Grade 6, Unit 2,
Lesson 4
Indonesia is a country in Southeast
Asia made up of an archipelago of over 10,000 islands.
More than 300 languages are spoken in Indonesia, which
has the fourth largest population in the world, right
behind the United States. With so many different cultures,
Indonesia has many different styles of music-everything
from traditional music that stretches back hundreds
of years to pop music that blasts from cars, home stereos,
and clubs across the country.
Gamelan
The gamelan is a traditional instrument ensemble
found in many parts of Indonesia. Just like an orchestra
in the United States, a gamelan ensemble has many musicians
playing all types of instruments.
On the island of Java, the biggest instrument is a metal
gong almost a yard wide called a gong ageng that
hangs from a wooden frame. Another instrument is called
the kenong, made of long rows of small gongs
arranged like teapots in a row. Musicians strike the
kenong with short sticks. The gamelan also includes
metal xylophones of different sizes. Some of the xylophones
play a melody, but many instruments, like the big gongs,
play repeating cycles of notes.
On Bali, people play a gamelan style called gong
kebyar. Instead of the steady, clock-like rhythm
of Javanese gamelan, gong kebyar has lightning-fast
melodies. In fact, they are so fast that two players
alternate every other note of the melody. This technique
is called kotekan.
Wayang Kulit
In Java, people love to watch wayang kulit, or
shadow puppet plays, where puppeteers work behind a
white screen illuminated by a single light. Puppeteers
use intricate puppets to cast silhouettes on the screen
to tell a story. A small gamelan orchestra performs
along with the play to provide background music, just
like the soundtrack of a Hollywood movie.
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