Saturday 13 June 2009, 6.30pm
BP Lecture Theatre
London
Dancer Ni Made Pujawati and the Southbank Gamelan Players present music and dance from the royal courts of Central Java.
Saturday 13 June 2009, 6.30pm
BP Lecture Theatre
London
Dancer Ni Made Pujawati and the Southbank Gamelan Players present music and dance from the royal courts of Central Java.
Saturday 6 June 2009, 7.30pm
Durham
Following a stunning show in the Gala Theatre last year, Musicon welcomes back Europe’s formost Gamelan group. From exuberant folk traditions to the refinement of the Javanese royal courts: Southbank Gamelan Players, Ensemble in Residence at London Southbank Centre, presents a rich and varied programme of music from Central Java.
Saturday 18 April 2009, 7.30pm
Plaid, Supanggah and Southbank Gamelan Players – Queen Elizabeth Hall
Featuring Southbank Gamelan Players playing Supanggah’s music in a pre-concert set in the hall, followed by sets from electronica duo Plaid, and a collaboration between Plaid, Supanggah and Southbank Gamelan Players.
Wednesday 19 November 2008, 7.45pm
London Jazz Festival in association with BBC Radio 3
Purcell Room
Nominated for this year’s Mercury Award, the Portico Quartet play melodic, rhythmic music that mixes the inspiration of Philip Glass and Steve Reich with a very contemporary kind of improvisation – engagingly chiming themes delivered by steel pan-like Hang drums, saxophone and bass. They have played and busked all over the world, and they’ve always been fascinated by gamelan, so they jumped at the chance when Southbank Centre and the London Jazz Festival suggested a collaboration with Indonesian gamelan master Rahayu Supanggah, a Southbank Centre Artist in Residence, supported by Paul Hamlyn Foundation.
Rahayu Supanggah opens the evening performing with Southbank Gamelan Players, Portico Quartet play their own set, and then Supanggah and Portico join forces.
26-29 August 2008
Terengganu International Gamelan Festival – Kuala Terengganu
Southbank Gamelan Players presents two programmes of new British music for gamelan in a festival featuring gamelan ensembles from Malaysia, Java, Bali, Japan and UK.
Saturday 7 June, 7.30 pm, 2008
Southbank Gamelan Players presents an evening of Javanese music ancient and modern, from the regal to the raucous. Featuring guest dancer Ni Madé Pujawati. Pre-concert talk and demonstration from 6.30 pm. Part of the University of Durhams’s Musicon concert series.
Thursday 29 May – Sunday 1 June
British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB
Over four days, Southbank Gamelan Players, working with puppeteer Matthew Cohen, presents a shadow puppet performance of the entire (!) Ramayana, from the birth of Ravana to the fall of Alengka. The show is part of the British Library’s Ramayana exhibition, running 16 May – 14 September 2008, which also includes gamelan workshops.
Gamelan Wayang
Ballroom floor, Royal Festival Hall, Saturday 8 September 2007, 10:30 P.M.
An all-night session of storytelling, shadow-puppetry and music celebrates the return of the gamelan to Southbank Centre. Javanese master puppeteer Ki Purbo Asmara, vocalist Sukesi, Southbank Gamelan Players and Associate Artist Rahayu Supanggah come together to create this special event. Based on an episode from the Mahabharata epic, the play follows the Javanese tradition of incorporating contemporary characters and themes, including a specially commissioned puppet of the Royal Festival Hall itself. All-night Javanese shadow-puppet play with puppeteer Ki Purba Asmara.
Queen Elizabeth Hall in June 2003, 2004 and 2005.
dance-drama trilogySouth Bank Gamelan Players
Sunarno Dance Company
Sunarno Purwolelono choreographer
Further performances were given in Italy (2004), Manchester, and Aldeburgh Festival (2005).The Ramayana, an epic Hindu poem in Sanskrit, is one of the world’s great stories, and a wellspring of South Asian culture – told and retold over the past two millennia in innumerable versions and languages across the continent. In Java it is frequently told through shadow-puppet plays or dance-drama.
During a three year collaboration with choreographer Sunarno Purwolelono, the Southbank Gamelan Players and the Sunarno Dance Company presented the Ramayana cycle as a trilogy of Javanese dance-dramas. Ten dancers portrayed the classic Hindu tale of the Abduction of Princess Sinta by the demon king Rahwana, and Prince Rama’s quest for Sinta with Hanuman the monkey warrior.
Friday 27 February 2005
BBC Maida Vale Studios, Delaware Road, London, W9
Southbank Gamelan Players & BBC Symphony Orchestra,
A week of school and community based activities (23 – 27 February 2004) led by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Southbank Gamelan Players culminated in 2 performances at BBC Maida Vale Studios on Friday 27 February when members of the BBC SO and Southbank Gamelan Players gave the world premiere of Geoff Poole’s Swans Reflecting Elephants, as well as performing works by John Adams, Debussy and Alec Roth.