Slendro (called
salendro by the Sundanese
) is a pentatonic scale, one of the two most common scales
(laras) used in Indonesian
gamelan music, the other
being pélog.
Tuning
From one region of Indonesia to another the slendro scale often
varies widely. The amount of variation also varies from region to
region.
For example, Slendro in Central Java
varies much less from gamelan to gamelan than it
does in Bali
, where
ensembles from the same village may be tuned very
differently. The five pitches of the Javanese version are
roughly equally spaced within the octave.
As in pelog, although the intervals vary from one gamelan to the
next, the intervals between notes in a scale are very close to
identical for different instruments within the same gamelan. It is
common in Balinese gamelan that instruments are played in pairs
which are tuned slightly apart so as to produce
interference beating which are ideally at a
consistent speed for all pairs of notes in all registers. It is
thought that this contributes to the very "busy" and "shimmering"
sound of gamelan ensembles. In the religious ceremonies that
contain Gamelan, these interference beats are meant to give the
listener a feeling of a god's presence or a stepping stone to a
meditative state.
For the instruments that do not need fixed pitches (such as
suling and
rebab) and
the voice, other pitches are sometimes inserted into the scale. The
Sundanese musicologist/teacher
Raden Machjar Angga
Koesoemadinata identified 17 vocal pitches used in slendro.
These
microtonal adjustments bear some
similarity to Indian
śruti.
Note names
The notes of the slendro scale can be designated in different ways;
one common way is the use of numbers often called by their names in
Javanese, especially in a
shortened form. An older set uses names derived from parts of the
body. Notice that both systems have the same designations for 5 and
6. There is no 4; possibly this is because it appears as an unusual
tone in pelog and is not used when modulating between the
systems.
| Number |
Javanese number |
Traditional name |
|
Full name |
Short name |
Full name |
Literal meaning |
| 1 |
siji |
ji |
panunggal |
head |
| 2 |
loro |
ro |
gulu |
neck |
| 3 |
telu |
lu |
dada |
chest |
| 5 |
lima |
ma |
lima |
hand (five fingers) |
| 6 |
enam |
nam |
enam |
six |
The name
barang is also sometimes used for 1 in slendro
(it is the usual name for 7 in pelog); the octave is then
designated as
barang alit.
Connotations
For experienced participants in gamelan music, the pelog and
slendro scales each have a particular feeling, related to the
rituals and circumstances in which the scale is used.
For example, in
Bali
, slendro is felt to have a sad sound because it is
used as the tuning of gamelan
angklung, the traditional ensemble for cremation ceremonies.
The connotation also depends on the
pathet
(roughly, the mode) used. There are three slendro pathet used in
Javanese gamelan,
nem,
sanga, and
manyura. That is the order in which they appear in a
wayang performance, which historically used
only slendro pathet. Consequently, they have the implications of
where they appear in the evening.
Origin
The origin of the slendro scale is unknown.
It is similar to
scales used in Indian
and Chinese
music as
well as other areas of Asia and they all may have a common
origin. A salendro scale is also found in the neighboring
musical ensemble of
Kulintang. This is
very difficult if not impossible to determine.
Even within Indonesia it is difficult to determine the evolution of
scales.
For example, scales used in Banyuwangi
, at the eastern tip of Java, are very similar to
scales used in Jembrana, a short distance
away on Bali. There is probably no way to document which
region influenced the other, or if they both evolved
together.
References