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Jangger Dance
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The flute begins an eerie tune,
and faraway voices chant a strange song that flows from a loud melody to
a nearly inaudible high pitch. Two girl singers appear wearing splendid,
floral crowns with multi-coiored spikes. They advance, allowing another
pair to enter, until twelve girls have filed on stage.
Slowly they kneel
opposite each other, cocking their heads and darting their eyes to
accent the rhythm of the orchestra. As the chanting continues, young men
silently repeat the girls' entrance. In contrast to feminine delicacy,
their movements are deliberate and strong. All wear painted moustaches.
Suddenly, the male
formation breaks into frenzied activity of twists, jerks and lunges.
Instantly, the shock wave ceases, the men freeze in their positions, and
the lonely flute carries the dance back to the soft sways and chanting
of the girls.
A folk dance
introduced to the island in the thirties, the origin is in the
Sanghyang trance ceremony in which the women chant the Sanghyang
song and the men alternate with the gruff sounds of the Kecak.
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