Musical Nationalisms

Musical Nationalisms

PART FOUR MUSICAL NATIONALISMS Jeremy Wallach - 9789004261778 Downloaded from Brill.com10/03/2021 03:09:57AM via free access Jeremy Wallach - 9789004261778 Downloaded from Brill.com10/03/2021 03:09:57AM via free access <UN> <UN> CHAPTER NINE NOTES ON DANGDUT MUSIC, POPULAR NATIONALISM, AND INDONESIAN ISLAM Jeremy Wallach I’d like to begin with a short anecdote from ‘the field’.1 One afternoon in early 2000, I was being driven to a distant East Jakarta recording studio by the chauffeur of a wealthy Indonesian music producer. During our long ride through Jakarta’s famously congested streets, a cassette containing a single dangdut song (Apa adanya [Whatever comes] by Ine Sinthya, from her forthcoming cassette) played continuously on the car stereo system. After a while, I finally asked the driver, whose name was Syaiful, if he was growing tired of hearing the same tune repeated over and over. He smiled and said no. A while later, searching for something to talk about, I asked him why he thought the lyrics of dangdut songs were often so sad. In reply, he explained: Because dangdut songs represent the innermost feelings of us all. Pop sing­ ers just sing for themselves, but dangdut singers represent us all, like we were the ones singing…Dangdut is broader, closer to society.2 I realized immediately that Syaiful’s response contained a succinct sum­ mation of a pervasive genre ideology concerning dangdut music and its place in contemporary Indonesian society. In the course of my research, 1 I am deeply grateful to the many dangdut producers, artists, critics, and fans who shared their experiences and opinions with me on this subject, especially Edy Singh, Pak Paku, Pak Hasanudin, Opie Sendewi, Lilis Karlina, Titiek Nur, Guntoro Utamadi, and Syaiful. I would also like to extend a special thanks to Donny Suryady and the members of OMEGA Group. I am greatly indebted to all the participants at the 2003 KITLV interna­ tional workshop for their invaluable comments, criticisms and suggestions for this project; I especially thank workshop organizers Kees van Dijk and Bart Barendregt. I owe special thanks to Jeroen de Kloet for the thoughtful and incisive comments he provided as respon­ dent to the workshop paper on which this chapter is based. I am also indebted to David Harnish, David J. Jackson, Michael Mooradian Lupro, and Sharon Wallach for their feed­ back on earlier drafts of this essay. Special thanks also to Esther Clinton for invaluable input at the final editing stage. 2 Karena lagu dangdut mewakili perasaan nurani kita semua. Penyanyi pop menyanyi untuk diri-sendiri, tapi penyanyi dangdut mewakili kita semua seperti kita yang menyanyi… Dangdut lebih luas, lebih bermasyarakat. © Jeremy Wallach, 2014. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported (CC-BY-NC 3.0) License. Jeremy Wallach - 9789004261778 Downloaded from Brill.com10/03/2021 03:09:57AM via free access <UN> <UN> 272 jeremy wallach I had found that an enduring notion of collective ownership by the ordi­ nary people of Indonesia accompanies the sounds of dangdut wherever and whenever they materialize, strongly influencing the music’s perfor­ mance, recording, reception, and interpretation. The particular signifi­ cance of the preceding ethnographic vignette is that, as an employee of a record producer, Syaiful knew full well how dangdut cassettes like the one he was playing are actually produced–namely through a professional­ ized, high­tech, capital­intensive, and not­especially­populist process developed for the purpose of reaping maximum commercial profits. Nevertheless, even members of the Indonesian elite who decry it as low class, immoral, and culturally inauthentic generally concede that dangdut music has a powerful connection with its vast nationwide audience that is quite unlike that of any other music genre (cf. Frederick 1982:124; Siegel 1986:215–8; Browne 2000; Wallach 2008; Weintraub 2010). Furthermore, particularly since the 1998 fall of the Soeharto dictatorship, growing num­ bers of middle­class Indonesians who had formerly shunned dangdut music as low class and ‘from the village’ have embraced dangdut’s musical national populism and its implicit critique of the pro­Western cultural elitism of the Soeharto years. In the following essay, I discuss the lived experiences that lie beneath the multi­faceted and contentious cultural politics of dangdut music in Indonesia. My remarks are based on long­term ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 1997 and 2000 on the contemporary meanings and practices of dangdut music among urban Indonesians of different social classes. From this research I have concluded that dangdut’s ideological positioning as a distinctively ‘Indonesian’ music ‘close to the people’ evokes an inclusive social vision that constitutes a populist alternative to both the Soeharto era’s hegemonic ideology of ‘development’ and the exclusivist, moralistic rhetoric of Indonesian radical Islamists. My chief aim here is to examine the discourses of popular nationalism surrounding dangdut music in Indonesia, and discuss some of the limits to their ethos of inclusivity, particularly when the salience of gender differences in dan- gdut’s performance and reception is taken into account. Sound, Lyrics, and Audience Dangdut’s inclusive, integrative eclecticism is exemplified by the diversity of its musical influences and its dense, layered sonic textures. While the genre has roots in the older orkes Melayu style (see Kartomi 1998; Weintraub 2010), contemporary dangdut music is perhaps best described Jeremy Wallach - 9789004261778 Downloaded from Brill.com10/03/2021 03:09:57AM via free access <UN> <UN> dangdut music, popular nationalism, and indonesian islam 273 as an amalgam of various internationally circulating popular music styles – in particular Indian film song, Middle Eastern pop, Western hard rock, disco, and reggae – with the occasional regional Indonesian musical idiom mixed in. In other words, the music and the ensemble that plays it incorporate elements from globally hegemonic Western popular music, transnational popular Asian and Islamic musics, and local/regional archi­ pelagic traditions (primarily Sumatran, Javanese and Sundanese) to forge a distinctive national popular music style. A basic dangdut ensemble includes two electronic keyboards, two electric guitars, electric bass, Western trap drum kit, a set of diatonically tuned bamboo flutes (suling), a tambourine, and a set of tabla­like hand drums called gendang (not to be confused with the double­headed cylindrical or barrel­shaped drums of the same name found in gamelan and other traditional Indonesian ensembles). Additional instruments found in larger ensembles and on recordings include electrified mandolins, saxophones, trumpets, and sitars. These instruments played together create a dense, interlocking musical texture to accompany dangdut’s sensual, plaintive vocals, which express emotions ranging from heartbroken despondence to sly flirta­ tiousness depending on the particular song (see David, this volume). On recordings, dangdut music saturates the entire sonic frequency spectrum, from the trebly shimmers of the tambourine and sharp attacks of clean electric guitar strums to the thick, midrange­heavy instrumental timbres of synthesized strings to the powerful bass thumps of the low gendang drum, the dhang-DHUT from which the genre derives its ono­ matopoetic name. As such, dangdut incorporates both the high and low sonic extremes of hard rock music and the ‘sweet’ midrange sounds of pop into an integrative, all­encompassing whole that seems to straddle the ideological sonic divide between oppositional and mainstream popu­ lar musics (cf. Wallach 2003:47–8). For all its noisy eclecticism, however, the standard dangdut sound has remained fairly unchanged in the four decades following its emergence as an exciting new electrified entertain­ ment music in the 1970s, even as the production of dangdut recordings has become significantly more high­tech (Wallach 2005:140–2).3 3 Since the mid 1980s, a number of dance floor­friendly offshoots of dangdut music have arisen that do modify the standard dangdut sound and instrumentation by adding drum machines, studio effects, digital samples, and electronic dance music rhythms and subtracting most of the acoustic instruments (Lysloff 1997:215; see also Wallach 2004, 2005). Dangdut fans and producers with whom I spoke kept these styles, collectively known as dangdut trendy in the music industry, discursively separate from the ‘original’ or Jeremy Wallach - 9789004261778 Downloaded from Brill.com10/03/2021 03:09:57AM via free access <UN> <UN> 274 jeremy wallach In recent years, various types of regional (daerah) dangdut styles such as dangdut Bugis and dangdut Jawa have become popular in particular ethnolinguistic niche markets in Indonesia, yet these variants are usually understood as local appropriations of a pre-existing, irreducibly national form. Dangdut music produced for a nationwide market is almost always sung in the national language, Indonesian. Song narratives tend to be simple and straightforward, and discourses of feeling are emphasized more than details of storytelling. Song lyrics, while not exactly mirroring colloquial Indonesian speech patterns, are written in concise, direct lan­ guage that frequently incorporates well-known sayings, proverbs, and cli­ chés to poignant or humorous effect, not unlike the lyrics of many American country and western songs.4

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