• More Jungga music from East Sumba

    Haling Vol. 3 - Song 1 MP3

    There are a very limited number of locally produced cassettes available, each released as a “volume” or an artists work. Haeng, Haling, Ester and Ataratu are the most well known throughout Waingapu and the surrounding provinces of East Sumba. In many of the recordings, children and animals can be heard in the background during the performance, and often times, the tape will run out in the middle of a song, so the performermer will continue the song from where he left off on the previous side. These are recorded on home ghetto-blasters, and sold/traded in local street markets in Waingapu, Sumba.

  • Torajan Pa’Badong funeral vocal trance Music

    I found this cassette simply labelled “Pa’badong” in a vegetable market in Rantepao, Sulawesi. The origins of the tape is unknown to me. This vocal style has been documented before, but this is interesting because it is a locally produced cassette of their own traditional style. Enjoy.

    Pa’Badong Section 4 MP3

  • The joys of discovery

    you find it sitting on the corner of a table in a small-town vegetable market:

    you send it home in a shoe-box.

    7 months later, having no idea what to expect, you pop it into a cassette player and hear this:

    Papelle MP3

  • Musik Sumba!

    Sumba is the southernmost island of the Indonesian archipelago. To the north is Komodo island, to the east is East Timor. Sumba is a living megalithic culture in a perpetual golden age, carving stone monuments out of the hillsides and dragging them through the valleys by brute force. Hilltop kampung (villages) rest above some of the more rare uncultivated valleys of indonesia. Christianity has made inroads, though the animist Merapu religion still reigns supreme outside of the towns of Waingapu and Waikabubak. The Sumbanese are a mixture of Papuan, Malay and Indian ancestry, and its sandlewood legacy lives on within its proud tradition of horses, and you will hear Sumbanese cowboys yelping in the hills long before you will see them, but you can be sure they are there. Pasola is a ritualized war, and now the only real tourist attraction on the island if you can call it that. It has been referred to as a veiled human sacrifice by British media. Electricity and outside music have begun to spread to the island, as well as roads and very limited electricity in recent years. In my time there, the two biggest hits, blaring out of cassette-players was “Everything I do I do it for you” and “Uptown Girl”.

    I was given this cassette by a young man in Waikabubak who spent his entire afternoon wandering the town with me through villages and car-repair shops to try and find a cassette of Sumbanese music. It is performed on the 2 or 3 stringed Jungga, which acts essentially as a Sumbanese guitar

    This is actually a cassette from Waingapu in eastern Sumba. It is the only duet album I am aware of. The two main cassette artists in Sumba are “Haling” and “Haeng”. the main female is Ataratu. This is the only cassette I was able to find featuring Ester. Last year, Haeng made his first casette featuring electric keyboard accompanying his music. Also, Sumba found its very first Dangdut artist! All that stuff is sitting in my archives, and I am trying to figure out what to do with it, but in the meantime, enjoy the only Sumbanese 2-person cassette in existence:

    SONG 1 MP3
    SONG 2 MP3

    This is an excerpt from a journal entry I wrote on my tape-collecting in Sumba:
    Waikabubak is a little town in West Sumba, and similar to the rest of Sumba, it seems to look better on paper and film — and even in my memory — than it ever did when I was really there. I heard phenomenal tales of (more…)

  • Musik Bambu Toraja

    INDAHNYA TORAJA MP3

    I found this cassette in a street market in Rantepao, the largest trading center in the Torajan valley of the inner highlands of southern Sulawesi, Indonesia. The Toraja were first contacted by the Dutch nearly 70 years ago, at which point they were still fierce warriors and occasional headhunters. It is widely stated that the Toraja’s animist religious beliefs include the idea that they came from outer-space to their current location, and their homes are designed to symbolize the “space-ships” that they came to earth on. More recent interpretations often see this merely as a symbolic creation story, and believe that the arching homes may have come about following trade expeditions to Sumatra, where both the Batak and Minangkabau have buffalo-horn shaped rooftops.

    This Bamboo music is usually played by children’s groups, whereas the more subtle and arguably difficult trance musics (Pa’badong/Papelle) are performed by adults. The bizarre rectangular bamboo instruments have very limited pitch range, and no moving parts.

    photo I took of the Bambu instruments in Buntu Kalando, Sulawesi