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Sample Track 1:
"Ketawang: Puspawarna " from Java: Court Gamelan (this track is on a gold-plated record that NASA launched into space in 1977)
Sample Track 2:
"Bubaran: Hudan Mas" from Java: Court Gamelan
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Java: Court Gamelan (this track is on a gold-plated record that NASA launched into space in 1977)
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Layer 2
Of Monkey Chants and the Love God

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Islands , Of Monkey Chants and the Love God >>

     Back in the 1960s, before the marketplace concept of world music existed as suc, the independent Nonesuch label (now a part of AOL Time-Warner) began its Explorer Series -- a slew of legendary titles that packaged musicology as pleasure, presenting traditional music from diverse parts of the world in high-quality audio.  Some of those albums have come out on CD, but until now there hasn't been a complete reissue of the series.  But beginning in 2002  and continuing through 2005, all 92 volumes will be hitting the stores in volleys - a major record-publishing event. 
     Nost of what a record reviewer gets in the mail is landfill in the making, so imagine my delight when i got a package of 12 Explorer titles from Indonesia and the South Pacific.  Back when I was a musical tadpole, these records introduced me to gamelan, the pulsing, shimmering tuned-metal orchestra of Bali and Java.  I engaged in a marathon listen-down with theaim of picking three of the 12 - not the three best, because there is no such thing, but three I highly recommend.
Golden Rain, recorded in Bali in 1966, begins with the glorious clatter of a 25 piece orchestra called Gamelan Gong Kebjar, then progresses to a recording I first heard when it was new - and that I haven't ever forgotten.  It's the monkey chant:  200 men repeating the syllable "tjak" bank and forth at a motorically high speed, with solo voices singing over it in a dramatic ebb and flow that lasts for more than 20 minutes.  Hearing it feels like a privilege.
Originally released in 1972, Gamelan Semar Pegulingan: Gamelan of the Love God is an exercise in ecstatic transport.  The integrity of thetimbres and the vitality of the performance may remind you how cheesy today's synthesizer-driven chill-out music is.  I took a class in 1973 from Robert E. Brown, who recorded this music, and I remember him speaking wistfully of Bali as paradise on earth.  This CD sounds like paradise, too.
Striking and completely different from the others is West Java: Tongeret: Sundanese Popular Music.  Recorded between 1979 and 1986, this is a later generation of music reflecting a different idea, but it still uses traditional instrumentation.  This record is unlike any you've ever heard, and it's everything you could want in popular music.  There are senusous, expressive female vocals by Idjah Hadidjah; shoutingmen'haunting melodies; rich timbres; shifting textures; and dynamic, challenging drumming.  It functions as a kind of link between the Explorer Series and the sophisticated world music releases of the 1990s.  I don't use the word often, but this record is sublime, absolutely sublime. 05/01/03
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