aural archipelago

field recordings from around Indonesia

  • Map
  • Archive
  • aural archipelago
  • Donate
  • About
  • Friends + Inspirations

Songs After Dawn: Drone and Trance in Banyuwangi

January 18, 2015 by Palmer Keen in Early

Location: Banyuwangi, East Java

Sound: Jaranan Buto/Gandrung (?)

In a tradition that stretches the length of Java and into Bali, groups of young men straddle hobby horses and ride them deep into trance, galloping upon a wave of propulsive, gong-driven music. This artform, often called jathilan (also known as kuda lumping, especially in West Java) stretches back centuries and has continued into the 21st century largely unchanged.

The music that accompanies the dance is raw and unrestrained compared to the slow, graceful sounds of Javanese music cultivated in the royal palaces of Surakarta and Yogyakarta (a comparison I've made before, but it bears repeating as that music has been planted so firmly in the public imagination as prototypical of Javanese music!). The typical ensemble across Central and East Java features kendang drum together with the gongs known as kempul, kenong, and kethuk; melody is provided by the reedy buzz of the tarompet, a kind of single-reed wind instrument.

The musicians I met in Banyuwangi called their art jaranan buto, as it also features a dance in which men dress up in costume as Buto, a hairy giant famous in Javanese folklore. The music as I encountered it took two forms: in some songs, especially during the trance-dance segment, the tarompet was used, giving the music a character more typical of the jathilan music found throughout Java.

In other songs, however, the instrumentation made it very clear that we were in Osing country: as I mentioned in my previous post on Osingnese bamboo music, this far eastern corner of Java has a unique ethnic group all its own, distinct from the dominant Javanese, with a musical tradition that is likewise very distinct. The artform for which Osing are most well known is the dance and music called gandrung, which uniquely features two Western instruments creatively adapted into the Osing musical lexicon: the violin (here called biola and played in a radically different style from the Western classical tradition), and the triangle.

Here is where things get confusing: when asked what they called their music, they responded with "jaranan buto", and when the tarompet was in full swing it sounded quite like other jathilan music I've heard from other parts of Java. But when the biola came out and the sinden started singing in the idiosyncratic melismatic style typical of the Osing, the music sounded remarkably similar, if not identical to gandrung music. Minor variations could be heard: only one violin played, rather than the two typical of gandrung, but that fascinating drone, played on two strings of the violin in imitation of the rebab that typically accompanies Javanese gamelan, had all the hallmarks of that quintessential Osing ensemble.

With that in mind, I'm tempted to call this music gandrung, but as someone who is very much not an expert on this particular music, I'm going to defer to the musicians! This is definitely something that deserves further research and investigation: are there other groups that merge jathilan and gandrung in this way? In what ways, imperceptible to my amateur ears, is this music different from both of these forms? Is it a previously undocumented hybrid? More research by people more qualified than me is begging to be undertaken!

Context:

It was dawn when the train from Surabaya finally pulled into the station in Banyuwangi, the final stop in the rail system that stretches the length of Java. The sun had not quite risen, but the air was somehow still hot and damp as we walked into the night, becak drivers accosting us from all sides. Nearby, in a small tent, a performance was being pumped through a primitive sound system, sounding like wayang, the traditional puppet theater found throughout Java. Pulled between these sounds and the bed I knew I'd find in a nearby motel, I hesitated, tired but curious. After the long, sleepless train ride, the bed won that contest.

I awoke in the foul, damp motel hours later, light and a bizarre drone pouring in through the small window. The sound was alien and unplaceable: was there an ensemble of musical bees outside? And what was that unfamiliar voice, floating distorted into our room? My girlfriend laid next to me, groggy and confused. What is that sound? I asked her. It sounds Mongolian, she said.

Disoriented but with curiosity piqued, I threw my clothes on, grabbed my sound recorder and camera, and went to investigate. Outside, the sun was already reaching high into the sky, pounding down onto the dusty road outside. I squinted into the light, across the way, and saw the tent from dawn, amplified music persisting from within, that weird drone, that unfamiliar voice.

I reached the tent, walking past the fat stacks of the soundsystem and into the shade of the tarp, taking a seat on dry grass next to curious kids sipping juice from bags, seeming to draw the attention of nearly everyone, including the musicians. They sat on the ground in front of me, a man sawing away at a violin - that was the drone! - , a woman sitting in a chair, caked in makeup and belting out melismatic lines, a man spinning a stick rhythmically along the three sides of a large musical triangle. No doubt about it, I realized, hearing these gandrung-esque sounds: I had arrived in Banyuwangi!

In a break between songs, I shyly approached the musicians, quizzing them on their product: what was this music? As I mentioned earlier, they answered with curious smiles: jaranan buto! Jathilan!

 Their leader beckoned me into another nearby tent, where boys were sitting scattered on the ground, applying dramatic makeup to their young faces, readying themselves for the dance, for their ride into trance.

Taking a seat once again in the audience, I watched these kids emerge, astride their woven horses. They looked bored as they slowly pranced about in practiced formation, swaying to the sound of the tarompet. But as the music escalated, their looks changed, eyes becoming feverish. Some abandoned their horses to crawl on the ground themselves, possessed, it seemed, by the spirit of some unknown animal. Some boys crawled to a corner to take in whifs of incense and eat raw, unprocessed rice. Another took an elaborate wooden dragon mask and began to gnaw on its wooden face.

As the gong beat on, the boys crawled on hands and knees across the dry grass, eyes bugging and darting left and right. One by one, a man with the look of a shaman would approach them, push them down and with a firm move of his hand, seem to push the spirits out of their bodies, after which they would go limp, sit up, and walk dazed back to the tent with a look of pure bewilderment, as if they had no idea what just happened. As the musicians brought the song to a close, I couldn't help but feel exactly the same way.

January 18, 2015 /Palmer Keen
East Java
Early
1 Comment
  • Newer
  • Older
Featured
DSC02828 copy.JPG
Mar 4, 2025
On the Hunt with Hatong: Buffalo Horn Music in Banten
Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025
DSC03881.JPG
Jan 9, 2025
Enter the Octagon: Hyperlocal Zither Drum Ensembles in Sumedang, West Java
Jan 9, 2025
Jan 9, 2025
DSC04064.JPG
Nov 24, 2024
Celempung Mang Jama
Nov 24, 2024
Nov 24, 2024
DSC03435.JPG
May 18, 2024
Pikon: Mouth Harp Music of Papua
May 18, 2024
May 18, 2024
DSC03347.JPG
May 5, 2024
Papuan Strings, Pt. 3: Wisisi
May 5, 2024
May 5, 2024
DSC03508.JPG
Apr 8, 2024
Papuan Strings, Pt. 2: Yorbo, Arnold Ap, and Musical Solace in Biak
Apr 8, 2024
Apr 8, 2024
Picture1.jpg
Oct 30, 2023
Stambul Fajar: Jalur Rempah
Oct 30, 2023
Oct 30, 2023
songgeri.jpg
Sep 5, 2023
Papuan Strings, Pt. 1: Songgeri
Sep 5, 2023
Sep 5, 2023
DSC09060 copy 2.JPG
Mar 20, 2023
Alas Ethnic Minority Music of Aceh: Bangsi Alas
Mar 20, 2023
Mar 20, 2023
DSC09195.JPG
Feb 26, 2023
Alas Ethnic Minority Music of Aceh: Canang Bulu
Feb 26, 2023
Feb 26, 2023
DSC09152.JPG
Nov 26, 2022
Alas Ethnic Minority Music of Aceh: Canang Situ
Nov 26, 2022
Nov 26, 2022
DSC09218.JPG
Jul 10, 2022
Alas Ethnic Minority Music of Aceh: Kecapi
Jul 10, 2022
Jul 10, 2022
DSC09806.JPG
Feb 16, 2022
Angklung Buncis: Mutual Aid and Music in the Fields of West Java
Feb 16, 2022
Feb 16, 2022
DSC09961.JPG
Dec 22, 2021
Suspended Traditions: A Calung Renteng Addendum
Dec 22, 2021
Dec 22, 2021
DSC06736.JPG
Aug 9, 2021
Harpa Mulut Nusantara [Mouth Harps of Indonesia]: Kuriding
Aug 9, 2021
Aug 9, 2021
DSC07611.JPG
Jul 26, 2021
Sounds of Madurese East Java, Pt. 2: Serbung
Jul 26, 2021
Jul 26, 2021
DSC07426.JPG
Jul 19, 2021
Harpa Mulut Nusantara [Mouth Harps of Indonesia]: Rinding Lumajang
Jul 19, 2021
Jul 19, 2021
DSC07538.JPG
Jul 12, 2021
Sounds of Madurese East Java, Pt. 1: Tong Tong Kerapan
Jul 12, 2021
Jul 12, 2021
DSC09264.JPG
Feb 11, 2021
Cokek: Sino-Javanese Syncretism on the North Coast of Java
Feb 11, 2021
Feb 11, 2021
THUMBNAIL.JPG
Dec 12, 2020
The Power of Drums: Jaipong Bajidoran Between Karawang and Subang
Dec 12, 2020
Dec 12, 2020
WhatsApp Image 2020-06-07 at 4.08.04 PM.jpeg
Jun 7, 2020
Traces of Salindru in Banjar Lands: Gamalan Banjar in Barikin, South Kalimantan
Jun 7, 2020
Jun 7, 2020
DSC06608.JPG
Jun 7, 2020
Jejak Salindru di Tanah Banjar: Gamalan Banjar di Barikin, Kalimantan Selatan
Jun 7, 2020
Jun 7, 2020
DSC05872.JPG
Oct 21, 2019
Dayak Halong Ritual Music in South Kalimantan, Pt. 3: Gamalan
Oct 21, 2019
Oct 21, 2019
DSC05929.JPG
Jun 21, 2019
Dayak Halong Ritual Music in South Kalimantan, Part 2: Kasapi
Jun 21, 2019
Jun 21, 2019
DSC05932.JPG
May 25, 2019
Dayak Halong Ritual Music in South Kalimantan, Pt. 1: Kelong
May 25, 2019
May 25, 2019
DSC00871.jpg
Feb 19, 2019
Tagonggong: Sounds from the Edge of Indonesia
Feb 19, 2019
Feb 19, 2019
DSC03354.jpg
Nov 30, 2018
The Many Sounds of Predi, a Minangkabau Artisan
Nov 30, 2018
Nov 30, 2018
DSC03083.jpg
Nov 24, 2018
Musical Journeys in West Sumatra: Gandang Sarunai on the South Coast
Nov 24, 2018
Nov 24, 2018
DSC03203.jpg
Nov 1, 2018
The Sound of Silek: Gandang Sarunai
Nov 1, 2018
Nov 1, 2018
2018_09_30_55092_1538285740._large.jpg
Oct 1, 2018
Palu and Donggala Earthquake and Tsunami Relief
Oct 1, 2018
Oct 1, 2018
Archive
  • March 2025
  • January 2025
  • November 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • November 2022
  • July 2022
  • February 2022
  • December 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • February 2021
  • December 2020
  • June 2020
  • October 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • February 2019
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • June 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • August 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014