THE INDONESIAN VERSION by BARAKATAK
THE ORIGINAL VERSION by OZONE
sources
1. http://www.youtube.com/v/jRx5PrAlUdY&hl=en_US&fs=1
2.http://www.youtube.com/v/YkcBrW8udgk&hl=en_US&fs=1&
3.http://www.extratip-goettingen.de/data/imgs/275m.jpg
Hey.Hey.i'm back after hibernating for a looonngg timee..haha
and after i got an inspiration after chatting with my friend..haha
okay .at this time i'll show you my most played song in my itunes for this week!!!
an the answer is : "C.U.T.S" taraaa!
An unique band from bandung. Emerging after they succesfully become one of L.A. indiefest finalist with their single "BERINGAS"
what a nice song..started with drum noise and something like 8bit sound..the song very very make you high with it's upbeat tempo
just watch the video and listen the surprises!!haha
sources
1.http://sarapandingin.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/image_1027_45cxehn.jpg
2.http://www.youtube.com/v/2HhI_jllkA8&hl=en_US&fs=1
Okay..maybe most of us do not know who are God Bless.. God Bless is one of rock legend band in Indonesia. They always bring their rock progessive song to rock out their fans. After 36 years hoping for their new album, now they release their new album titled "36". The hit single is "Prahara Timur Tengah".
In this song, the distortion of Ian Antono's guitar dominating with a rock style drum rythm. Let's get the song. But don't forget to buy the original album.
Click the album above to download via mediafire.com
hey yoo..
thx god..my page had been recovered from any problems an hour ago..haha
oke..back to title..
UNGU, one of superband in Indonesia has launched their new song, "Hampa Hatiku". First time i hear this song,,what a nice song! i think. A colaboration between hardrock, pop, dang dut (indonesian taste), and rap are very very extraordinary.
I think, UNGU want to established their career in indonesian musical industry. So, they try to follow the market by creating the most popular genres in indonesia right now (-melayu pop). But, UNGU can make it different. The song still has the arts and not as "nerdy" as other melayu song from other melayu band here. Keep rockin UNGU!
HAMPA HATIKU
genres : pop, rock, dang dut, rap
Pernah kah kau merasa
Pernah kah kau merasa
Cukup sudah kuberikan cintaku
Cukup sudah rasa ini untukkmu
Mati sudah hati ini padamu
Mati sudah hasrat ingin bersamamu
Reff 2x
Pernah kah kau merasa
Hatimu Hampa
Pernah kah kau merasa
Hatimu Kosong
Buang saja smua kata cintamu
Buang saja smua kata maafmu
Hancur sudah hati ini padamu
Hancur sudah hasrat ingin bersamamu
Back to reff 2x
Rap version
Pernahkah pernahkah kalau kau merasa
Di galaksi yang datang
Terasa gelap gulita tiada cahaya
Hanya gelap
Hitam dan kelam
Tak ada lagi suka tak ada rasa
Pernahkah
(Pernah pernah pernah pernah pernahkah)
Pernahkah kau merasa
Di saat diri terlelap
Mesti gemuruh kian beradu
Slalu mengganggu
Kau tetap terlelap dalam tidurmu
Maafkan aku sayangku
Bukan maksudku menyakitimu, menghianatimu
Ampuni aku sayangku
Jujur kukatakan aku tak lagi mencintaimu
Pernah kah kau merasa 3x
back to reff 2x
Click to download UNGU-Hampa_Hatiku via GudangLagu.com-4shared
So sory..these problems are out of my handling..
i'll try to fix it back
so...still enjoy this page..hopefully..:)
Namanya aneh..kuburan,,
Tapi band yang ini uda cukup dikenal orang2 musik yang gag sengaja denger ni lagu trus terbengong- bengong dengerin lirik nya..ckck
coba deh denger ni lagu..
lumayan buat nambah wawasan dan gw sebagai seorang pendengar musik ngakuin band ini main ny bersih juga versi record ny...entah gmn maen live nya..
saLut deh buat KUBURAN BAND yang udah bisa nembus pasar musik indo dan moga2 aj banyak fans nya..hehe
download lwt 4shared aj nii..click the link above
These years, jazz in indonesia has a significant improvement. Some jazzy commercial band rised and being popular at the time. RAN maybe the pioneer of jazzy pop Indonesia band. Now, new band named Gruvi has launched their new album with the hits Masih Mencintaimu. What a jazzzyy song!!
Masih Mencintaimu
genres : acid jazz, pop, funk
Salahku putuskan cintamu
kusesali itu
Ku pergi meninggalkan dirimu
kini ku merindukanmu
Sayangku, maafkanlah diriku
ku tahu ku salah menyakitimu
Sayang terimalah aku lagi
ku masih mencintaimu
Aku memang tak sempurna
kusadari itu
Ampuni semua kebodohanku
ku tak bisa hidup tanpamu
Sayangku, maafkanlah diriku
ku tahu ku salah menyakitimu
Sayang terimalah aku lagi
ku masih mencintaimu
~{}~
Oooh… sayangku, maafkanlah diriku
ku tahu ku salah menyakitimu
Sayang terimalah aku lagi
ku masih mencintaimu
ku masih mencintaimu ouwoo..
ku masih mencintaimu
SUMPAH I L U
genres : little jazzy and rock
Mataku sudah buta
Tak dapat melihat
Wajah rupawan lagi
Selain wajahmu
Hatiku sudah mati
Tak dapat merasa kerinduan yang dalam
Selain rinduku padamu
Reff :
Sumpah i love you
I need you
I miss you
Aku tak bisa musnahkan
Kamu dari otakku
Sumpah i love you
I need you
I miss you
Aku tak bisa musnahkan
Kamu dari otakku
-----------------------------
if you listen it carefully u can fell the guitar rhtym like in the Casiopea song,, especially in the Casiopea - Asayake. The guitar tone in both of the song has same typical and same rhtym. Is it true that mahadewi try to be a plagiat??? haha
Hey ya..
MAKHLUK TUHAN PALING SEXY
Otakmu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu memikirkan aku
matamu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu menatap aku
harus kah seperti ada
di dalam penjara cintamu
hidungmu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu cium pipiku
bibirmu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu sebut namaku
harus kah seperti ada
di dalam penjara cintamu
REFF :
kamulah makhluk tuhan
yang tercipta yang paling seksi
cuma kamu yang bisa
membuatku terus menjerit
hatimu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu memeluk hatiku
jantungmu seksi itu terbukti
dari caramu cemburu padaku
kamulah makhluk Tuhan paling seksi
yang paling seksi, seksi sekali
the newest song of The Rock has released...
The re-arransement song from Mulan...
check this out..click the link
BLACK HOLES
The 20th century saw a great many new discoveries regarding celestial phenomena in the universe. One of these entities, which has only recently been encountered, is the Black Hole. These are formed when a star which has consumed all its fuel collapses in on itself, eventually turning into a black hole with infinite density and zero volume and an immensely powerful magnetic field. We are unable to see black holes even with the most powerful telescope, because their gravitational pull is so strong that light is unable to escape from them. However, such a collapsed star can be perceived by means of the effect it has on the surrounding area. In Surat al-Waqi'a, Allah draws attention to this matter in this way, by swearing upon the position of stars:
And I swear by the stars' positions-and that is a mighty oath if you only knew. (Qur'an, 56:75-76)
The term "black hole" was first employed in 1969 by the American physicist John Wheeler. Previously, we imagined that we were able to see all the stars. However, it later emerged that there were stars in space whose light we were unable to perceive. Because, the light of these collapsed stars disappears. Light cannot escape from a black hole because it is such a high concentration of mass in a small space. The enormous gravitation captures even the fastest particles, i.e. the photons. For example, the final stage of a typical star, three times the mass of the Sun, ends after its burning out and its implosion as a black hole of only 20 kilometres (12.5 miles) in diameter! Black holes are "black," i.e. veiled from direct observation. They nevertheless reveal themselves indirectly, by the tremendous suction which their gravitational force exerts on other heavenly bodies. As well as depictions of the Day of Judgement, the verse below may also be pointing to this scientific discovery about black holes:
When the stars are extinguished. (Qur'an, 77:8)
Moreover, stars of great mass also cause warps to be perceived in space. Black holes, however, do not just cause warps in space but also tear holes in it. That is why these collapsed stars are known as black holes. This fact may be referred to in the verse about stars, and this is another important item of information demonstrating that the Qur'an is the word of Allah:
[I swear] by Heaven and the Tariq! And what will convey to you what the Tariq is? The Star Piercing [the darkness]! (Qur'an, 86:1-3)
Each symbol consists of n-shapes and u-shapes. n-shapes come in two sizes: small and large (twice the size of a small). u-shapes come in three sizes: small, medium (1.5x) and large (2.5x). For example, the character 'h' consists of a small n-shape, followed by a large u-shape and two large n-shapes. This format is closely followed in hand-writing and is no longer followed in printed characters
Javanese characters are written slanted to the side and below the line, and there are no word boundaries
Vowels
In Javanese, there are a total of nine vowels: /a/, /i/, /I/, /e/, /ε/, /ə/, /o/, /ɔ/, /u/. However, only five vowel diacritics, known as sandhangan swara, are used because some diacritics can be used for two different vowels. Rules regarding the pronunciation and the context eliminate the need for a new symbol for every vowel by making the vowel predictable.
Rules regarding inherent vowels of basic characters:
1) A basic character stands for a syllable that ends in the vowel /ɔ/ when the character is preceded by another character containing a sandhangan swara.
2) A basic character stands for a syllable that ends in the vowel /a/ when the character is immediately followed by a character containing a sandhangan swara.
3) The first basic character of a word normally has the /ɔ/ vowel, unless it precedes two other basic characters, in which case the first basic character has the /a/ vowel.
Consonants
The twenty consonants are:
ha, na, ca, ra, ka
da, ta, sa, wa, la
pa, dha, ja, ya, nya
ma, ga, ba, tha, nga
Number
The Meaning of Javanese Script
The alphabet itself forms a poem, of which the line-by-line translation is as follows:
Hana caraka There (were/was) two messengers
data sawala (They) had animosity (among each other)
padha jayanya (They were) equally powerful (in fight)
maga bathanga Here are the corpses.
in detail:
hana / ana = there were/was
caraka = messenger (actually, 'one who is loyal to and trusted by someone')
data = have/has
sawala = difference (regarding a matter)
padha = same, equal
jayanya = 'their power', 'jaya' could mean 'glory' as well
maga = 'here'
bathanga = corpses
The best Dewa's Song which describe it's character in music. Mixing traditional genres, dangdut, rock, pop, and jazz.
They make the beautiful song and lyrics
Perempuan Paling Cantik di Negeriku Indonesia
< genres : rock, pop, techno >
Merah darahku bulat tekadku
Setelah aku tatap wajahmu
Berkobar seluruh jiwa dan ragaku
Untuk perjuangkan cinta yang ku yakini
Putih tulangku semangat cintaku
Setelah aku raba tanganmu
Rasakan kulitmu yang selembut salju
Serentak bergelora darah mudaku
Reff:
Kamu adalah perempuan paling cantik
Di negeriku indonesia kamulah yang nomor satu
Aku tak akan bisa sukai lagi perempuan yang lainnya
Revolusi cinta matiku
Telah bergema ke seluruh negeri
Ini adalah tonggak sejarah hidupku
Karena ku yakin kamu adalah takdirku
Dengan tegasnya ku nyatakan
Kamulah akhir perjuanganku
Kuburkan cinta cinta yang sudah sudah
Kemerdekaan aku kamu yang ku tunggu
download Perempuan Paling Cantik di Negeriku Indonesia
Laskar Cinta ( a song for peacefullness ) _recommended_
< genres : hard rock, arabian >
Dewa - Laskar Cinta (Chapter One)
Wahai,jiwa jiwa yg tenang..berhati-hatilah dirimu..kepada..
Hati hati yang penuh..dengan..kebencian yang dalam
Karena, sesungguhnya iblis..ada dan bersemayam..
Di hati yang penuh..Dengan benci dihati..
Yang penuh..Dengan prasangka
Chorus:
Laskar cinta Sebarkanlah benih-benih cinta..
musnahkanlah virus-virus benci..
virus yang bisa rusakkan jiwa..
dan busukkan hati.. laskar cinta..
ajarkanlah ilmu tentang cinta..
karena cinta adalah hakikat
dan jalan yang terang bagi semua manusia
Jika..kebencian meracunimu..
Kepada¦manusia lainnya
maka sesungguhnya iblissudah berkuasa atas dirimu
Maka..jangan pernah berharap..aku..akan mengasihi..menyayangi..
Manusia manusia..yang penuh benci..seperti kamu
Chorus
Dewa - Laskar Cinta (Chapter Two)
Wahai jiwa-jiwa yang tenang..jangan sekalikali kamu..
Mencoba jadi Tuhan dengan mengadili dan mengahakimi
Bahwasanya kamu memang tak punya daya dan upaya.
Serta kekuatan untuk menentukan kebenaran yg sejati..
Bukankah kita memang tercipta laki laki wanita
dan menjadi suku suku bangsa.. yang pasti berbeda
bukankah kita harus saling mengenal dan menghormati
Bukan untuk saling bercerai berai dan berperang angkat senjata
You can translate by your self with your Indonesian - English dictionary. The lyrics is very good and contain moral value
Download Laskar Cinta Chapter One
Sedang Ingin Bercinta
<>dangdut, rock > _unique_
Setiap ada kamu mengapa jantungku ini
Berdetak lebih kencang seperti genderang mau pecah
Setiap ada kamu mengapa darahku mengalir lebih cepat
Dari ujung kaki ke ujung kepala
Setiap ada kamu otakku berfikir
Bagaimana caranya untuk berdua sama kamuReff :
Aku sedang ingin bercinta
Karena mungkin ada kamu disini
Aku ingin Aku ingin
Back To : *, Reff
Back To : Reff
Download Sedang Ingin Bercinta
Semarang is a city on the north coast of the island of Java, Indonesia. It is the capital of the province of Central Java. It has an area of 373.67 km² and a population of approximately 1.5 million people, making it Indonesia's fifth largest city. Semarang is located at 6°58′S 110°25′E. A major port during the Dutch colonial era, and still an important port today, the city has a large ethnically Chinese population.
The name of the city, Semarang, may have originated from the concatenation of the words "assam" (tamarind) and "arang" (charcoal). Another version is that Semarang is originated from Chinese word Sam Po Lang (San Bao Loong, 三宝垄), meaning "the city of Sam Po" (Admiral Zheng He).
History
Semarang's history dates back to the ninth century, when it was known as Bergota. By the end of fifteenth century, a Javanese Islamic missionary from nearby Sultanate of Demak with the name of Kyai Pandan Arang founded a village and an Islamic boarding school in this place. On May 1, 1547, after consulting Sunan Kalijaga, Sultan Hadiwijaya of Pajang declared Kyai Pandan Arang the first bupati (regent) of Semarang, thus culturally and politically, on this day Semarang was born.
In 1678, Sunan Amangkurat II promised to give control of Semarang to the Dutch East India Company (VOC) as a part of a debt payment. In 1682, the Semarang state was founded by the Dutch colonial power. On October 5, 1705 after years of occupations, Semarang officially became a VOC city when Susuhunan Pakubuwono I made a deal to give extensive trade rights to the VOC in exchange of wiping out Mataram's debt. The VOC, and later, the Dutch East Indies government, established tobacco plantations in the region and built roads and railroads, making Semarang an important colonial trading centre.
In the 1920s, the city became a center of leftist and nationalist activism. With the founding of the Communist Party of Indonesia in the city, Semarang became known as the "Red City". The Japanese military occupied the city along with the rest of Java in 1942, during Pacific War of World War II. During that time, Semarang was headed by a military governor called a Shiko), and two vice governors known as Fuku Shiko. One of the vice governors was appointed from Japan, and the other was chosen from the local population. After Indonesian independence in 1945, Semarang became the capital of Central Java province.
Economy
The western part of the city is home to many industrial parks and factories. The port of Semarang is located on the north coast and it is the main shipping port for the province of Central Java. Many small manufacturers are located in Semarang, producing goods such as textiles, furniture, and processed foods. Large companies, such as Kubota and Coca-Cola, also have plants in Semarang or its outer towns.
Many major banks in Indonesia have large offices in Semarang. These include BCA, BNI, Panin Bank, HSBC, Permata, and Bank Mandiri. Most of these offices are located in the center of the city, especially around Jalan Pandanaran and Jalan Pemuda.
Hospitality is becoming increasingly important in Semarang. It is home to about a dozen upscale hotels that cater to business travelers and tourists. The most noteworthy are Hotel Ciputra, Grand Candi Hotel and recently opened Hotel Gumaya and Novotel.
Consumer activity spending remains strong Semarang. Most locals attend daily or weekly markets, like Pasar Johar. The majority of stores in Semarang are small, family-owned businesses. However, larger Indonesian companies as well as foreign companies have begun to open their own stores here. Carrefour, a French hypermarket chain, opened its first store in Central Java at the brand-new DP Mall in Semarang, one of the 3 main shopping malls in the city. The other two malls are Ciputra Mall and Java Supermall. In this year, a new shopping mall will be open. Paragon city an unique mall with it's appartement above it.
Resorts
As a result of its large ethnically Chinese population, the city boasts several Chinese temples. These include Sam Po Kong (Gedung Batu), built in honour of the Chinese Great Admiral Zheng He who visited the area in 1405, and Tay Kak Sie Temple. Blenduk Church, a 1753 Protestant church built by the Dutch, is located in the old town (called "Oudstad"). The old town is an unique town designed by dutch government long time ago. There are a lot of ancient building and other resorts in this area. Tugu Muda (Youth Monument), a monument to heroes of Indonesia's independence struggle, is located in a large roundabout surrounded by famous buildings such as Gedung Lawang Sewu and the Semarang Cathedral. Jalan Pemuda, one of the roads leading into the roundabout, is a major shopping street. The Cathedral of the Holy Rosary is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Semarang.
Food
Semarang is widely known for its Bandeng Presto (pressure-cooked milkfish) and Lumpia.
Sister City
Semarang has some sister city such as :
Brisbane, Australia
Peking, China
WEBSITE SEMARANG CITY
A pentatonic scale is a musical scale with five pitches per octave in contrast to an heptatonic (seven note) scale such as the major scale. Pentatonic scales are very common and are found all over the world, including but not limited to Celtic folk music, Hungarian folk music, West African music, African-American spirituals, Jazz, American blues music and rock music, Sami joik singing, children's songs, the Greek traditional music and songs from Epirus, Northwest Greece and the music of Southern Albania, the tuning of the Ethiopian krar and the Indonesian gamelan, Indonesia Kulintang, melodies of Korea, Japan, China and Vietnam (including the folk music of these countries), the Afro-Caribbean tradition, Polish highlanders from the Tatra Mountains, and Western Classical composers such as French composer Claude Debussy.
Hemitonic and Anhemitonic
Ethnomusicology commonly classifies pentatonic scales as either hemitonic or anhemitonic. Hemitonic scales contain one or more semitones and anhemitonic scales do not contain semitones. For example, a hemitonic pentatonic scale common in some areas of North and West Africa contains flatted 2nd, 3rd, and 6th degrees (hence, if the scale begins in C, it will contain a D-flat, E-flat, and A-flat, plus a G-natural).
Major Pentatonic Scale
Anhemitonic pentatonic scales can be constructed in many ways. One construction takes five consecutive pitches from the circle of fifths; starting on C, these are C, G, D, A, and E. Transposing the pitches to fit into one octave rearranges the pitches into the major pentatonic scale: C, D, E, G, A, C.
Another construction works backward: It omits two pitches from a diatonic scale. If we were to begin with a C major scale, for example, we might omit the fourth and the seventh scale degrees, F and B. The remaining notes, C, D, E, G, and A, are transpositionally equivalent to the black keys on a piano keyboard: G-flat, A-flat, B-flat, D-flat, and E-flat.
We can also omit the third and seventh degrees of the C major scale to obtain the notes another transpositionally equivalent anhemitonic pentatonic scale: {F,G,A,C,D}. If we omit the first and fourth degrees of the C major scale we have a third anhemitonic pentatonic scale: {G,A,B,D,E}.
Minor Pentatonic Scale
Although various hemitonic pentatonic scales might be called minor, the term is most commonly applied to the relative minor pentatonic derived from the major pentatonic, using scale tones 1, 3, 4, 5, and 7 of the natural minor scale. Thus C minor pentatonic would be C, E-flat, F, G, B-flat. The A minor pentatonic, the relative minor of C, would be the same tones as C major pentatonic, starting on A, giving A, C, D, E, G. This minor pentatonic contains all three tones of an A minor triad.
A gamelan is a musical ensemble from Indonesia, typically from the islands of Bali or Java, featuring a variety of instruments such as metallophones, xylophones, drums and gongs; bamboo flutes, bowed and plucked strings, and vocalists may also be included.
The term refers more to the set of instruments than to the players of those instruments. A gamelan is a set of instruments as a distinct entity, built and tuned to stay together — instruments from different gamelan are generally not interchangeable.
The word "gamelan" comes from the Javanese word "gamel", meaning to strike or hammer, and the suffix "an", which makes the root a collective noun.
Cultural Value
In Indonesia, gamelan usually accompanies dance, wayang puppet performances, or rituals or ceremonies. Typically players in the gamelan will be familiar with dance moves and poetry, while dancers are able to play in the ensemble. In wayang, the dalang (puppeteer) must have a thorough knowledge of gamelan, as he gives the cues for the music. Gamelan can be performed by itself — in "klenengan" style, or for radio broadcasts — but concerts in the Western style are not traditional.
Gamelan's role in rituals is so important that there is a Javanese saying that "It's not official until the gong is hung."Some performances are associated with royalty, such as visits by the sultan of Yogyakarta. Certain gamelans are associated with specific rituals, such as the Gamelan Sekaten, which is used in celebration of Mawlid an-Nabi (Muhammad's birthday). In Bali, almost all religious rituals include gamelan performance. Gamelan is also used in the ceremonies of the Catholic church in Indonesia. Certain pieces are designated for starting and ending performances or ceremonies. When a "leaving" piece (such as "Udan Mas") is begun, the audience will know that the event is nearly finished and will begin to leave. Certain pieces are also believed to possess magic powers, and can be used to ward off evil spirits.
Gamelan is frequently played on the radio. For example, the Pura Pakualaman gamelan performs live on the radio every Minggu Pon (a day in the 35-day cycle of the Javanese calendar).[6] In major towns, the Radio Republik Indonesia employs professional musicians and actors, and broadcast programs of a wide variety of gamelan music and drama.
In the court tradition of central Java, gamelan is often played in the pendopo, an open pavilion with a cavernous, double-pitched roof, no side walls, and a hard marble or tile floor. The instruments are placed on a platform to one side, which allows the sound to reverberate in the roof space and enhances the acoustics.
In Bali, the Gamelan instruments are all kept together in the balai banjar, a community meeting hall which has a large open space with a roof over top of it with several open sides. The instruments are all kept here together because they believe that all of the instruments belong to the community as a whole and no one person has ownership over an instrument. Not only is this where the instruments are stored, but this is also the practice space for the sekaha (Gamelan orchestra). The open walls allow for the music to flow out into the community where the rest of the people can enjoy it.
The sekaha is led by a single instructor whose job it is in the community to lead this group and to come up with new songs. When they are working on a new song, the instructor will lead the group in practice and help the group form the new piece of music as they are practicing. When the instructor creates a new song, he leaves enough open for interpretation that the group can improvise and as a group they will be writing the music as they are practicing it.
The Balinese Gamelan groups are constantly changing their music by taking older pieces they know and mixing them together as well as trying new variations on their music. Their music is always constantly changing because they believe that music should grow and change; the only exception to this is with their most sacred songs which they will not change. A single new piece of music can take several months before it is completed.
Men and women usually perform in separate groups, with the exception of the pesindhen, the female singer who performs with male groups.
In the West, gamelan is often performed in a concert context, but may also incorporate dance or wayang.
Tones
The tuning and construction of a gamelan orchestra is a complex process. Javanese gamelans use two tuning systems: sléndro and pélog. There are other tuning systems such as degung (exclusive to Sunda, or West Java), and madenda (also known as diatonis, similar to a European natural minor scale). In central Javanese gamelan, sléndro is a system with five notes to the diapason (octave), fairly evenly spaced, while pélog has seven notes to the octave, with uneven intervals, usually played in five note subsets of the seven-tone collection. This results in sound quite different from music played in a western tuning system. Many gamelan orchestras will include instruments in each tuning, but each individual instrument will only be able to play notes in one. The precise tuning used differs from ensemble to ensemble, and give each ensemble its own particular flavour. The intervals between notes in a scale are very close to identical for different instruments within each gamelan, but the intervals vary from one gamelan to the next.
Colin McPhee remarked, "Deviations in what is considered the same scale are so large that one might with reason state that there are as many scales as there are gamelans." However, this view is contested by some teachers of gamelan, and there have been efforts to combine multiple ensembles and tuning structures into one gamelan to ease transportation at festival time. One such ensemble is gamelan Manikasanti, which can play the repertoire of many different ensembles.
Balinese gamelan instruments are commonly played in pairs which are tuned slightly apart to produce interference beats, ideally at a consistent speed for all pairs of notes in all registers. It is thought that this contributes to the very "busy" and "shimmering" sound of gamelan ensembles. In the religious ceremonies that contain gamelan, these interference beats are meant to give the listener a feeling of a god's presence or a stepping stone to a meditative state.
Influence on Western
The gamelan has been appreciated by several western composers of classical music, most famously Claude Debussy who heard a Javanese gamelan play at the Paris Exposition of 1889 (World's Fair). (The gamelan Debussy heard was in the slendro scale and was played by Central Javanese musicians.) Despite his enthusiasm, direct citations of gamelan scales, melodies, rhythms, or ensemble textures have not been located in any of Debussy's own compositions. However, the equal-tempered whole tone scale appears in his music of this time and afterward,[14] and a Javanese gamelan-like heterophonic texture is emulated on occasion, particularly in "Pagodes", from Estampes (solo piano, 1903), in which the great gong's cyclic punctuation is symbolized by a prominent perfect fifth.
Direct homages to gamelan music are to be found in works for western instruments by John Cage, particularly his prepared piano pieces, Colin McPhee, Lou Harrison, Béla Bartók, Francis Poulenc, Olivier Messiaen, Bronislaw Kaper and Benjamin Britten. In more recent times, American composers such as Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and Dennis Murphy, Loren Nerell, Michael Tenzer, Evan Ziporyn, Daniel James Wolf and Jody Diamond as well as Australian composers such as Peter Sculthorpe, Andrew Schultz and Ross Edwards have written several works with parts for gamelan instruments or full gamelan ensembles. I Nyoman Windha is among contemporary Indonesian composers that have written compositions using western instruments along with Gamelan. Hungarian composer György Ligeti wrote a piano étude called Galamb Borong influenced by gamelan. American folk guitarist John Fahey included elements of gamelan in many of his late-60s sound collages, and again in his 1997 collaboration with Cul de Sac, The Epiphany of Glenn Jones. The experimental art-rock band King Crimson, while not using gamelan instruments, used interlocking rhythmic paired guitars that were influenced by gamelan. Experimental pop groups The Residents, 23 Skidoo (whose 1984 album was even titled Urban Gamelan), Mouse on Mars, His Name Is Alive, Xiu Xiu, Macha, Saudade, and the Sun City Girls have used gamelan percussion. The gamelan has also been used by British multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield at least three times, "Woodhenge" (1979), "The Wind Chimes (Part II)" (1987) and "Nightshade" (2005). Avant-garde performance band Melted Men uses Balinese gamelan instruments as well as gamelan-influenced costumes and dance in their shows.
Recently, many Americans were first introduced to the sounds of gamelan by the popular anime film Akira. Gamelan elements are used in this film to punctuate several exciting fight scenes, as well as to symbolize the emerging psychic powers of the tragic hero, Tetsuo. The gamelan in the film's score was performed by the members of the Japanese musical collective Geinoh Yamashirogumi. Gamelan and kecak are also used in the soundtrack to the video games Secret of Mana and Sonic Unleashed. The musical soundtrack for the Sci Fi Channel series Battlestar Galactica features extensive use of the gamelan, particularly in the 3rd season , as do the Alexandre Desplat'a scores for Girl With A Pearl Earring and The Golden Compass.
Loops of gamelan music are ubiquitous in electronic music. An early example is the Texas band Drain's album Offspeed and In There, which contains two tracks where trip-hop beats are matched with gamelan loops from Java and Bali and recent popular examples include The Prodigy's song Hot Ride, or EXEC_PAJA/.#Orica extracting, a song sung by Haruka Shimotsuki as part of the Ar tonelico: Melody of Elemia soundtracks.