Beleganjur
Gamelan beleganjur is one of the most popular styles of gamelan music in Bali. Its closest Western analogue is probably the Western military band.
History
Like the Western military band, the original purpose of beleganjur was to accompany armies into battle and strike fear into the hearts of the enemy. In fact, gamelan beleganjur literally means "gamelan of walking warriors". Also like its Western counterpart, today beleganjur has mostly lost its association with warfare, and instead is associated with festivals, contests, and cremation ceremonies - modeled on the modern marching band and the Javanese tanjidor tradition to the west.Although the origin of beleganjur is uncertain, it bears resemblance to the now rare gamelan gong bheri.
Instrumentation
The most primitive beleganjur ensemble, known as bebatelan, consisted of only nine instruments:- one "great gong": gong ageng;
- one secondary gong, with sunken boss instead of the usual raised one: bendé;
- four pairs of cymbals: ;
- two differently tuned drums, considered male and female: kendang;
- one small handheld gong that acts as a metronome: kempli.
Though bebatelan itself is rarely heard nowadays, its instrumentation forms the nucleus of the more complex modern ensemble: beleganjur bebonangan. The additional instrumentation of the beleganjur bebonangan ensemble is:
- a second gong ageng, forming a male/female pair of gongs;
- a medium-sized gong: kempur;
- four additional ceng-ceng to total of eight
- two tuned hand-held metal pot-gongs: ponggang;
- four similar but higher-pitched pot-gongs: bonang
- bamboo suling vertical flutes in some bands