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Our trip today would take us east from Ubud, all the way
to the coast at Amed, which we'd heard had a beautiful
black sand beach. Justine came with us - Steve was still
feeling a bit under the weather and decided to stay home.
But before we headed off for Amed, Dewa had a special treat for us!
We'd talked to him of our fascination with gamelan, and he
told us he would take us to a gamelan factory in
Blahbatuh. Heaven!
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This
guy is carving the side parts of jegogans - the "bass"
instruments in the gangsa metallophone section
of the gamelan. It's all done by hand, with little or
no machining.
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Outside,
the jegogans were being painted red. They later
get a beautiful gold detail painted on them - again, all
by hand.
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We
were fascinated by the large gongs. Back at home we'd been
borrowing a large gong from the UCSC Sundanese gamelan, which
had a crack in it and didn't sound too great. We really needed
a new gong for our gamelan, and we were amazed at how inexpensive
gongs were in Bali - around $350-$400 for a large gong like this.
Actually within the range of affordability! Hmmm...
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Here
are a lot of gansga frames stacked up and
waiting to be painted.
You can also see a small gong (kempur) at right.
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They
had a fancy showroom for the finished instruments. This is
me and Justine asking the guy about the complete set of
gamelan gong they had for sale. I think it was around
$14,000, but that was in 1997 and the exchange rates and
entire economic situation has changed since then. Ah well,
some day...
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The thought of buying a gong wouldn't leave us throughout
the trip, and in the end both Steve and we bought large
gongs for our gamelan.
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Photos: Astrid, Martin and Julia Randall
All content copyright (c) 2001, Astrid, Martin and Julia Randall
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