Music of Brunei

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Brunei is a southeast Asian country located next to Malaysia. There is a wide array of native folk music, and dance.

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[edit] Folk music

Adai-adai is a group work song sung by fisherpeople while they fished. Another folk dance is the Benari, or Joget Baju Putih, performed during numerous festivals. It is usually performed by three men and three women.

[edit] Kedayan music

Main article: Kedayan music

Aduk-Aduk is a ceremonial dance performed by the Kedayan people during holidays, especially at the end of the harvest season. Dancers wear traditional warrior's attire, in tengkolok, red belt and black clothing, and dance to the beat of silat, a Malay martial art. This dance is accompanied by percussion instruments, including drums and coconut shells.[1]

[edit] Malay music

Main article: Ethnic Malay music

The Malay population are known for the Jipin dance, performed by six men and women, accompanied by instruments that include the gambus dan biola, dombak and rebana. Gongs like the Guling tangan (a set of small gongs), duck gongs and other styles are played. Malay folk music is played by accomplished musicians at special feats and celebrations. Responsive singing is sometimes performed at weddings, with the guests joining in [2]. The song "Alus Jua Dindang" is also an important part of Bruneian wedding music; in it, the groom (who, in a traditional wedding does not know the bride beforehand), flatters and declares his devotion to his new wife [3].

[edit] Music institutions

The Brunei Music Society [4] has been helping to develop Bruneian classical music since its founding in 1972. There is also a Brunei Music Association.

Southeast Asian music

Brunei - Cambodia - East Timor - Indonesia - Laos - Malaysia - Myanmar - Philippines - Singapore - Thailand - Vietnam

[edit] References

[edit] External links