Gamelan musicians have always learned gamelan as an aural tradition. We learn and memorize a piece by hearing it played and by practicing it ourselves. There is a written cipher notation for gamelan. Notation is not generally used by Javanese musicians but may be used by others, such as ethnomusicologists and foreign students learning gamelan.

Gamelan notation is written in numbers with special characters for accentuating instruments. Music is not notated in a score for all the instruments, so one generally sees the balungan, or melody. Other parts can be notated but this can be difficult to read--it is often easier to learn how to derive one's part and use one's own shorthand notation for reminders

Javanese gamelan music comes in two scales, or laras: sléndro and pélog. Neither of the scales is compatible with Western tuning because the intervals, or pitch steps between subsequent notes, are different. Even gamelan instruments of different sets do not have exactly the same intervals between notes. This means that gamelan instruments must be played as sets, but this also gives individual character to different gamelan ensembles.

Sléndro is a pentatonic or five-note scale consisting of the pitches

1 2 3 5 6 i

The numbers are the pitches, dots are rests, and the overbars denote notes played twice as fast as usual. To denote a pitch in a higher octave, a dot would be placed above a number. A pitch in a lower octave would have a dot below the pitch number.

Other symbols denote punctuating instruments. For example, the circle is for gong ageng and the sideways parentheses for gong suwuk. The plus-sign is for kethuk, the "smiley" for kempul, and the "frowny" for kenong. In the above notation, the kethuk, kenong, and kempul parts apply to each line. Note also that the notes come in groups called gatra, which can be thought of as "measures" in Western music

Other instruments have their own notation using numbers, although these are often complex, especially if there are two notes being played at the same time, bowing markings, etc. The drums have their own special notation with different symbols.

 

  

 

This free website was made using Yola.

No HTML skills required. Build your website in minutes.

Go to www.yola.com and sign up today!

Make a free website with Yola