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  2. Gong ageng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gong_ageng

    Gong Ageng in Javanese Gamelan ensemble Two gong sets; pélog scale set and sléndro scale set. Smaller kempul gongs are suspended between gong ageng (largest, right-side) and its gong suwukan (left, facing rearward). The gong ageng (or gong gedhe in Ngoko Javanese, means large gong) is an Indonesian musical instrument used in the Javanese gamelan.

  3. Gong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gong

    For example, in the central Javanese gamelan, the largest gong is called gong ageng, ranges in size up to 1 meter in diameter, has the deepest pitch and is played least often; the next smaller gong is the gong suwukan or siyem, has a slightly higher pitch and replaces the gong ageng in pieces where gong strokes are close together; the kempul is ...

  4. Colotomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colotomy

    T = kethuk, P = kempul, N = kenong, Gong = gong ageng. The ketawang is one of the gendhing structures used in Javanese gamelan music. Its colotomic structure is: pTpW pTpN pTpP pTpG. where p indicates the strike of the kempyang, T the ketuk, P the kempul, N the kenong, and G the simultaneous stroke of the gong and kenong.

  5. Gamelan Gadhon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamelan_Gadhon

    The gong ageng (large gong) marks the end of each of the largest melodic phrases; these are called gongan, and a piece can have one or several of these. Several other instruments can also be included: the gambang (xylophone), suling (end-blown bamboo flute), and siter (plucked stringed instrument).

  6. Gamelan siteran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamelan_Siteran

    Gamelan siteran is a casual style of gamelan in Java, Indonesia, featuring portable, inexpensive instruments instead of the heavy bronze metallophones of a typical gamelan. A typical group consists of varieties of siter (small zither, which leads to the name), kendang (drum), and a large end-blown bamboo tube or a gong kemodhong, functioning as a gong ageng.

  7. Beleganjur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beleganjur

    The drums and cymbals generally play interlocking patterns over the ostinato of the gongan gong cycle. Though bebatelan itself is rarely heard nowadays, its instrumentation forms the nucleus of the more complex modern ensemble: beleganjur bebonangan. The additional instrumentation of the beleganjur bebonangan ensemble is: a second gong ageng ...

  8. Gongan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gongan

    Gong'an County (公安县), Jingzhou, Hubei, China; Gong'an, Zhongshan County (公安镇), town in Guangxi, China; Gong'an fiction, a subgenre of Chinese crime fiction revolving around government magistrates solving criminal cases; Kōan, also known as Gongan, story, dialogue, question, or statement in Chán Buddhism

  9. Kempyang and ketuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kempyang_and_ketuk

    Ladrang form on the balugan instruments. GONG = gong ageng Play approximation without colotomy ⓘ The kempyang and ketuk are two instruments in the gamelan ensemble of Indonesia, generally played by the same player, and sometimes played by the same player as the kenong. They are important beat-keepers in the colotomic structure of the gamelan.