Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"

This paper discusses aspects of composing for a specific type of Balinese gamelan ensemble known as gendér wayang, a quartet of metallophones that accompanies shadow puppet plays and life-cycle rituals. The author is a composer and ethnomusicologist who spent many years studying this tradition and h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gray, Nicholas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Analytical Approaches to World Music 2013-07-01
Series:Analytical Approaches to World Music
Online Access:http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2013b/Gray_AAWM_Vol_2_2.pdf
id doaj-c95296fb17794e50af8e3d2f50056a89
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c95296fb17794e50af8e3d2f50056a892020-11-25T03:57:37ZengAnalytical Approaches to World MusicAnalytical Approaches to World Music2158-52962013-07-0122100147Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"Gray, Nicholas0SOAS, University of LondonThis paper discusses aspects of composing for a specific type of Balinese gamelan ensemble known as gendér wayang, a quartet of metallophones that accompanies shadow puppet plays and life-cycle rituals. The author is a composer and ethnomusicologist who spent many years studying this tradition and has conducted research on traditional compositional methods for the ensemble. He also teaches and leads a gendér wayang ensemble in London. The instrument's technical difficulty and the highly complex, rhythmically ambiguous nature of the traditional repertoire make this a particularly challenging ensemble to compose for. The paper explores connections between certain ritual pieces in the traditional repertoire, legends surrounding these pieces, and the author's own composition "The Birth of Kala" which formed part of a collaborative project with actor, storyteller and movement artist Tim Jones in 2012. The starting point of the concert was the instrument itself, with the music and storytelling a kind of meditation on it. The concert had three interwoven strands: firstly Balinese stories surrounding the origins of gendér including the birth of the demonic Kala, secondly traditional pieces, and thirdly the newly composed music. The latter took up most of the second half of the concert as a kind of abstraction of issues raised in the more narrative first half. This article presents a description and analysis together with score in cipher notation and references to the online video of the first performance. It then discusses some issues arising from the work, and from the analysis of it, locating the whole within the context of new gamelan composition.http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2013b/Gray_AAWM_Vol_2_2.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gray, Nicholas
spellingShingle Gray, Nicholas
Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
Analytical Approaches to World Music
author_facet Gray, Nicholas
author_sort Gray, Nicholas
title Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
title_short Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
title_full Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
title_fullStr Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
title_full_unstemmed Reflections on composing for Balinese gendér wayang: "The Birth of Kala"
title_sort reflections on composing for balinese gendér wayang: "the birth of kala"
publisher Analytical Approaches to World Music
series Analytical Approaches to World Music
issn 2158-5296
publishDate 2013-07-01
description This paper discusses aspects of composing for a specific type of Balinese gamelan ensemble known as gendér wayang, a quartet of metallophones that accompanies shadow puppet plays and life-cycle rituals. The author is a composer and ethnomusicologist who spent many years studying this tradition and has conducted research on traditional compositional methods for the ensemble. He also teaches and leads a gendér wayang ensemble in London. The instrument's technical difficulty and the highly complex, rhythmically ambiguous nature of the traditional repertoire make this a particularly challenging ensemble to compose for. The paper explores connections between certain ritual pieces in the traditional repertoire, legends surrounding these pieces, and the author's own composition "The Birth of Kala" which formed part of a collaborative project with actor, storyteller and movement artist Tim Jones in 2012. The starting point of the concert was the instrument itself, with the music and storytelling a kind of meditation on it. The concert had three interwoven strands: firstly Balinese stories surrounding the origins of gendér including the birth of the demonic Kala, secondly traditional pieces, and thirdly the newly composed music. The latter took up most of the second half of the concert as a kind of abstraction of issues raised in the more narrative first half. This article presents a description and analysis together with score in cipher notation and references to the online video of the first performance. It then discusses some issues arising from the work, and from the analysis of it, locating the whole within the context of new gamelan composition.
url http://aawmjournal.com/articles/2013b/Gray_AAWM_Vol_2_2.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT graynicholas reflectionsoncomposingforbalinesegenderwayangthebirthofkala
_version_ 1724459750396002304