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Associated Press reported: The songwriter, popularly known as Gesang, composed the song about the Solo River, the longest river on the island of Java, in the traditional keroncong style, a Portuguese-influenced folk music using stringed instruments. Gesang Martohartono, composer of many “keroncong”(songs), among them the world-famous “Bengawan Solo,” a favorite throughout Asia, died at the age of 92 in May 2010. Many of the songs played on the streets by ukelele players are kroncong songs. It experienced a revival in the 1980s thanks to the singer Hetyy Koes Endnag. Krongcong today is regarded as old people's people and many recordings have Muzak-style string arrangements. Kroncong is sort of similar to Japanese enka and Thai luk thung music. The melodies were influenced by the sardonic Portuguese style of Fado and mid-tempo rhythms similar to this found in Mozambique and Madagascar. Ī typical kroncong group includes a singer (usually a woman), two “kroncongs” (ukeleles), guitars, violins, a flute and sometimes a cello and percussion. It emerged in its modern form in the 1930s when it was featured in Indonesian films and spread throughout the archipelago. Kroncong (pronounced "kerong-chong", also spelled Keroncong) is style of urban-folk music that is named after a kind of ukelele that dates back to the Portuguese era, when the music and rhythms from Portuguese colonies in Africa and Asia merged and blended. Franky Sahilatua, who played an important role in popularizing voguish music of social criticism during the Suharto era, died at 57 in April 2011. She made a much publicized pilgrimage to Mecca. Rolling Stone Indonesia has selected two of her songs as some of the best Indonesian songs of all time. Titiek Puspa is one Indonesia’s biggest pop stars. Ruth Sahanaya participated in a tsunami relief concert in Malaysia in 2005. Popular artists in the early 2000s included Peter Pan, Dewa, SLank. Styles of Indonesian pop music include include “pop-sunda” (mostly bad Western-influenced pop from the Sunda area) “qasidah modern” (Islamic pop music with Arab style melodies and Indonesian instruments), and “batak” (a percussion-driven music of the Batak people from the Lake Toba area of Sumatra).
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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appeared on pop music television show in Jakarta, She got a big cheer when she said the Beatles and Rolling Stones were among here favorite music groups but politely declined an offer to sing. Today, big raves are sometimes held in Bali. These laws were repealed when Suharto came to power in the mid 1960s. Worried about the invasion of foreign culture and Western music in particular, Sukarno introduced repressive legislation that encouraged artists and musicians to shun foreign influences and energize indigenous forms. One popular opera of the 1920s was run by a white Russian. The music featured the Malay language, rather than local vernaculars, and the “kroncong” guitar music brought to Jakarta by Malacca's "Black Portuguese." According to the Rough Guide to World Music: "The plays mixed dance, slapstick and satire in a surreal amalgamation of Indian romance, “A Thousand and One Nights” and Victorian Gothic.” Many of the original actors were Eurasian. Pan-Indonesian pop culture began at the turn of the 20th century with “opera stambul” ("Malay Opera") played by itinerant troupes in improvised local theaters. Bands like Nidji, Ungu, Slang, Peter Pan and singing celebrities like Rossa, Agnes Monica, Kris Dayanti, Pasha, Ari Lasso, are popular in Malaysia and Singapore as well as Indonesia. Indonesia also boasts some of the best rock and pop bands and singers. In metropolitan Jakarta, the Java Jazz Festival is the annual meeting highlight for top international and Indonesian jazz musicians. A wide variety of pop music is broadcast on television, played on the radio and blasted from buses, bemos and private vehicles. The pop music scene in Indonesia is regarded as the most lively and exciting in Southeast Asia.