| |
Images from The Beede
Gallery
Saron Panerus (Peking) from the Javanese Gamelan Kyai Rengga Manis Everist
Click on any image on this page to see a larger image.
NMM 9910. Saron Panerus (Peking) in Laras Slendro. Smallest member of saron group. Metallophone with seven bronze bars placed over teakwood frame. Keys held in place by two pins inserted through holes in the bars and embedded in the frame. Decorated with flower and leaf pattern covered in gold leaf. Length: 66.6 cm.
Function: The saron instruments play the basic or skeletal melody of the music—the balungan. This basic melody is an abstraction of the melody played by the elaborating instruments. Usually the notation for any piece of music will be limited to the part played by the saron instruments.
Playing technique: The saron instruments are played by striking the bar in its center with the oval end of the mallet and dampening the previous bar when the next is played. The player sits on the side with the pitches ascending to the right.
Click on stand, carved flower below bars, and lotus blossom at base of stand (above) to see larger images.
Click on carved flowers on bass and treble ends of the frame to see larger images.

Click arrow to
continue Beede Gallery Tour
Go to
Beede Gallery Tour Index
Go to Virtual Gallery Tour Index
Go to Checklist of Musical Instruments from Kyai Rengga Manis Everist Gamelan
Go to The Manufacture and Ceremonial History of the Kyai Rengga Manis Everist Gamelan
Go to The Arrival of the Kyai Rengga Manis Everist Gamelan in Vermillion, July 15, 2000
Go to The Naming Ceremony for the Kyai Rengga Manis Everist Gamelan, April 26, 2003
Go to Glossary of Terms Relating to the Kyai Rengga Manis Everist Gamelan
National Music Museum
The University of South Dakota
414 East Clark Street
Vermillion, SD 57069
©National Music
Museum,
2006
Most recent update:
October 22, 2007
You are the 4,833rd visitor to this page since May 5, 2006
The University of South Dakota
Return to Top of Page
| |