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Orkes Melayu singer Ellya Khadam switched to dangdut in the 1970s, and by 1972, she was the number-one artist in Indonesia. Her success, along with that of Rhoma Irama, meant that by 1975, 75 per cent of all recorded music in Indonesia was of the dangdut genre, with pop bands such as Koes Plus adopting the style. [citation needed]
Rhoma Irama — Dangdut male singer/songwriter, musician, actor, politician. He recognised as The King of Dangdut Indonesia; Rini Wulandari — Indonesian pop/RnB singer. Winner of Indonesian Idol season 4; Rinto Harahap; Rizky Febian — Male pop, RnB, soul & jazz singer, songwriter. He is the son of the comedian Sule; Rossa — pop/R&B/soul ...
Funkot music is a mix of Funky House [12] [b] and Dangdut music with a tempo of around 160 to 220 bpm. Funkot music usually includes percussion sounds such as cowbells, woodblocks, fast triple bass kicks, vocal samples (namely "ay!", "are you ready?", and "one, two, three, four" samples), the extensive use of Amen breaks, and high-pitched synths.
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In the 80's, Indonesian media widely coined the term Pop kreatif. [7] Journalists Seno M. Hardjo and Bens Leo is cited to have popularized this term to differentiate the music presented by musicians with the likes of Guruh Soekarnoputra, Eros Djarot, Chrisye, Fariz RM, and Dian Pramana Poetra from the Melancholic pop music artists and genre. [3]
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Indonesian Wikipedia article at [[:id:150 Album Indonesia Terbaik]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|id|150 Album Indonesia Terbaik}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Dangdut is a popular semitraditional music genre of Indonesia which is partly derived of Indian, Arabic, and Malay music in the late 1960s in Jakarta city. It consists of melodious and harmonical music with the main tabla as the percussion beat especially in the classical dangdut versions.
Koplo or dangdut koplo is a subgenre of dangdut, Indonesian popular dance & folk music, that originated in East Java during the early 2000s. The genre gets its name from the slang term "koplo" which refers to a hallucinogenic drug that is sold cheaply in Indonesia.