MUSIC
The Village orchestras
Next to having good orchestras, a fine group of dancers
is an almost organic need for the spiritual and physical
life of the community. Besides the passion they show
for their music and dancing and the important part
these play in the ritual, to have a skilful and famous
group of dancers brings pride and social prestige
to the village ward, the bandjar. The young men of
today are fond of football games, but all other attempts
to introduce foreign amusements have failed in Bali.
The rare movie shows in the two large towns are patronized
almost exclusively by the foreign population, and
not even the rich princes like phonographs, although
there are excellent records of Balinese music. I do
not know anyone who has a radio.
Balinese
dancing is essentially for exhibition: dancing to
entertain an audience and for display of skill, a
stage of development that belongs to an advanced civilization,
but that in Bali goes hand in hand with the ritual-magic
dances characteristic of primitive peoples. Thus the
survival of the primitive in a developed society,
a characteristic of everything Balinese, shows itself
in the dancing as well as in the general mode of life.
In the religious dances the community amuses itself
at the same time that it tries to propitiate the gods
and ward off evil spirits. There are even violent
self-sacrificial dances in which the performers in
a trance simulate self-torture with knives or walk
on fire to appease the bloodthirsty evil spirits and
to show their supernatural powers.
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The
Balinese attribute a divine origin music and dancing.
It is said that Batara Guru, the Supreme Teacher,
invented the first instruments, and that Indra, the
Lord of the Heavens, originated dancing when he created
the incomparably beautiful dedari, the nymphs of heaven,
to dance for the pleasure of the gods. In the Ardjuna
Wiwaha it is mentioned that the seven principal dedari
were made from a precious stone that,was split into
seven parts. Before dancing for the assembled gods,
the nymphs, the legend says, walked three times around
them in the usual respectful manner; the gods became
lovesick, and since their. dignity prevented them
from turning around, Indra sprung many eyes, and brahma
developed four faces.
Balinese
dancing was, perhaps, originally restricted to the
ritual, but the religious dance has become more and
more theatrical; characters that were once frightful
demons are now tamed to perform for the amusement
of the crowd. There are, however, still many purely
religious or magical dances; local priests (pemangku,
kabayan, and so forth) of the old communities still
dance solemnly at temple feasts, in front of the altars,
holding incense-burners, even going into a trance
and walking in fire, Only in Bali have I seen wrinkled
old women with white hair dancing to amuse the gods,
splendidly unashamed of what would be normally the
attribute of youth. At temple feasts they perform
the mendet and the redjang, two dances mainly for
" aged " women - married women - with offerings
of food to the visiting deities.
Although
there are dances of a purely demonstrative type that
interpret the music, dancing in Bali cannot be considered
as an art separate from the theatre. In fact, the
arts of the theatre are so closely allied that there
is no word in Balinese meaning " theatre."
No Balinese would think of separating a show into
its component parts or, on the other hand, think a
show complete that did not contain, music and dancing.
They divide their. theatre rather according to the
style of the story, which'in turn dictates its music
and the style of its technique. So, for example,,
the stories of the Ramayana take the shadow, or wayang
wong form, the historical plays are the topeng, and
love stories the ardja, and so forth. The following
are the most important Balinese dances and plays:
LEGONG,
Music: full pelegongan orchestra. Dance-pantomime
by two or three young girls playing Lasem and Semaradhana
stories.
TJALONMUNG
Pelegongan with large flutes. A great exorcizing drama
of the story of Rangda Tjalonarang, with dialogue,
singing, and dancing.
BARONG
Pelegongan (called bebarongan in this case). A dancepantomime
of the adventures of a fantastic, holy animal, ending
usually in a wild kris dance (rebong, ngurek) by men
in trance. Also an exorcism.
DJAUK
Pelegongan orchestra. Dance-pantomime by male masked
actors. Danced in the legong technique, with any story.
Masks do not represent special characters. Characteristic
head-dress.
DJOGED
Pediogedan, an orchestra of the pelegongan type, but
made of bamboo. A purely demonstrative, flirtatious
dance without a story. Called gandrung when performed
by a boy in girl's clothes.
MENDeT
and REDJANG Orchestra: semar pegulingan or pelegongan.
Two offering dances performed by elderly women and
priests during temple feasts.
SANGHYANG
Music: songs by a chorus of men and women'. An exorcizing
trance dance of the legong style performed by little
girl mediums.
WAYANG
kulit Orchestra: gender wayang. Shadow-plays by pup
pets.
Stories of the Mahabharata, Ramayana, and others.
A storyteller chants recitative.
WAYANG
WONG Gender wayang with drums and other percussions.
Ramayana
episodes by masked actors dancing and singing in classic
Kawi.
BARIS
Gong. Ritual war dances with spears (baris gede).
There
is
a modernized version (baris pendet) in which heroic
plays are performed in dance-pantomine with incidental
dialogue and singing.
TOPeNG
Gong. Masked actoris playing local historical plays
(ba
bad);
mostly pantomine, but with dialogue by the comic cbaracters.
KEBIYAR
Gong kebiyar. A modem dance purely demonstrative in
character,
performed by a boy dancer who interprets musical moods.
GAMBuH
Gamelan gambu'h; flutes, violin, and percussions.
The classic technique for dramatic performances. Stories
from the Malat, with much singing. Other plays of
a similar character arc the tantn, tjupak, basur,
and parwa.
ARDJA
Gamelan ardia; flutes and percussions. The ardia is
a modernized gamb6h playing romantic stories like
Tiandra Lasan, Salya, Sidapaksa, Galolikuh,.and Chinese
tales like Sampik and Tuan Wei.
BARONG
LANDONG Gamelan batel flutes and gongs. Giant puppets
of a religious character, playing humorous stories,
the adventures of an old woman (djero luh) and a black
giant (diero gede). ' DJANGER Gamelan djanger; flute,
gong, and drums. A modern musical comedy with many
foreign elements, performed by boys and girls.
kECAK
Large groups of men singing in chorus, moving and
dancing to the rhythm of the music. Occasionally performing
episodes of plays. Derived from the sanghyang and
dianger.
All
these forms will be described later, divided for easier
recognition according to our custom under the headings
of " dance,plays, opera," and so forth,
by their most characteristic features.
Like
music, dancing has developed to a standard of technical
perfection that makes of it a difficult science, requiring
years of special physical training and practice. Although
strict rules are followed and the structure of the
dance is made up entirely of traditional gestures
that leave no room for improvisation or Individualistic
styles, there is a certain margin of freedom allowed
for the dancer. Sound and gesture become one, definite
movements ruled by the most rigid discipline. The
excellence of a performer does not depend only on
his skill, but also on his personality' his emotional
intensity, and the expressiveness of his features.
Only clowns (bebanyolan) have no special technique
and no program
Personality
and the spirit of surprise are expected of them.
Obviously
there is Javanese influence discernible in. the Balinese
school of dancing, but they have drifted so far apart
in spirit and in social function that they have little
in common today. In Bali dancing is still a living
popular art, while in Java, where dance of the higher
order was dying until rescued in recent years by the
sultans, today it is only in the high courts of the
Javanese princes that fine dancing can be seen. In
Java the fine dancer is a specialist attached to the
court, often a prince himself; in Bali be is an ordinary
villager with talent and skill who performs for the
prestige of his community and for the entertainment
of his neigbbours. In Bali as well as in Java, it
is a part of the education of a prince to dance, act,
and play musical instruments, but in Bali a prince
who organizes a theatrical group mingles with the
common people and performs for their amusement. It
is amusing to hear the Javanese and the Balinese deride
each other's theatre: the Balinese think the dances
of Java are meaningless, dull, and dead, but the Javanese
are shocked at the " noisy " music of Bali
and look upon their dancing as the product of rude
and primitive peasants.
The
Balinese have constantly injected new life into their
theatre, in contrast to the Javanese, who, perhaps
because of Mohammedan influence, have allowed the
art to come to a standstill so that their acting suggests
imitation of the movements of their archaic marionette
shows (wayang purwa) . The Javanese actor cannot express
emotion except by the most conventional gestures,
and his face remains fixed and mask-like. The Balinese
act in an exactly opposite manner. They are gay, exuberant,
and fond of gestures and slapstick comedy. Javanese
masks are stylized, with long, sharp noses and slit
eyes that eliminate all sense of the realism frowned
upon by Islamism. The Balinese make masks of amazing
expressiveness, often realistic in character, studies
of standard types. I have seen a masked play with
masterfully carved masks that were caricatures of
Chinese, Arabs, and Europeans.
A
theatrical group is organized by the villagers into
a society along the same lines as a musical club.
Contributions of money are made, instruments procured,
and musicians trained. The future dancers are selected
from the boys and girls of the community, taking into
consideration their pleasing personal appearance,
their physical fitness, and their potential talent
for a particular dance. For that most typical of Balinese
dances, the legong, for example, the little girls
chosen should be from five to eight years of age,
and if they can be found to look alike, it is taken
for granted that they will make a very fine legong.
When
the dancers are assembled, a teacher is called to
train them. He is generally a former great dancer
or an orchestra leader who knows the dance to the
last detail. The most elementary routines are taught
at first, and repeated until the dance has "
gone into the pupil." The teacher is often assisted
by his more accomplished pupils, slightly older dancers
from other villages. The method of training consists
in guiding the movements of the pupil, leading them
energetically by the wrists until by sheer repetition
the pupils acquire the " feeling " of the
gesture and can do the movements by themselves. At
the'beginning the teacher chants the tunes, but formal
rehearsals with the full orchestra are held later.
The
teacher works tirelessly for weeks and months at a
time and it is typical of Bali that be is not necessarily
paid for his efforts. If be receives a monetary reward
for his work, it is insignificant and is meant rather
as expense money while in a strange community. Instead
of a fee, be is lavishly feasted and treated as an
honoured guest. If his home is in another village,
be is lodged in the bandjar where he teaches and at
the end of every rehearsal is presented with trays
of Chinese cakes, coffee, cigarettes, and betel-nut.
It is not unusual for a famous teacher like Ida Bagus
Boda of DenPasar to be called to give the finishing
touches to a well-trained group. The various styles
of teaching are so definite that it is not difficult
for a Balinese connoisseur to guess the teacher of
a given legong.
Physical
training plays an important part in the dancer's education;
while the pupil learns the elemental sequence of the
dance ' the basic steps, and general movements of
the arms, he exercises regularly to acquire suppleness
of every muscle and control over each member until
his body becomes practically double-jointed.
The
legs, however, are used with a minimum of importance
in the dance, except for locomotion, and in certain
sitting dances like the kebiyar are not used ata'll.
It is said that such movements are possible only because
of the extreme youth of the dancers! It is true that
a legong dancer retires at twelve or thirteen, or
perhaps continues in another type of dance, and that
a fully grown girl is often considered too big, to
dance, but there are old women who are fine dancers
and a good'baris performer is usually a man past middle
age. A solo dance often lasts more than an hour, and
even children can dance incessantly for long periods
of time without showing traces of exhaustion. This
resistance often amazes travellers, but, the Balinese
explain that the dancer is unconscious of the real
work and falls into a sort of self-induced trance
where only the rhythm of the dance exists, and the
dancer then moves in a world where fatigue is unknown.
Legong dancers are very popular in the community;
they are looked upon as people out of the ordinary
and are exempt from heavy work. They have many suitors,
and a prince frequently marries a legong dancer as
soon as she becomes of age.
When
a society has enough money for costumes and the dancers
are ready to make a public appearance, the village
association, on an auspicious day, gives an inauguration
festival (malaspasin). The costumes are blessed before
they can be worn for the first time, and the group
makes offerings to launch the new organization successfully.
An actor, a dancer, or a story-teller undergoes the
same ceremony by which a priest or magician adds power
to his soul. In the case of a dancer the ceremony
is a magic purification and beautification in which
a priest with the stem of a flower inscribes magic
syllables on the face, head, tongue, and members of
the future dancer to make him attractive to the eyes
of his public. It is not only on this occasion that
dancers pray for success; before every performance
they make small offerings to the deities of the dance,
Dewa Pergina, and to the nymphs of heaven the dedari
Supraba and Tilotama. In the temple Mertasari in Semawang
(near Sanur) there is a small stone shrine shaped
like a dancing helmet (gelunggan), and often legong
dancers go there to deposit offerings. Oncea year,aday
(tumpak wayang) is dedicated to the theatre, when
all theatrical accessories, the costumes, masks, and
marionettes as well as musical instruments, receive
offerings, perhaps to restore their original effectiveness.
On this day theatrical organizations all over the
island give feasts, but no performance of any kind
is permitted. There is also a day when literary manuscripts
receive offerings; the day is dedicated to Saraswati,
goddess of learning, science, and literature, when
no one may read.
The
size of the crowd is the only indication of whether
a performance is successful or not. The Balinese do
not applaud or show their appreciation of a performer
in any other way. This seeming lack of encouragement
does not influence the enthusiasm for the art, and
it is my impression that the dance and the theatre
of today are even more developed than in the past.
judging from, old reports, it seems that there are
more performances, the shows are more elaborate and
varied, and their are many new styles besides that
of the jealously preserved classic theatre. There
is hardly a village that does not have some sort of
dancing organization, and even the fact that the old
custom of exempting actors and musicians from payment
of taxes has been abolished by the Government has
not diminished interest in dancing and acting. There
is not even the incentive of commercial gain for the
individual; the small amounts received at private
festivals go to the society's fund for new costumes,
new instruments, and the communal feasts.
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