|  |     Gamelan is not an instrument, but the term for the group of musicians
    playing a variety of (mostly) percussion instruments.  It's music that
    is native to Indonesia.  The most easily found recordings of this are
    on the Nonesuch Explorer label, but a number of recordings on small
    labels specializing in ethnic music are in print as well.
    
    This music is rarely heard live in the US since the musicians are
    usually in the employ of an Indonesian nobleman.  However, an
    Indonesian group toured the U.S. just last year (I missed it, sadly).
    
    						Brian
    
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|  | 
>    Gamelan is not an instrument, but the term for the group of musicians
>    playing a variety of (mostly) percussion instruments.  It's music that
>    is native to Indonesia.
 
       Sounds like it's a term not only for a kind of group, but more for
    a type of music, kind of like Reggae could be used to mean "it's
    a reggae group" but really referring to the type of music.  In
    which case I'm more interested in the musical type, and I can go
    listen to the records you mention (thanks).
    A friend saw the "Gamelan" group (they played Nightstage in Cambridge
    a few months back) and said they were awesome.  I got the impression
    it was part jazz, part improv, part new-age, part world music.
    I also have the new Todd Rundgren album and was told there was
    some "gamelan playing" to be heard on it, now I gather it's more
    of a musical style.  I don't know much about Indonesian percussion
    instruments, but even if none of them are called gamelans, there
    must be something distinctive about either the instruments themselves
    or the way they are played.
    My ignorance is showing... but thanks for the info.
    Tom
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|  |     Gamelan music is not as rare here as one might think. There are a
    number of active gamelans in the US -- I think I've read that there are
    more than twenty -- including one in Boston called the Boston Village
    Gamelan.  The players in these are generally American, and I bet a lot
    of them got into gamelan through ethnomusicology studies in college --
    for example U of MD at College Park has an ethnomusicology program
    and a gamelan, or at least they did when I was there, and I bet there
    are others.
    
    Head to your public library and look up "Javanese music" in the Harvard
    Dictionary of Music for an overview that should answer some of your
    questions.
    
    					Val
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