快活app

Skip to Content

High Arts Asia

Back to Article Listing

Author(s)

Madeline Phipps

Music and Dance of Bali featured alumni, faculty and former staff performers

Feature  •

Nearly 500 audience members enjoyed a night of Balinese music and dance performances on Feb. 2. The program featured a traditional Balinese dance-drama in which a mythical lion-like creature fended off a meddling monkey, a processional gamelan balaganjur and a performance of the virtuosic 21st century composition 鈥淛agra Parwata.鈥

Several pieces were performed by听, a gamelan orchestra consisting of 20 musicians from the Colorado Front Range and directed by Balinese composer I Made Lasmawan.听Aaron Paige, visiting assistant professor of ethnomusicology at 快活app鈥檚 Lamont School of Music, plays in the orchestra and organized the concert, in part to contribute to his students鈥 experience in his Music, Society and Culture course.

鈥淚n preparation for the concert, my students engaged in a unit on the music and culture of Bali, Indonesia,鈥 Paige said. 鈥淎s part of this module, students had the opportunity to work with myself and members of Tunas Mekar in a series of hands-on workshops on a bronze gong gamelan orchestra, generously lent to 快活app by the ensemble.鈥 (Gamelan music is highly rhythmic and uses various gongs, drums and bronze metallophones encased in ornate hand-carved jackfruit wood.)

Along with Paige, five others with connections to the 快活app community played in the gamelan orchestra. One of them, Joseph Engle (MA 鈥15) described the significance of playing with a cross-cultural group. 鈥淢y experience playing gamelan has been many things over the last year and a half. Frustrating, challenging, fulfilling and transformative are only some of the words I could use to describe this art form,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭hrough gamelan and the community surrounding it and permeated by it, I have learned about myself as a person and a musician.鈥

Rhianna Fairchild (BA 鈥16), who also performed, called her introduction to Balinese gamelan as a music student profound. 鈥淚 was instantly enchanted by the ornate beauty and sophistication of the entire cultural practice,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted to be a part of the local group from the moment we did a workshop in Professor Paige鈥檚 class.鈥

The concert was part of the Lamont School of Music鈥檚 Expanding Horizons Initiative, which aims to bring greater understanding and appreciation of diverse cultures and performing arts to the 快活app and the Front Range. 鈥淎s an alum,鈥 said Jill Fredericksen (BA 鈥86), 鈥淚 greatly enjoyed seeing how this concert and others like it are joining 快活app with artistic and cultural communities in Denver. I hope that we can work together to continue building such connections in the future.鈥