MUSIC

Loved by the people, music is as much a part of the environment as rivers, trees, and the snarl of bemos. It is often difficult to know where music ends and nature and Balinese life begin. Echoing, throbbing xylophones, drums, and clashing cymbals can be heard all hours of the day and night, blending with chirping crickets and croaking frogs. Bathers sing in rivers, rattles clack in fields, bicycle bells tingle, kites vibrate in the wind, little boys imitate the sound of gongs, pigeons circle overhead with whistles attached to their feet, and during the space of just a few kilometers one may hear the hard and feverish rehearsal of half a dozen percussion-centered gamelan the centerpiece in this rich and varied musical environment.
     The word gamelan simply means "musical group" and may refer to 20 different kinds of xylophonic, percussion-type musical ensembles. There are more gamelan regularly performing on Bali today-over 1,500 orchestras and 100 dance troupes-than ever before. Just as the Balinese share the planting of rice and the upkeep of their temples, traditional orchestra clubs, sekaha, are a communal organization in which everyone shares an equal interest and pride.

History and Development
Scholars believe gamelan music may derive from the sound of priestly bells. Another theory holds that the percussive component of gamelan developed from workers using heavy pounding-poles to beat out music as they beat the husks off rice grains, perhaps lifting the trough off the ground and laying it on crossbeams to enhance the resonance. The gamelan is likely indigenous to Indonesia and probably consisted of bamboo instruments. The royal courts of Bali emulated the pomp and ritual of the Javanese Majapahit Kingdom of ancient Java, and Balinese courtly music was no exception. Mention of gamelan orchestras have been found in chronicles dating back as far as the 14th century.
     With the Dutch seizure of power in 1908, Balinese court culture began to undergo a drastic transformation. Their power and sources of revenues sharply curtailed, the puri ceased to function as cultural centers. By the 1930s the ceremonial glitter of the courts had faded and most of the court gamelan were in storage, gathering dust. Unable to afford their traditional role as patrons of the arts, many courts sold their gamelan to village musicians, thus passing the domination and fostering of the arts into the hands of common villagers. Whole orchestras were melted down and recast in forms that better suited the flamboyant and frolicsome tastes of the masses. From the moment the music left the courts and filtered into the villages, its development accelerated and took on a life of its own, becoming louder, faster, more earthy, and available to a much wider audience.
     Today, the village gamelan is played with more vigor and passion than the slower, haunting Javanese-style orchestra, which remained the prerogative of the courts on Bali until well into the 20th century.

Musical Composition
Sudden changes, displaced accents, bursts of rapid, precise, highly syncopated playing, increases and decreases of volume, and a highly developed counterpoint based on simple melodies give many Westerners the impression that gamelan music is improvised like jazz, but this is untrue. If an orchestra musician started hammering out his own tune, he'd be immediately ostracized from the troupe. Alternately playful, blaring, with a frenetic, vibrant sound, gamelan is Balinese music like no other you have ever heard.
     The assorted drums, gongs, and cymbals carry a wide variation of pitch and timbre. What might be called octaves are not exact octaves and may sound off-pitch or dissonant to Western ears. Instruments with a high range of notes are struck with more frequency than those with lower ranges, so there's a greater proportion of high harmonics over fundamental harmonics; half and quarter notes are employed to a considerable extent.
     There are five or seven tones in Balinese music, just as in Java. The instruments are tuned when they're made to either the pentatonic (five-tone) pelog scale or the septatonic (seven-tone) slendro scale. All the instruments have fixed pitches, with the exception of the wistful, viola-like rebab and wailing suling (flutes). Each gong-like instrument is tuned to its neighbor, making the whole gamelan a self-contained, coherent musical unit, played as a single instrument rather than a collection. Each instrument is tuned to its partner in a slightly higher tone, producing the shimmering, tremolo, so characteristic of Balinese gamelan. Even on an individual instrument, the octave notes may be tuned slightly higher than the matching lower tones. Played together they produce a rich, throbbing sound.
     A Balinese gamelan piece usually consists of four or five movements, each divided into four phases: a solo to introduce the piece, the introductory theme, followed by central body and then the clashing, thunderous finale. Typically, compositions are named after animal actions or temperaments: "Crow Stealing Eggs, "Fighting Cats," "Toad Climbing Pawpaw," "Golden Butterfly," or "Snapping Crocodile."
     Composers are selected from the orchestra's best players. In everyday life they could be waiters at a restaurant, artisans, or field laborers. It's difficult to make out who controls the orchestra so perfectly and precisely because the gamelan has no real conductor. Instead, the orchestra is lead by the two drummers, often the most accomplished musicians of the group. They link the instruments together, control the tempo, and underline the accents. With their knowledge of both dance and music, the drummers signal other musicians to play the proper musical gesture to accompany a specific dance. The music itself is played from memory, which is extraordinary when you consider how lengthy and complex some pieces are. The Balinese have worked out a system of notation, but the orchestration of the melody is fixed so notation is seldom used. Learning by repetition, the Balinese say when a piece is practiced long enough "it enters the musician's liver and he plays without thinking."
     Musicologists marvel at the way two musicians play interlocking parts as fast as possible, beating out alternate notes at top speed and in perfect coordination, resulting in a faster performance than one player is capable of. The Balinese like their music very loud and dramatic, with sharp changes in the tempo and volume. A piece always seems to end unexpectedly-as if in mid-song. In the south, the playing style is more refined and fluid, radically different from the violent, rhapsodical style of the north.

Forms of Gamelan Orchestras
Strictly defined, the word gamelan refers to the Javanese orchestra, though it may be applied in general to any Indonesian percussion orchestra. The Balinese themselves refer to their orchestra simply as gong, as in gong gede or gong kebyar, and each set of instruments is given names such as "Sea of Honey" or "Floating Cloud." There's a gong for almost every occasion-weddings, cremations, cultural performances, birthdays. Special music accompanies long processions to the sea, or lures the gods from their celestial heights. Other melodies induce a trance, entertain the masses with musical comedy, or accompany all-night operas for the elite.
     Ensemble size ranges from the huge 40 member gamelan gong to the mini-xylophonic quintets carried on multistoried pyres in funeral processions. In between you'll find 30-piece bronze percussion orchestras, small angklung, bamboo gamelan, orchestras entirely of lutes and mouth-harps, and small quartets playing the accompanying music for choral symphonies composed of chants and grunts. Each ensemble differs in the instruments that make it up, the scale used, and the sonority. Many types of orchestras can be pared down so that they can be played by marching bands.
     Since the 1960s, credit goes to tourists for keeping alive some forms of gamelan which might otherwise have succumbed to the pervasive influence of modernism, though experimentation with new styles never ceases. The Western music inundating Bali is now looked upon as a stimulus rather than a threat, but youthful composers also look to older traditional Balinese forms for inspiration, and forms are always coming in and out of style. The seven-tone semar pegulingan orchestra in which some instruments are played with two hands has now become the most sought-after ensemble for the creations of contemporary Balinese composers. The archaic and rare gong selunding features metallophones with iron keys and very simple trough resonators.
     The highly distinctive, classical tektekan orchestra of Krambitan in Tabanan is made up of men carrying split bamboo drums and giant cowbells around their necks. Exorcizing malignant spirits when pestilence strikes the village, this is the only orchestra of its type in Bali. The island's only all-women gamelan, known as gong wanita, is from Peliatan in Gianyar where they perform on the Tirtasari Dance Stage.
The refined gong gede and gong pelegongan prevalent in the early years of this century, essentially as temple orchestras, were superseded in the 1920s and 30s by more up-tempo gong kebyar, which started catching on in northern Bali in 1915. Until recently, it was the most popular and widespread type of orchestra, but has reached a state of saturation both in numbers and style.
     A few older ensembles are coming back in popularity. Revived in the past five years is the spectacular gamelan jegog of the western Jembrana Regency which consists of mammoth tubes of bamboo, the largest measuring up to 30 cm in diameter and over two meters in length. When struck with a big, padded mallet, the sound made by the resonating jegog tubes can be heard over a great distance. One impetus behind this revival is the unremitting and intense competition between different musical associations. Encouraged by the provincial government which sponsors annual music festivals and competitions, these contests are like sporting events.

The Instruments
As many as 25 separate instruments make up different musical ensembles on Bali. Instruments are framed in splendidly carved, painted, and gilded stands. More elaborate and expensive frames have scenes from the Hindu epics carved along their sides. All gamelan instruments are sanctified; some melodies are considered so sacred they may not be played or even hummed without special ceremonies and offerings. Even before a commercial gamelan performance, a priest is always summoned to bless the venue, the musicians, dancers, and instruments, and to neutralize any malevolent spirits which might cause mischief.
     The principal instruments of the orchestra are the metallophones of various sizes and pitches. The gangsa, the highest pitch, is used to play rapid, interlocking rhythms and melodies. The midrange instrument, the calung, plays the core melody, while the bass metallophone, the jegogan, punctuates the longer phrases and reinforces the basic melody. Their metal keys are suspended over bamboo resonating tubes, mellowing the harsh metallic sound. Each instrument plays an integral role in the group, which is be divided into sections: instruments to embellish the basic melody, instruments to lay down the metrical structure, and instruments to "sweeten" the melody.
     Holding conical kendang drums in their laps and using both hands and rounded sticks, the lead drummers pour forth incredible rhythms. They can vary the tonal quality depending on whether the drum is played with the tips of the fingers, the palm of the hand, or damped with the fingers. The big wadon, or female drum, is played by one of the leaders. The smaller, male drum, or lanang, dictates the rhythm of the gamelan; dancers always follow the beat, or what musicologists call the "drum language," laid down by these two open-ended drums.
     Other instruments include the fast, tinkling cymbals (cengceng) that change the tempo and carry the faster rhythms. Holding the composition together is the kempli, a small gong held on the lap which is steadily beaten with a stick, keeping the beat, and medium-sized suspended gongs (kempur) that punctuate the phrases at critical moments. The xylophonic tingklik provides liquid, mellow contrast to the brazen, bright notes of the metallophones. The 10 keys are made of bamboo and have no resonators. Different forms of tingklik are played in Bali's outer districts like Jembrana and Tenganan. The deep, luscious accents of the great bronze gongs mark off the basic line of the piece (much like a piano in Western orchestras), while the theme and the rich, rippling chords are played on sets of inverted gong-shaped bells (reyong) and the alto bells (trompong)-inverted, nipple-shaped bronze bowls which look like small kettles and are beaten with padded sticks.
     Instruments that accompany particular dances or dramas include the bamboo flute (suling) and the two-stringed, violinlike zither (rebab). Both provide ornamentation and a lead for the melody, but are not indispensable parts of the orchestra. These specialized instruments are most often found in small chamber-like ensembles performing in prestigious restaurants and hotels. The simple flute (suling) is a common instrument played from the mouth or the nose. It measures approximately six cm around and 90-115 cm in length. The oldest ensembles still use a large number of suling. Their mournful sound accompanies the gamelan melody during the most poignant parts of the story. In Indonesia, where there is no set scale, this adaptable bamboo tube is crafted to fit the scale being used.

     The genggong, a bamboo jew's harp, is one of the world's oldest instruments developed in Indonesia in the 10th or 11th century. Just two-cm-wide and 20-cm-long, it's made from a short, thin, dried rib of palm leaf with a long, vibrating tongue. The genggong is held in front of the mouth while a finger tugs a string attached to the other end, causing the instrument to vibrate. Both a percussion and tonal instrument, the genggong produces a melody and a twanging, hypnotic rhythm at the same time. The cavity of the mouth acts as the instrument's sounding board, and the harmonics are changed by opening or closing the mouth and by breath control. By "breathing" the tune, a skilled player can make this ancient instrument bleat, trill, croak, laugh, or lull you to sleep. When well played, the genggong can sound somewhat like the Australian aborigine's didgeridoo, a set of bagpipes, or the curious whispering voices of night insects. Like many other traditional Balinese instruments, it is tuned to the pentatonic (slendro) scale, making it possible to play the genggung in the bamboo angklung ensemble. It's most often heard accompanying the humorous genggong, or frog dance, performed at birthdays, farewells, and wedding parties.

Gamelan Instrument-Making
The finest gamelan made on Bali cost US$20,000-30,000. Bali's consummate gamelan instrument craftsmen live and work in the villages of Tihingan, Sawan, and Blahbatuh. These highly respected artisans have a profound knowledge of metallurgy, bronze-smithing, instrument-tuning, and woodworking. The tone of each bronze key is matched against a wooden tuning stick, then laboriously filed to acquire just the right pitch. Similar instruments are slightly out of tune with each other to make a shimmering, more appealing sound. Although all ensembles are tuned to roughly the same scale, there is no universally accepted reference. This is very much in keeping with the belief that each gamelan has its own spirit. For a Balinese, it's unthinkable to step over an instrument lest the unique spirit residing in it be offended.
     The largest and most famous gong foundry (pabrik gong) is I Made Gabeleran's in Blahbatu. After melting an alloy of tin and copper with hot coconut charcoal fires stoked with bamboo plungers, Pak Gabeleran's smiths forge magnificent sets of trompong or cast reyong in molds. In the big display room, completed instruments are for sale from Rp125,000 for a small kendang batel to Rp800,000 for an impressive, glittering gangsa giing. Specialists carve the ornate wooden frames and stands for the instruments in a rear courtyard. This workshop complex, Sidha Karya-Kerajinan Gong, which produces five or six complete gamelan ensembles a year, is a must-see for the lover of gamelan. Turn at the balai banjar and you'll see the wooden logs for making stands stacked outside.
     In the Northern village of Sawan live four generations of gamelan-instrument makers. Workshops here turn out gender, gangsa, ceng-ceng, and other instruments. Of all the instrument-makers on Bali, Widandra gives the best explanation of the entire process. Or check out the poster in the showroom with photos and explanations of the steps involved. Instruments and small, carved, gilded stands are also for sale. If you don't buy anything, please leave a donation in appreciation of Widandra's time and effort.

The Players
Gamelan players are not professionals but are drawn from all walks of life-farmers, shop owners, postal clerks, and might be from eight to 80 years of age. Some have played together for as long as 50 years, and some groups have long outlived their original members, existing unbroken for hundreds of years. Each banjar appoints a leader and a treasurer, and members contribute all they can to assure the success of the group. It's their responsibility to contribute money and labor, carry instruments, train new musicians, and rehearse. Members speak in the low language and no one sits higher or lower than the other. If the orchestra receives payment from a large hotel or from other commissioned performances, the money usually goes to the gamelan club to cover expenses, transportation, tuning, and maintaining or acquiring new instruments or costumes. Excess funds are divided among members in time for Galungan, the Balinese New Year.

Rehearsals
To achieve the rich sonic complexity and subtlety of Balinese music-without a notational system-requires long hours of rehearsal. Depending on the orchestra, rehearsals are held as infrequently as once every six months or as often as five days a week. In preparation for an upcoming festival, temple anniversary, or to provide music for a dance troupe, incessant rehearsals take place.
     You have an excellent chance of happening upon a gamelan rehearsal, usually after sunset when villagers gather around the bale banjar where the orchestra is kept. Follow your ears-you can't miss the metallic, jangly energy and deep, reverberating gongs. Sit near the musicians so you can feel the power of the music. Rehearsals are casual, open-air affairs with dogs prancing across the dance floor, old men playing flutes in the background, infants suckling, and babies falling asleep amidst the clashing of drums, gongs, and cymbals. If not preparing for a performance a musician might even hand over his mallets to a spectator during a session. Entry is free.
     The instruments remain in the bale banjar for anyone who wishes to practice. Training starts at a very early age; when the musicians take a break, a mob of little boys descend on the instruments (it's almost impossible to damage them) and start improvising a melody, often quite deftly. They learn the various parts of the composition by imitation, and the most talented youngsters in a village are singled out and sent to one of two outstanding and innovative conservatories of dance and music in Denpasar. The SMKI conservatory is for high school level students, while the government-sponsored STSI, the Music and Dance Academy in Denpasar, offers work on undergraduate through master's degrees. After mastering the related forms of music, dance, and drama, the students usually return to their villages to teach. The custom of all-male groups has now fallen by the wayside; at SMKI in Denpasar you are just as likely to see girls practicing.

Performances and Events
A great number of villages offer commercial daily or weekly performances in the bale banjar-outfitted with a ticket table, rows of chairs, and lighting. Foreign audiences are bused in from the resorts and pay a fee of Rp5000-6000. The performances usually start at 0930 or 1000.
     Gamelan are most often owned by the banjar, and a village could have as many as three banjar, each with its own gamelan, though temples, as well as independent families, may also own smaller orchestras. If it's prosperous enough, the goal of every banjar is to own the most outstanding gamelan among the surrounding communities. As evening approaches on the roadways of Bali, you'll see gaudily attired musicians and their instruments piled on trucks on their way to the resorts to play.
     A temple performance is one of the best places to see the gamelan perform. Temple anniversary ceremonies, odalans, are always taking place somewhere on Bali and visitors are always welcome. Ask the local tourist office, your hotel proprietor, driver, or guide. Go in the late afternoon or early evening when spectators are arriving with their offerings. A group of interested people may also commission a performance. The fee is very reasonable (US$100-500), depending upon the size and elaborateness of the orchestra and dance troupe, and the length of the program. Go up to the head of the music club, the ketua sekaha gong, and make arrangements for your group to be seated in the bale banjar or other community space. The comraderie and interplay such an event fosters between visitors and villagers is unforgettable.
     At the Denpasar Arts Center on Jl. Nusa Indah in Abiankapas (a 15-minute walk east of Kereneng Station) visitors can see dance and music rehearsals as well as public dances. The art center also features two magnificent open-air amphitheaters with modern lighting and hosts a Bali Arts Festival. Each year from mid-June to mid-July musical and sendratari competitions, as well as diverse classical and modern music performances, are held daily. If it's the high season, book your hotel early so that you don't miss it.

Overseas Gamelan Sets
The Balinese gamelan first traveled overseas in 1931 when a small troupe of dancers and musicians toured Europe. In the 1950s, another group visited Europe, the U.S., Mexico, and Australia. The inimitable quality of the Balinese gamelan has attracted Western composers ever since. There are hundreds of authentic, first-class Javanese and Balinese gamelan owned by Indonesian consulates or embassies, private nonprofit groups, and ethnomusicology departments in a number of universities in Japan, Australia, Europe, and the United States. Indonesians consider the gamelan as an important emissary connecting them to the world at large, although native Balinese gamelan are seldom played outside of Indonesia because of the high costs of transporting 30 instruments and 40-50 people.
     There are Balinese ensembles in Montreal, Canada; Belfast, Northern Ireland; Munich and Freiburg, West Germany; and Melbourne, Australia. In the U.S.A. alone there are 100 groups, and in Japan at least 15 Balinese gamelan exist. Modeled after the Balinese sekaha system, orchestra members are sought from the community. These students learn to play from experienced non-Balinese tutors or from native Balinese invited as guest-teachers.
Active gamelan can be found at the Indonesian embassy in Washington, D.C., and the New York and Los Angeles consulates (ask for the cultural representative). Universities which maintain gamelan and hold performances include Brown University, California Institute of the Arts, Ohio State University, UCLA, and San Diego State.
     One of the most thrilling American groups, now in its 17th year, is the nonprofit, 35-member Gamelan Sekar Jaya of the San Francisco Bay area (6485 Conlon Ave., El Cerrito, CA 94530, tel./fax 510-237-6849). This gong kebyar club is currently under the direction of I Nyoman Windha. Their repertoire includes both traditional pieces and new compositions, often accompanied by dances. Another private group is the Giri Mekar Gong Kebyar of Woodstock, New York. The American Gamelan Institute in Lebanon, New Hampshire, runs the performing ensemble Gamelan Lipur Sih. The ethnomusicology department at Bowling State University has a gong kebyar called Kusuma Sari. A handful of students at Cornell University regularly stage gender wayang performances as a part of the music department's outreach program. Denver's group, Tunas Mekar, a nonprofit 18-member community orchestra, is under the umbrella of the Colorado New Music Association. They perform angklung and kebyar with dancers and offer a cassette. Dartington College of Arts, Totnes, Devon, TQ9 6EJ, U.K. (tel. 0803-865491, fax 863569) has a gong kebyar set.

Studying Music
Though the wide variety of Balinese compositions are generally attractive to Western ears, some formidable obstacles face Western students. The rhythm defies Western music notation. Indeed, the whole Western concept of scales and keys, as well as the terminology, is alien to Balinese music. While a Westerner may discern two separate five-tone scales, a Balinese can recognize at least seven.
     Learning to appreciate the music requires great concentration and ear training. Students are started off kindergarten style with big charts, and audible counting games accustom the class to the role of each instrument before they kneel behind the real thing. Singing their parts along with the music, Westerners must adjust to rhythms that can't be wrestled into four beats per measure.
     Although the instruments appear simple, a number of tricks go into playing them. One of the most difficult to learn is the mallet technique-the knack of striking the keys with a mallet in the right hand while dampening the keys with the fingers of the left a millisecond later. This split-second timing at very high speeds sometimes takes years to master.
     Decide first on the style of music you want to study. The most popular choices for Westerners are the tingklik, gong kebyar, and gender wayang. Michael Tenzer, author of Balinese Music, advises students to learn the basic melodies on the gangsa first, as other instruments like the reyong and kendang are too abstract for the beginner. Bring a tape recorder so that you can hear the lesson and practice later. Determining payment is awkward for a Balinese teacher because their instruction is usually given to a group and payment is made in favors or obligations rather than in coin. Ask other students what the going rate is-about Rp10,000 per lesson in 1995.
     The Center for World Music (10715 Anaheim Drive, La Mesa, CA 91941, U.S.A., tel. 619-440-7200) presents summer music study programs in Bali each year. Courses usually last four weeks in July or August. Tuition is US$750, including on-site meals. Inexpensive camping-style accommodation in tents or nearby homes is available as well. Also look for art-oriented tour companies. Overseas Adventure Travel (tel. 617-876-0533) of Cambridge offers a two-week itinerary which includes a lesson in gamelan playing and stylized Balinese dance. More informal is the Balinese Music Workshop offered by Ubud's Ganesha Bookshop, Jl. Raya (opposite the post office); Rp15,000 per person every Tuesday evening 1800-1930. This is an introductory workshop and no previous musical knowledge is necessary. Participants are given a brief history and outline of the gamelan and then invited to choose one of their instruments to learn some basic music. Instruments include metallophones, gongs, cymbals, drums, flutes, and others. Inquire about group bookings.
     It's possible for Westerners to study music at KOKAR/SMKI in Batubulan and at STSI (Indonesian Academy of Music and Dance) on Jl. Nusa Indah in Denpasar. Many of the island's best dancers, choreographers, and composers work at these renowned conservatories. The majority of the faculty speak English. If you just want to see and hear the musicians practicing, classes always take place in the mornings. Music study also makes up part of the curriculum at the Yayasan Siddha Mahan Foundation in Sideman (Karangasem Regency).
     To seriously study Balinese music for any length of time, however, you need a permit from LIPI in Jakarta as a "guest student." Wayan, the proprietor of Siti Homestay (tel. 0361-975599) in Peliatan, can help you obtain a long-term study visa and/or academic sponsorship. Ask musicians or your hotel or homestay proprietor if they know of any music teachers who take Western students. The study locale is often just a room in a private home with a pair of instruments facing each other-yours and the teacher's.

Essential Reading
Dance and Drama in Bali (Faber and Faber Ltd., 1938) by Beryl de Zoete and Walter Spies is a recognized classic. More updated is Balinese Music by Michael Tenzer (Periplus, 1991), the definitive and indispensable introduction to more than a dozen different types of Balinese gamelan.
     To learn about the location of orchestras outside of Bali and related topics, students of ethnomusicology and lovers of gamelan and the performing arts should subscribe to the journal Balungan, published by the American Gamelan Institute (Box 1052, Lebanon, NH 03766, U.S.A.; call or fax 603-448-8837); US$15 for two issues per year, US$20 overseas, US$30 institutions. Write or call for a sample. Volume 4, No. 2 is a special issue devoted to Bali.
     Balinese Music in Context is published by the Institute of Musicology, Petergraben 27, 4051 Basel, Switzerland. They've also issued Ritual Music from Bali in their anthology of Southeast Asian Music series. In Volume No. 5, you'll find an inventory of all the recordings of Balinese ritual music (gambang, selunding, gong luang and saron/caruk) in their archives (copies are available). Dating from the 1930s, this is the largest collection of Balinese traditional music in the world.

Recordings
There are plentiful selections of cassette tapes of classical and modern gamelan music available for Rp6000-8000 in the shops of Kuta, Legian, Denpasar, and Ubud. At commercial performances a table is often set aside for the sale of gamelan tapes and CDs. CMP Records, 155 W. 72nd St., no. 704, New York, NY 10023, U.S.A., sells two volumes of Balinese music on CD. Consumers with Master/Visa may order by telephone (800 443 4727).
     The American Gamelan Institute (A.G.I.) produces cassettes and CDs of contemporary Indonesian music, including works by Balinese composers as well as others from the West. Ask about their "Bali Cassette Collection" (10 cassettes: US$75), a wide-ranging musical survey recorded in dozens of different villages, covering a wonderful variety of musical styles and instruments: a children's group in Peliatan, gamelan composed of bamboo flutes or xylophones, and some of Bali's most popular modern kebyar compositions. Also ask about their "New Music from Bali" (US$10) with contemporary works by Astita, Rai, and Suweca. A.G.I. maintains an archive and distributes a journal, musical scores, monographs, and other educational materials.