tiheb -si~ Navigating an uncertain future at the 'U' V ( l l ii' ll .N lu ll) ()l-----------------T O l We have a gamelan... but what is it? A gamelan is a group of musical instruments - ones steeped in thousands ofyears of Javanese and Balinese tradition and built and tuned as a unified harmonic ensemble. Each gamelan is unique, and instruments from one gamelan are generally not interchange- able with those of another. Gamelan performances can range from just music to a multi-art spectacular featuring traditional dance, costumes and elaborate puppet theatre. Ritual preparation precedes the performances, Offerings are presented to the spirits of the sacred musical ensem- ble. Drawingfrom Hindu and Buddhist practices, performers work to reach a level of profound concentration and fiery enthusiasm. There are fewer than 200 gamelans in the United States and only one in Michigan - ours. But now, with changes looming at the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, some fear the future of our gamelan isn't so secure. We have a gamelan... but how'd we get it in the first place? 1965 was a year marked by growing tensions in American rela- tions with Southeast Asian nations and an escalation of the war in Vietnam. In March of that year, the University witnessed the first major "teach-in," an educational anti-war demonstration that later spread to many other institutions of higher education. Mean- while, the 1964-65 World's Fair, with its theme of "Peace Through Understanding," served in some ways as a beacon of hope. Indo- nesia was the first Southeast Asian nation to agree to participate - a 69-piece Javanese gamelan was a highlight of its exhibit. But anti-Western sentiments caused Indonesia to withdraw from the United Nations and remove its exhibit from the World's Fair. Due to financial difficulties, they needed to sell the gamelan. The University competed with Wesleyan University to pur- chase it, each putting down $2,000 for the set. Somehow, a second gamelan was procured and each institution received one. We have agamelan ... now what? Judith Becker, who was a graduate student studying ethnomu- sicology at the University when the gamelan arrived in the '60s, recalls being thrilled when it was first delivered to campus. She listened to recordings, learned gamelan herself and helped estab- lish an ensemble. A year or so later, Susan Walton, now the direc- tor of the University's ensemble, joined the gamelan. "I found the gamelan just by luck and fell in love with it," Wal- ton said. "It taught me all sorts of musical principles that I hadn't been aware of. It also modeled a kind of communal way of doing music, which I thought was wonderful: the notion that anybody can play music. That playing music together was like having a party together. Some people at the party know how to sing bet- ter than others, but nobody really cares - the whole point is that you're playing it, you're singing it together." By 1971, Walton was traveling to the archipelago nation to do original research and make connections that would later help to expand the University's gamelan program. "I was learning about another culture and falling in love with the language and the people, the history and the art and music it's almost like a love affair - just a passion for everything Indone- sian. And I see that in so many of my students too," Walton said. Over the years, Becker and Walton have attracted generations of renowned artists for gamelan residencies. Since 1967 there have been 51 residencies of puppeteers, dancers or musicians. Some are for a year, some for a semester, others for just a short time. We have a gamelan... Saturday, Feb.15 at Stamps Auditorium The University's gamelan resident is Midiyanto, the director of the University of California, Berkeley Gamelan and a seventh generation gamelan performer. He's been coaching student and faculty performers in preparation for Saturday's concert. He's also teaching a Wayang Kulit workshop exploring the symbol- ism and philosophy of traditional shadow puppet theater, and the stories it often depicts from the great Indian epics, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana. In 1988, a young Midiyanto came to the University for the first time and played with the gamelan ensemble. Fifteen years later, he returned for a residency. Now he's back for a third go-around. Instead of staying on the west coast for UC, Berkeley's winter break, Midiyanto chose to spend these six weeks in Michigan. See GAMELAN, Page 4B DESIGN BY ANISSA CIANI AND MELISSA FREELAND PHOTOS BY NICK WILLIAMS tI