From Issue 2

Recording Retrospective: Cili Mekar

Insitu Recordings

Cili Mekar: Pupuh Keduung

Cili Mekar

Bali Record B 751

1990

Many artists and labels have contributed to Indonesia’s vibrant and longstanding recording cultures. In each subsequent issue of Insitu Recordings Magazine we will celebrate one outstanding recording from this collection. Today we pay tribute to Cili Mekar, an album exhibiting extraordinary virtuosity and depth of expression recorded and released by Bali Record in 1990. The cassette includes twelve tracks of minimal yet rich performances juxtaposed with kidung poetry, including the title track Pupuh Keduung, a new work composed by I Wayan Sinti. Working in a number of configurations, I Wayan Sinti, Ni Wayan Rumiasih and Ida Bagus Prasi give masterful performances on rebab, suling, kendang, and voice, creating a truly embodied music that defies classification.

The twelve compositions can be split into two groups, one half featuring poetry and the other solo or duo instrumentals. On the former, the suling and rebab elaborate the melody, broken only by Prasi’s explosive kotekan-like elaborations. Rumiasih and Sinti’s vocals are laid boldly on top of this instrumental support. The latter feature virtuosic explorations of solo and duo presentations of rebab and/or suling. Within this uncommon arrangement, Prasi and Sinti deftly ornament melodies, creating an expressive summary of gamelan. It is difficult to overstate the level of technical excellence and musicality in these performances, which lack nothing for their minimal materials.

Many of the small and mixed-ensemble works that Insitu Recordings has recorded and released, especially in our Insitu Sessions series, carry an interesting resonance with this album. Cili Mekar means “small blossoms” or “small developments,” an image that Sinti said was intentional, and carried his hope that others would be inspired to explore smaller-ensemble formats. While the motivations behind making works like these vary across composers, there is no doubt that his idea resonates with many contemporary artists. 
 
The recordings themselves are noteworthy for their raw and transparent quality in the inimitable style of Bali Record. This works to highlight the breaths, pauses and turns, and the inflections that create a deep feeling of vitality in this music. What we find on this cassette is three artists working together to create a reverent atmosphere of deeply informed experimentation – small blossoms of possibility born of the fertile foundational elements of Balinese gamelan and poetry. Cili Mekar has the power to continue to fascinate and inspire listeners, and is as relevant and essential as ever.
 
Be sure to also check out the translation of Pupuh Keduhung in this issue’s Seleksi Puisi

Album Details

  • I Wayan Sinti (karya, rebab, kendang, vocal)
  • Ni Wayan Rumiasih (vocal)
  • Ida Bagus Prasi (suling)

Side A Track List

  1. Pupuh Keduung
  2. Sinom Silin
  3. Sinom Wug Payangan
  4. Rebab/Suling

Side B Track List

  1. Pupuh Semarandana
  2. Pupuh Sinom Lumrah
  3. Ginada Pakang Raras
  4. Rebab Solo
  5. Suling Solo/Tabuh Telu
  6. Suling Solo
  7. Rebab/Suling
  8. Ekstra Rebab Solo
I Wayan Sinti

Insitu Recordings

Kalau mencari rekaman seleksi gong kebyar Michael Tenzer coba cari di Bali Record. Mereka punya koleksi kaset, CD, dan VCD yang luar biasa. Semua rekaman di atas oleh Bali Record. Tolong mensuport mereka.

About the author(s)

Zachary Hejny

Zachary Hejny is a California-born composer and performer of experimental music residing in Indonesia. His work explores polytemporality, incidental tuning systems, ecological sound structures, and philosophies of noise. Current projects include electro-acoustic instrument building using recycled materials, an environmental sound map, a metronome app practice aid for Balinese kendang tunggal, and various music for visual media. He received a DMA in composition from UC Santa Cruz (2021) and currently works as a foreign researcher at IKIP Saraswati Tabanan.
Zachary participates in various contemporary music scenes on Bali, primarily as an avid student of gender wayang, gamelan composer, and performing sound artist. Previous involvement with Balinese music involves a Darmasiswa cultural immersion scholarship (2012), a master’s degree from ISI Denpasar (2015), numerous festival commissions (including at the Bali Arts Festival in 2017), and a Fulbright Student Research grant (2023). He currently volunteers as Assistant Director and board member for Insitu Recordings, where he helps edit a digital magazine, maintain an archive of historical gamelan recordings, and document creative work by emerging Balinese composers.
Tabanan, Bali

Jonathan Adams

Jonathan Adams is an ethnomusicologist, electronic musician, and visual artist with broad interest in Balinese music. His experience includes formal study of longstanding ritual and court musics, participation in performances of new and innovative works, as well as instrument building and tuning. To date, he has spent 5+ years living in Indonesia. This included a one-year stay (2007/2008) supported by the Indonesian Darmasiswa program; and a four-year stay (2013-2017) that involved research on seven-tone music associated with Javano-Balinese poetry, assisting the experiential education program at the School for International Training, and co-founding Insitu Recordings. He received a BA in Ethnomusicology and Comparative Religion from the University of Washington in 2007, where he also spearheaded the realization of an innovative 9-tone gamelan developed by I Wayan Sinti, called Siwa Nada. He holds a Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology from the University of British Columbia (2021) and is currently adjunct assistant professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His research has been supported by the American Institute for Indonesian Studies (Henry Luce Fellowship 2014), a Tina and Morris Wagner Foundation Fellowship (2014-2015), and an Elsie and Audrey Jang Scholarship in Cultural Diversity and Harmony (2017-2018).
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Image: Kawamura Koheisai (Kohey)

People and organizations mentioned in this article

I Wayan Sinti (Sinti)

Many know I Wayan Sinti as a classical artist, but he is also a top innovator, composer, teacher and artist in Bali. Sinti was born in 1943 in Ubung Village and started studying vocals and gamelan in 1957. His interest in art led him to continue his studies at KOKAR. Because he was the best graduate at that time, the school where he studied hired him as a teacher. Apart from teaching in Bali, Sinti has also been invited to the Center for World Music in Berkeley, America and continued his ethnomusicology education at San Diego State University and graduated with an MA in music. Besides being active in teaching, Sinti also makes innovations in Balinese gamelan, such as making several new gamelans, Manikasanti and Shiwa Nada. As for some of I Wayan Sinti’s works, Lokarya, Ajnyaswari, Wilet Mayura, are still favored by the gamelan community because they are innovative but still have strong roots in Balinese artistic traditions.
Bali, Indonesia

© Insitu Recordings 2018