengat palace, the music being that of the gamelan and the dances consisting mainly of the ] and Bedaya, the main classical dances of the central Javanese courts.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q6MJEAAAQBAJ&dq=joget+gamelan+java&pg=PT16 |title=Sharing Identities: Celebrating Dance in Malaysia |author=Mohd Anis Md Nor, Stephanie Burridge Taylor & Francis |date=29 Nov 2020 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781000083729 |access-date=5 April 2023 }}</ref><ref>Saearani, M. F. T. B & Cahyono, A. (2016). The Inheritance of Malay Palace Dance in Malaysia and Yogyakarta Classical Dance in Indonesia . Harmonia: Journal of Arts Research And Education, 16(1), 75-86. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.15294/harmonia.v16i1.6145</ref>
Gamelan is one of the classical Malay musical ensembles. This classical Malay music was first performed at the Palace of ] in Riau-Lingga in the 17th century. In 1811, it was first performed in public in Pekan, Pahang, accompanied by the classical ''Joget Pahang'' during the wedding ceremony of Tengku Hussain, the son of Sultan Abdul Rahman who ruled Riau-Lingga, with Wan Esah, the younger sister of Bendahara Ali from Pahang. Malay gamelan was then introduced in Terengganu after Tengku Mariam, a princess of Pahang, married Tengku Sulaiman, the prince of Tengku Zainal Abidin from Terengganu. In 1913, the Malay Gamelan tradition completely disappeared from the abolition of the Riau-Lingga Sultanate, but flourished in Pahang, and then to Terengganu. In Terengganu, the name ''Joget Gamelan'' is used to replace the name ''Joget Pahang''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sanggar Seni Gamelan|url=https://www.sanggarseni.my/gamelan |accessdate=11 November 2020}}</ref> While in Terengganu, the current form of Malay gamelan and ''Joget Gamelan'' took formed.<ref>https://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/20248/1/Joget%20Gamelan%20Terengganu%20dari%20aspek%20penceritaan...(24%20pages).pdf</ref> The Malay gamelan was first brought to ] in 1969 in a public performance. Since then, it has become a part of the Malaysian arts and cultural heritage.<ref>http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/6465/1/yiing_siing.pdf</ref>

The 19th-century Riau-Lingga empire was vast. It included the peninsula states of Johor, Pahang and Terengganu, the Riau Archipelago and the Karimon islands. It was through this association of Pahang with the Riau-Lingga empire that Javanese court dance and music found their way into the Pahang court.
In Daik, where the musical ensemble is believed to be originated, only four bonangs that can be found, and currently stored in Museum Linggam Cahaya, Komplek Istana Damnah. According to the manager of the Museum, the four bonangs were found by the villagers of Kerandin kecamatan Lingga Timur and were buried in the ground and then handed over to the Museum. Even though Malay gamelan has long disappeared in Indonesia, due to the sense of responsibility as a nationalist citizen and the jealousy of its development in Malaysia, interest in reviving the Malay Gamelan has gotten stronger in Indonesia.<ref>{{cite web |title=Menabuh Gamelan Melayu |url=https://kebudayaan.kemdikbud.go.id/bpnbkepri/menabuh-gamelan-melayu/ |accessdate=11 November 2020}}</ref>
The first occasion for such a phenomenon was the 1811 royal wedding in Pekan, Pahang, of Tengku Husain, the eldest son of Sultan Abdul Rahman of Riau-Lingga and Wan Esah, the sister of Bendahara Wan Ali of Pahang when the wedding celebrations were enlivened by elaborate court dances, to the accompaniment of an orchestra of gongs and xylophones, which were found only at the Malay courts of Pahang and Lingga. While it is not known when this particular form of dance and music began in the Pahang court, it is evident, however, that by 1811 the tradition was known and practiced in the Pekan palace. <ref>(M. Sheppard, Joget Gamelan of Trengganu', Straits Times Annual, Kuala Lumpur: New Straits Times Press, 1969, p. 81.</ref>
Bendahara Wan Ahmad, later Sultan Ahmad (1863-1914), inherited the gamelan set as well as the court troupe of dancers and musicians from his father, Bendahara Wan Ali. The form, now called Joget Pahang, was firmly established at the Pekan palace under the royal patronage of Bendahara Wan Ahmad. His interest in the form was keen. He obtained three separate sets of gamelan instruments and established three groups of four dancers each. Of his five wives, three maintained a group each: one group was under his royal wife, Tengku Ampuan Fatimah, another under Che Besar and the third under Che Zubedah. Sultan Ahmad and his third wife, Che Zubedah, were particularly interested in Joget Pahang. Che Zubedah was a Chinese, and it is believed that she greatly influenced the development of Joget Pahang, spending much time and effort particularly in perfecting the dances.
One can clearly identify many 'Chinese' characteristics in Joget Gamelan. For example, elements of the costume like the manner in which the sarong is tied, and the particularities of the unusual headdress are a clear deviation from other Malay classical dance costume styles and from Serimpi and Bedaya. Also, the music of the dance Timang Burung, one of the most popular from the Joget Gamelan repertoire is, in fact, an old and familiar Chinese folk song.
During the reign of Sultan Ahmad of Pahang, Joget Pahang was introduced into the state of Terengganu. In 1885, a marriage took place between Sultan Zainal Abidin (1881-1918) of Terengganu and Tengku Long, daughter of Sultan Ahmad of Pahang. At this wedding, Sultan Zainal Abidin witnessed Joget Pahang for the first time and was impressed. Eventually, he borrowed a set of instruments and musicians from Sultan Ahmad and began the playing of gamelan music in his own palace. <ref>{{cite web |url=https://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/20248/1/Joget%20Gamelan%20Terengganu%20dari%20aspek%20penceritaan...(24%20pages).pdf |title=JOGET GAMELAN TERENGGANU DARI ASPEK PENCERITAAN DAN CABARAN PEMELIHARAANNYA |trans-title=JOGET GAMELAN TERENGGANU FROM THE ASPECT OF STORYTELLING AND THE CHALLENGES OF ITS MAINTENANCE |date=2012 |website=}}</ref>
In 1914, Sultan Ahmad died and there was no heir to the throne who was interested in maintaining the Pahang Joget tradition. Che Zubedah, Sultan Ahmad's wife also left for Terengganu with her gamelan set to live with her son, Tengku Ampuan Mariam. Tengku Ampuan Mariam was highly trained in the art of the Pahang dance. Armed with the support of Tengku Sulaiman who was also interested in gamelan, Tengku Ampuan Mariam continued this art in Terengganu.
Malay gamelan was first introduced to the public when Tan Sri Mubin Sheppard, a Malay architectural scholar, found a gamelan set at the Pool Terengganu Palace and then asked Tengku Ampuan Mariam's permission to turn on this gamelan in 1966.<ref> FarizanM. Razuri, 2010</ref> The first appearance of the Gamelan Orchestra in Raja Terengganu was in 1969 at the Asian Music and Drama Festival at Universiti Malaya (UM) Kuala Lumpur followed in 1970 in conjunction with Temasha Seni Melayu which also presented a new generation of dancers. Since then, it has become a part of the Malaysian arts and cultural heritage. Gamelan is commonly played during formal occasions like weddings and traditional ceremonies.
In the past,{{when|date=March 2021}} about 80 traditional gamelan music were performed but this has now been reduced to 50, with 12 songs being the common ones, some of them include ''Timang Burung'', ''Ayak-Ayak'' and ''Seri Rama Balik''. <ref>{{cite news |last1=Aziz |first1=Ninot |title=Living the Gamelan |publisher=New Straits Times |date=1 February 2015}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com.my/lifestyle/culture/2020/08/25/good-vibrations-how-to-unite-people-through-gamelan-music|title=Good vibrations: how to unite people through gamelan music &#124; The Star|website=www.thestar.com.my}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nst.com.my/lifestyle/pulse/2017/08/271189/renewing-love-gamelan|title=Renewing the love for gamelan &#124; New Straits Times|first=Adrian|last=David|date=August 22, 2017|website=NST Online}}</ref>


==Instruments== ==Instruments==
Based on the ancient royal gamelan set discovered in 1966 at Istana Kolam, Terengganu, a set of Terengganu Malay gamelan consists of these basic instruments:<ref>https://www.hmetro.com.my/nuansa/2019/04/440348/memartabatkan-gamelan</ref> Based on the gamelan set discovered in 1966 at Istana Kolam, Terengganu, a set of Terengganu Malay gamelan consists of seven basic instruments:<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Teuku Iskandar |first1=Teuku Umar Ilany |title=Malay Gamelan: Playing Techniques of the Keromong and Gambang |journal=International Journal of Creative Industries |date=15 December 2021 |doi=10.35631/IJCREI.38001 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Teuku-Umar-Ilany-Teuku-Iskandar/publication/357241865_Malay_Gamelan_Playing_Techniques_of_the_Keromong_and_Gambang/links/61c2f06babfb4634cb35a8d7/Malay-Gamelan-Playing-Techniques-of-the-Keromong-and-Gambang.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hmetro.com.my/nuansa/2019/04/440348/memartabatkan-gamelan|title=Memartabatkan gamelan|first=Aniza|last=Zainudin|date=April 3, 2019|website=HM Online}}</ref>
# ''Keromong'', also known as '']'' (a set of 10 small kettle gongs) # ''Keromong'', also known as '']'' (a set of 10 small kettle gongs)
# '']'', (a wooden xylophone) # '']'' (a wooden xylophone)
# '']'', (another set of metallophones, slightly smaller than ''saron kecil'') # ''Saron kecil'', also known as ''saron barung'' (a set of metallophones)
# '']'', also known as ''saron barung'' (a set of metallophones) # ''Saron besar'', also known as ''saron demung'' (another set of metallophones, slightly bigger than ''saron kecil'')
# '']'' (a set of 5 large kettle gongs)
# '']'', also known as ''saron demung'' (another set of metallophones, slightly bigger than ''saron kecil'')
# A pair of hanging ], which are ''gong kecil'' and ''gong besar''
# '']'', (a set of 5 large kettle gongs)
# '']'' (a barrel drum)
# A pair of hanging ], (which are ''gong kecil'' and ''gong besar'')
Malay gamelan had more than seven musical instruments during its heyday at Istana Kolam, such as the gedemung (slentho in Javanese tradition) and gender, but only seven instruments remained and were kept after the Second World War.<ref>Teuku Umar Ilany Bin Teuku Iskandar (2022). Gamelan Melayu:Teknik Permainan Keromong Dan Gambang Serta Peranan Cincang Dan Turun Gambang. Universiti Malaya. </ref>
# '']'', (a barrel drum)

One instrument was added later into Malay gamelan:
# '']'', (similar to ''saron'' but larger)


== Joget Gamelan == == Joget gamelan ==
{{Infobox dance {{Infobox dance
| name = Joget Gamelan | name = Joget gamelan
| native_name = | native_name =
| etymology = {{langx|jv|ꦗꦺꦴꦒꦺꦢ꧀|joget}} (dance) and {{langx|jv|ꦒꦩꦼꦭ꧀|gamel}} (hitting or striking)<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Norsafini |first1=Jafar |last2= Rahmah |first2= Bujang |date=2015 |title=Creative Reinvention of Joget Gamelan in Malaysia |url=http://www.ijcci.net/index.php?option=module&lang=en&task=download_file&id=184_file_1 |journal=International Journal of Cultural and Creative Industries |volume=3 |issue=1 |access-date=20 March 2021}}</ref>
| native_name_lang =
| etymology = | image = SUKTRA Gamelan Dancers.jpg
| image_size = 250px
| image = SUKTRA Gamelan Dancers.jpg
| alt = 250px | caption = Dancers performing a Joget Gamelan dance
| caption = Dancers performing a Joget Gamelan dance | genre = ]
| genre = | signature =
| instruments = Malay gamelan
| signature =
| instruments = Malay gamelan | year =
| origin = ], then later introduced to ] where it was developed into its form today <ref>{{cite journal |last1=Norsafini |first1=Jafar |last2= Rahmah |first2= Bujang |date=2015 |title=Creative Reinvention of Joget Gamelan in Malaysia |url= http://www.ijcci.net/index.php?option=module&lang=en&task=download_file&id=184_file_1 |journal=International Journal of Cultural and Creative Industries |volume=3 |issue=1 |access-date=20 March 2021}}</ref>
| inventor =
| year =
| origin = ]
}} }}
{{Dance drama of Southeast Asia}} {{Dance drama of Southeast Asia}}
The classical Malay ''Joget Gamelan'' always tells a hidden story. The classical Malay song of ''Timang Burung'' tells the story of Hikayat Panji Semirang, a romantic Javanese tale of ''Raden Galuh Chendera Kirana'' and ''Raden Inu Karpati''. According to Tengku Mariam, this dance repository originally consisted of 77 types of ] songs and 60 types of dances. Among popular songs and dances are such as ''Timang Burung'', ''Ayak-ayak'', ''Lambang Sari'', ''Ketam Renjung'', ''Geliung'', ''Lantai Lima'', ''Kending Gajah'', ''Togok Rompin'', ''Kunang-kunang Mabuk'', ''Galuk Merajuk'', ''Silatin'', ''Lolo'' and ''Monab''. According to Tengku Mariam, this dance repository originally consisted of 77 types of ]. But today there are only 33 types left as a result of the absence of dance instructors. Among the 33 types of dances that remain are such as ''Timang Burung'', ''Ayak-ayak'', ''Lambang Sari'', ''Ketam Renjung'', ''Geliung'', ''Lantai Lima'', ''Kending Gajah'', ''Togok Rompin'', ''Kundang-Kundang Mabuk'', ''Galuk Merajuk'', ''Silatin'', ''Lolo'' and ''Monab''.


Many of the stories of the Joget Gamelan dances were taken from the Javanese Panji cycle, others were based upon activities in and around the palace. The following are some examples:
This classical dance is performed exclusively by female dancers and can be staged internally or openly. ] elements can be seen in terms of the art of dance. In aesthetics, this dance is very beautiful and is a form of dance that is the richest in terms of its type in the most traditional ].
Ayak-Ayak was the opening dance.
It tells of court maidens and servants at work, slaughtering chickens, goats and cows in preparation for the marriage of Raden Galoh Cendra Kirana to Raden Inu Kertapati. The movements in the dance depict the preparations.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q6MJEAAAQBAJ&dq=joget+gamelan+java&pg=PT16 |title=Sharing Identities: Celebrating Dance in Malaysia |author=Mohd Anis Md Nor, Stephanie Burridge Taylor & Francis |date=29 Nov 2020 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781000083729 |access-date=5 April 2023 }}</ref><ref>Saearani, M. F. T. B & Cahyono, A. (2016). The Inheritance of Malay Palace Dance in Malaysia and Yogyakarta Classical Dance in Indonesia . Harmonia: Journal of Arts Research And Education, 16(1), 75-86. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.15294/harmonia.v16i1.6145</ref>
The dance Togok tells the story of Raden Galoh going in search of her husband who had disappeared. She meets another princess. In the ensuing fight, Raden Galoh is hurt by an arrow. However, all ends well, with both princesses hunting together. Raden Galoh is eventually reunited with her husband.
Timang Burung tells of how Raden Galoh, after being locked in her room by her father for some time, is released. Going into the garden with her handmaidens, she sees the Burung Kepudang or golden swallow. Enraptured by the movements of the bird, she requests her handmaidens to imitate them. Timang Burung is the ensuing dance of the maidens imitating the birds with fan movements depicting the fluttering wings and tails.
Taman Sari, an exquisite dance, tells of Raden Galoh and her handmaidens making merry in the beautiful garden called Taman Sari. There they play, eat, bathe, fish, beautify themselves, gather flowers, and dance.
A dance on the theme of war, called Perang, was also important. It is said that this dance was the last item in every formal performance and the dancers went into a trance.
Joget Gamelan performed exclusively by female dancers can be staged internally or openly.


== See also == == See also ==
{{Portal|Music|Malaysia}} {{Portal|Music|Indonesia|Singapore|Malaysia}}
* ] * ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
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{{Gamelan}} {{Gamelan}}
{{Indonesian musical instruments}}
{{Traditional musical instruments of Malaysia}} {{Traditional musical instruments of Malaysia}}


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Latest revision as of 11:51, 6 November 2024

Malay musical instrument and dance
Malay gamelan
A Malay gamelan performance
Other namesGamelan Melayu
Classification
DevelopedRiau-Lingga Sultanate (present-day Indonesia)
More articles or information
Various hanging Gongs (gong ageng, gong suwukan, kempul) of Gamelan in Indonesia
Music of Indonesia
Genres
Specific forms
Regional music
Malays playing gongs

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Modern

Music of Malaysia
Media and performance
Music awards
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RIM Charts
Nationalistic and patriotic songs
National anthem
Negaraku

The Malay Gamelan (Malay/Indonesian: gamelan Melayu; Jawi: ݢاميلن ملايو‎) is a style of music originated from Indonesia, performed in ethnic Malay-populated regions of Indonesia (particularly in North Sumatra, Riau and Riau Islands) and Malaysia (particularly in Pahang, Terengganu and Johor) as well.

Etymology

The word of Gamelan derived from the term in Javanese: ꦒꦩꦼꦭ꧀, romanized: gamel, which means "hitting" or "striking" refer to playing of percussion instruments or the act of striking with a mallet, + an (noun-forming suffix). While the word of Melayu refer to the Malays which had its correlation to Melayu Kingdom.

History

Malay Gamelan developed in conjunction with Malay Joget Gamelan. In the mid-18th century, a team of court dancers and musicians was sent from central Java to the island of Penyengat, the royal island capital of the Riau-Lingga empire (present-day Indonesia). Javanese style court dance and music were, therefore, introduced at the Istana Kuning (the Yellow Palace), the Penyengat palace, the music being that of the gamelan and the dances consisting mainly of the Serimpi and Bedaya, the main classical dances of the central Javanese courts.

The 19th-century Riau-Lingga empire was vast. It included the peninsula states of Johor, Pahang and Terengganu, the Riau Archipelago and the Karimon islands. It was through this association of Pahang with the Riau-Lingga empire that Javanese court dance and music found their way into the Pahang court.

The first occasion for such a phenomenon was the 1811 royal wedding in Pekan, Pahang, of Tengku Husain, the eldest son of Sultan Abdul Rahman of Riau-Lingga and Wan Esah, the sister of Bendahara Wan Ali of Pahang when the wedding celebrations were enlivened by elaborate court dances, to the accompaniment of an orchestra of gongs and xylophones, which were found only at the Malay courts of Pahang and Lingga. While it is not known when this particular form of dance and music began in the Pahang court, it is evident, however, that by 1811 the tradition was known and practiced in the Pekan palace.

Bendahara Wan Ahmad, later Sultan Ahmad (1863-1914), inherited the gamelan set as well as the court troupe of dancers and musicians from his father, Bendahara Wan Ali. The form, now called Joget Pahang, was firmly established at the Pekan palace under the royal patronage of Bendahara Wan Ahmad. His interest in the form was keen. He obtained three separate sets of gamelan instruments and established three groups of four dancers each. Of his five wives, three maintained a group each: one group was under his royal wife, Tengku Ampuan Fatimah, another under Che Besar and the third under Che Zubedah. Sultan Ahmad and his third wife, Che Zubedah, were particularly interested in Joget Pahang. Che Zubedah was a Chinese, and it is believed that she greatly influenced the development of Joget Pahang, spending much time and effort particularly in perfecting the dances.

One can clearly identify many 'Chinese' characteristics in Joget Gamelan. For example, elements of the costume like the manner in which the sarong is tied, and the particularities of the unusual headdress are a clear deviation from other Malay classical dance costume styles and from Serimpi and Bedaya. Also, the music of the dance Timang Burung, one of the most popular from the Joget Gamelan repertoire is, in fact, an old and familiar Chinese folk song.

During the reign of Sultan Ahmad of Pahang, Joget Pahang was introduced into the state of Terengganu. In 1885, a marriage took place between Sultan Zainal Abidin (1881-1918) of Terengganu and Tengku Long, daughter of Sultan Ahmad of Pahang. At this wedding, Sultan Zainal Abidin witnessed Joget Pahang for the first time and was impressed. Eventually, he borrowed a set of instruments and musicians from Sultan Ahmad and began the playing of gamelan music in his own palace.

In 1914, Sultan Ahmad died and there was no heir to the throne who was interested in maintaining the Pahang Joget tradition. Che Zubedah, Sultan Ahmad's wife also left for Terengganu with her gamelan set to live with her son, Tengku Ampuan Mariam. Tengku Ampuan Mariam was highly trained in the art of the Pahang dance. Armed with the support of Tengku Sulaiman who was also interested in gamelan, Tengku Ampuan Mariam continued this art in Terengganu.

Malay gamelan was first introduced to the public when Tan Sri Mubin Sheppard, a Malay architectural scholar, found a gamelan set at the Pool Terengganu Palace and then asked Tengku Ampuan Mariam's permission to turn on this gamelan in 1966. The first appearance of the Gamelan Orchestra in Raja Terengganu was in 1969 at the Asian Music and Drama Festival at Universiti Malaya (UM) Kuala Lumpur followed in 1970 in conjunction with Temasha Seni Melayu which also presented a new generation of dancers. Since then, it has become a part of the Malaysian arts and cultural heritage. Gamelan is commonly played during formal occasions like weddings and traditional ceremonies.

In the past, about 80 traditional gamelan music were performed but this has now been reduced to 50, with 12 songs being the common ones, some of them include Timang Burung, Ayak-Ayak and Seri Rama Balik.

Instruments

Based on the gamelan set discovered in 1966 at Istana Kolam, Terengganu, a set of Terengganu Malay gamelan consists of seven basic instruments:

  1. Keromong, also known as bonang (a set of 10 small kettle gongs)
  2. Gambang (a wooden xylophone)
  3. Saron kecil, also known as saron barung (a set of metallophones)
  4. Saron besar, also known as saron demung (another set of metallophones, slightly bigger than saron kecil)
  5. Kenong (a set of 5 large kettle gongs)
  6. A pair of hanging gongs, which are gong kecil and gong besar
  7. Gendang (a barrel drum)

Malay gamelan had more than seven musical instruments during its heyday at Istana Kolam, such as the gedemung (slentho in Javanese tradition) and gender, but only seven instruments remained and were kept after the Second World War.

Joget gamelan

Joget gamelan
Dancers performing a Joget Gamelan dance
EtymologyJavanese: ꦗꦺꦴꦒꦺꦢ꧀, romanized: joget (dance) and Javanese: ꦒꦩꦼꦭ꧀, romanized: gamel (hitting or striking)
GenreTraditional dance
Instrument(s)Malay gamelan
OriginIndonesia, then later introduced to Malaysia where it was developed into its form today
Malay gamelan
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According to Tengku Mariam, this dance repository originally consisted of 77 types of gamelan. But today there are only 33 types left as a result of the absence of dance instructors. Among the 33 types of dances that remain are such as Timang Burung, Ayak-ayak, Lambang Sari, Ketam Renjung, Geliung, Lantai Lima, Kending Gajah, Togok Rompin, Kundang-Kundang Mabuk, Galuk Merajuk, Silatin, Lolo and Monab.

Many of the stories of the Joget Gamelan dances were taken from the Javanese Panji cycle, others were based upon activities in and around the palace. The following are some examples:

Ayak-Ayak was the opening dance. It tells of court maidens and servants at work, slaughtering chickens, goats and cows in preparation for the marriage of Raden Galoh Cendra Kirana to Raden Inu Kertapati. The movements in the dance depict the preparations.

The dance Togok tells the story of Raden Galoh going in search of her husband who had disappeared. She meets another princess. In the ensuing fight, Raden Galoh is hurt by an arrow. However, all ends well, with both princesses hunting together. Raden Galoh is eventually reunited with her husband.

Timang Burung tells of how Raden Galoh, after being locked in her room by her father for some time, is released. Going into the garden with her handmaidens, she sees the Burung Kepudang or golden swallow. Enraptured by the movements of the bird, she requests her handmaidens to imitate them. Timang Burung is the ensuing dance of the maidens imitating the birds with fan movements depicting the fluttering wings and tails.

Taman Sari, an exquisite dance, tells of Raden Galoh and her handmaidens making merry in the beautiful garden called Taman Sari. There they play, eat, bathe, fish, beautify themselves, gather flowers, and dance.

A dance on the theme of war, called Perang, was also important. It is said that this dance was the last item in every formal performance and the dancers went into a trance.

Joget Gamelan performed exclusively by female dancers can be staged internally or openly.

See also

References

  1. "The Malay Gamelan". themalaygamelan. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  2. "The History of Gamelan's Origin". Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  3. "Menabuh Gamelan Melayu". 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  4. "Gambang Mentuda Diambang Kepunahan". 30 July 2019. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  5. "History and Etymology for gamelan". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  6. Sumarsam (1998). Introduction to Javanese Gamelan. Middletown.
  7. Lindsay, Jennifer (1992). Javanese Gamelan, p.10. ISBN 0-19-588582-1.
  8. Milner, Anthony (2010), The Malays (The Peoples of South-East Asia and the Pacific), Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 18–19, ISBN 978-1-4443-3903-1
  9. Reid, Anthony (2001). "Understanding Melayu (Malay) as a Source of Diverse Modern Identities". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 32 (3): 295–313. doi:10.1017/S0022463401000157. PMID 19192500. S2CID 38870744.
  10. Mohd Anis Md Nor, Stephanie Burridge Taylor & Francis (29 Nov 2020). Sharing Identities: Celebrating Dance in Malaysia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000083729. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  11. Saearani, M. F. T. B & Cahyono, A. (2016). The Inheritance of Malay Palace Dance in Malaysia and Yogyakarta Classical Dance in Indonesia . Harmonia: Journal of Arts Research And Education, 16(1), 75-86. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.15294/harmonia.v16i1.6145
  12. (M. Sheppard, Joget Gamelan of Trengganu', Straits Times Annual, Kuala Lumpur: New Straits Times Press, 1969, p. 81.
  13. "JOGET GAMELAN TERENGGANU DARI ASPEK PENCERITAAN DAN CABARAN PEMELIHARAANNYA" [JOGET GAMELAN TERENGGANU FROM THE ASPECT OF STORYTELLING AND THE CHALLENGES OF ITS MAINTENANCE] (PDF). 2012.
  14. FarizanM. Razuri, 2010
  15. Aziz, Ninot (1 February 2015). "Living the Gamelan". New Straits Times.
  16. "Good vibrations: how to unite people through gamelan music | The Star". www.thestar.com.my.
  17. David, Adrian (August 22, 2017). "Renewing the love for gamelan | New Straits Times". NST Online.
  18. Teuku Iskandar, Teuku Umar Ilany (15 December 2021). "Malay Gamelan: Playing Techniques of the Keromong and Gambang" (PDF). International Journal of Creative Industries. doi:10.35631/IJCREI.38001.
  19. Zainudin, Aniza (April 3, 2019). "Memartabatkan gamelan". HM Online.
  20. Teuku Umar Ilany Bin Teuku Iskandar (2022). Gamelan Melayu:Teknik Permainan Keromong Dan Gambang Serta Peranan Cincang Dan Turun Gambang. Universiti Malaya.
  21. Norsafini, Jafar; Rahmah, Bujang (2015). "Creative Reinvention of Joget Gamelan in Malaysia". International Journal of Cultural and Creative Industries. 3 (1). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  22. Norsafini, Jafar; Rahmah, Bujang (2015). "Creative Reinvention of Joget Gamelan in Malaysia". International Journal of Cultural and Creative Industries. 3 (1). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  23. Mohd Anis Md Nor, Stephanie Burridge Taylor & Francis (29 Nov 2020). Sharing Identities: Celebrating Dance in Malaysia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000083729. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  24. Saearani, M. F. T. B & Cahyono, A. (2016). The Inheritance of Malay Palace Dance in Malaysia and Yogyakarta Classical Dance in Indonesia . Harmonia: Journal of Arts Research And Education, 16(1), 75-86. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.15294/harmonia.v16i1.6145
Gamelan
Theory Musicians performing musical ensemble, bas-relief of Borobudur.
A Java-Bali style Gong, hanging in a frame.
Genres &
ensembles
Musicians
Instruments
Colotomic or
phrase-making
Balungan
or melody
Panerusan or
elaborating
Unpitched
Vocals and
clapping
Traditional musical instruments of Indonesia
GamelanKulintangKolintangTalempongTotobuang
Aerophones
Chordophones
Idiophones
Membranophones
Related articles
List of traditional Malaysian musical instruments by classification
GamelanGhazalKulintanganCaklempong
Aerophones
Chordophones
Idiophones
Membranophones
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