Tifa totobuang
A tifa totobuang is a music ensemble from the Maluku Islands, related to the kulintang orchestra. It consists of a set of a double row of gong chimes known as the totobuang and a set of tifa drums. It can also include a large gong.
The name comes from the instruments' collaboration. The ensemble can accompany the Maluku Island's Sawat Lenso dance.
The custom dates back at least to the late 17th or early 18th century. Gong-chime and drum ensembles, labeled tifa totobuang, were mentioned by François Valentijn, a Dutch army cleric who served in the Dutch army in Ambon, Maluku in two tours, 1686-1994 and 1703–1713. Valentijn talked about hearing "some Javanese lasses sing to the sound of a gong and a tifa and of a native zither...a large number of gongs and tifas."
Instruments
Tifa
The tifa drums used for the tifa totobuang have been classed into five sizes. These include, from smallest to largest:- tifa jekir
- tifa dasar
- tifa potong
- tifa jekir potong
- tifa bas
Totobuang
The totobuang is a set of gong chimes. Photos show the instrument in more than one configuration. One is laid out the same as the bonang, in two equal rows. Other images show a square pattern of 9 or 16 gong chimes.Jaap Kunst, a musicologist who wrote about Javanese music, said that totobuang was probably another word for bonang which could be used for any instrument played with a hammer.