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Balinese music is essentially an oral tradition. Notated music is not normally used; a system of numbers may be used to help learn pieces in rehearsal (for example, numbering the notes of a slendro scale as notes 1-5), but pieces are mostly learned by being heard, and the performance is expected to be given from memory.
Any group of musicians that is playing together must cooperate to some extent, but the level of cooperation exhibited in some
In modern times, large
This emphasis on cooperation is seen in many different aspects of
This emphasis on the cooperative aspects of playing reaches its most impressive height in the playing style called
kotekan , in which very fast, elaborate versions of the melody, which are so technically difficult that they cannot physically be played by a single player, are divided between two players playing the same kind of instrument, who play alternating notes in such close cooperation that they sound like a single player. (See
Listening to Balinese Gamelan for more about
Photographs, audio, and video recordings are all courtesy of the
University of Illinois School of Music and The Robert E. Brown
Center for World Music of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign . Special thanks go to
Thanks also to the Asnawa family and to all of the University of Illinois students and professors who participated in the Fall 2007 Balinese Music and Dance Concert at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, for their cooperation in preparing the photos, videos, and audio recordings accompanying this lesson: including dancers Yonitika Asnawa, Yunirika Asnawa, Norshahida Ismail, Samantha C. Jones, Dewidiari Rachman, Ya-Han Tsui, Justina Whelchel, and musicians I Ketut Gede Asnawa, Putu O. Mardiani Asnawa, Tarika Asnawa, Yonitika Asnawa, Yunirika Asnawa, Taylor Briggs, James Bunch, Vincent Calianno, Joel Caracci, Samuel Carroll, Fang-chi Chang, Rosa Chang, Meghann Clancy, Philip Clark, Mark Eichenberger, Joshua Hunt, Justin Kothenbeutel, Mackenzie Martin, Andrew McBeath, Ayu Putu Niastarika, Christopher Nolte, Zackary Penckofer, Matthew Plaskota, James Price, Dewidiari Rachman, I Wayan Rachman, Christopher E. Reyman, Nur Syahida Mohd Shafei, Ahmad Azlan Shahrudin, Shahira Tunnaww Mohd Sharkar, Otto Stuparitz, Stephen Taylor, Priscilla Tse, Shane Wirkes, and Philip Yampolsky.
The music of Bali is a large subject, and only the major points that will help introduce it to the new Western listener are touched upon here. For a more technical introduction to the music played by these ensembles, including information on scales, tuning, form, and texture, please see
Listening to Balinese Gamelan: A Beginners' Guide . For classroom activities that allow students to explore important aspects of
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