Javanesse Songs in Pentatonic and Diatonic Perspective
Wadiyo
1
, Slamet Haryono
1
, Joko Wiyoso
1
and Gita Surya Shabrina
1
1
Faculty of Languages and Arts, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang, Indonesia
gitasuryamusik@gmail.com
Keywords: Song, Pentatonic, Diatonic, Music, Number Notation, Tone.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to analyse the differences between Javanese songs using the gamelan pentatonic
musical notation with Javanese songs using Western diatonic musical notation. The research method applied
is qualitative. Meanwhile, the design research is case studies. The focus of the research relates to the intervals
between pentatonic and diatonic tones found in Javanese song and how to write the notation. Data analysis
uses perspective karawitanology and musicology. The results showed that there were differences between
Javanese songs written using the Javanese gamelan pentatonic musical notation with Javanese song written
using diatonic music notation. The difference is mainly in how to sing it and the distance or interval of each
note. Thus, when the song was sung, the taste of the song became very different in terms of its musical aspects.
This is understandable because the intervals or distances between the notes are not the same. The way to write
the Javanese songs notation with diatonic music notation is also different even though both use writing in the
form of number notes. The main difference is the Javanese song notation is usually written without a line,
while the diatonic musical notation uses a time signature line. Besides that, in writing Javanese songs that use
Javanese gamelan notation, the laras is always mentioned.
1 INTRODUCTION
Songs in art life in Javanese society are understood as
tembang or songs. In the beginning, tembang was
associated with pentatonic gamelan music while
songs or songs were associated with general music
originating from diatonic Western music. In its
development to date, many Javanese songs are sung
and written in the form of two versions, namely the
pentatonic version of gamelan and Western diatonic.
Gamelan music is known as the scale called laras
pelog and slendro, while diatonic Western music is
known for its diatonic scale. Scale in laras pelog is
written using numbers 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 which are read as
nem, ji, ro, lu, pat, mo, nem. The scale in the laras
slendro is written using numbers 1 2 3 5 6 1 which are
read as ji, ro, lu, mo, nem, ji. The point is that diatonic
Western music is written using numbers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1 read do, re. mi. Fa, sol, la, si, do.
Some researches on pentatonic and diatonic music
that are related to Javanese songs also have been done
by some researchers, for example what is done by
Restiningrum (2016). The study looked at the
characteristics of mixing gamelan pentatonic music
with Western diatonic music that was used to
accompany a song known as Badutan music. Initially
this art was purely the art of gamelan music or
karawitan which accompanied the Javanese song
known as Sindenan. However, nowadays along with
the development, the music of Badutan also
accompanies many diatonic songs. The tone between
the gamelan pentatonic music and diatonic general
singing is very different, but in Badutan music it is
still done by emphasizing humorous nuances.
Takari (2014) conducted a research on the
pentatonic and diatonic scales in general review. In
this study, it was found that (1) Pentatonic music
developed in Asia and parts of Eastern Europe, while
diatonic music emerged and developed in the West,
which is now spread throughout the world. (2) The
pentatonic scale is based on horizontal melodies
while the scale is diatonic in terms of vertical
melodies. (3) The pentatonic scale is produced in
cyclic and divisive systems, while the diatonic scale
is produced in a single divisive system. (4) the
pentatonic scale is produced from an instrument
designed to produce melodic tones, while the diatonic
scale is produced from instruments designed to
produce melodic and harmonious tones. (5) the
pentatonic scale is associated with music that is
Wadiyo, ., Haryono, S., Wiyoso, J. and Shabrina, G.
Javanesse Songs in Pentatonic and Diatonic Perspective.
DOI: 10.5220/0009032001410146
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Intermedia Arts and Creative Technology (CREATIVEARTS 2019), pages 141-146
ISBN: 978-989-758-430-5
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
141
associated with extra musicals while the diatonic
scale is associated with the cultivation of non-extra
musical music.
Research conducted by Aryanto (2018) is related
with the creation of the Soepra gamelan adapted from
Javanese gamelan. The tone color is still a gamelan
tone but using the diatonic scale. The creation of the
Soepra gamelan is intended to keep it from
eliminating the color of local traditional music but
can be used for wider artistic purposes, both to play
local traditional music and to play diatonic general
music.
For local traditional arts such as songs that use the
pentatonic scale to be changed in diatonic laras.
Based on the findings Spiller (2009) explained,
gamelan music that has a pelog and slendro style is
more developed into diatonic-style music because it
responds to the development of popular diatonic
music in Indonesia. Therefore, it has been a common
thing that gamelan music those who are pentatonic
are changed into diatonic music.
Javanese song in pelog and slendro as the
pentatonic Javanese gamelan music are presented
through research produced by Heriwati (2010) has
found that Javanese songs contain moral messages for
behavioral teachings seen as good, instilling
knowledge and invitations to do various actions that
are useful for society, nation, and country. The
message of this song was delivered in the form of a
song which at first always used the accompaniment
of gamelan music or karawitan with laras pelog or
slendro. Javanese songs like that have now been
changed into diatonic songs because pelog and or
slendro tones are then transferred to diatonic tones.
The function of pentatonic gamelan music is lost
when the existing song notation has been made in
diatonic form. Heriwati (2010) found that Javanese
songs is divided into three main points, namely
Tembang Gede, Tembang Tenagahan, Tembang Alit,
and there are additional songs named Tembang
Dolanan. This Tembang Dolanan is the one with the
most chants sung by being converted into diatonic
tones.
Even though Tembang Dolanan is currently being
used more in the community in diatonic tones, for the
public or public schools that still uphold the noble
values of Javanese culture, there are also those who
still preserve using the pelog and slendro as gamelan
music laras that conducted in Primary Schools in the
Surakarta area of Central Java (Supeni, 2015).
Various preliminary studies, all of which are closely
related to Javanese songs, both Javanese songs in the
form of pelog and slendro gamelan music and
Javanese songs in the form of Western music are
diatonic. Even so, the results of the study specifically
analyzed the differences between Javanese songs
using the gamelan pentatonic musical notation with
Javanese songs using Western diatonic musical
notation.
Based on the background, the problem raised in
this study is concerning first, how Javanese songs in
particular are written in the ideology of Javanese
gamelan music writing and in the diatonic musical
model. Second, how to sing the Javanese song in the
context of Javanese gamelan music is pentatonic and
in the Western musical perspective diatonic. Based on
these problems, the objectives of this study can be
conveyed, namely to find out the different forms of
Tembang Jawa (Javanese Songs) notation in the
context of Pentatonic Javanese gamelan music and in
the Western musical perspective of Diatonic.
Secondly to know the difference in inter-tone
intervals from Javanese songs that use pentatonic
Javanese gamelan notation with the tones of Dolanan
songs using diatonic musical notation.
2 RESEARCH METHODS
The method of this research is qualitative with the
approach of musicology and karawitanology. The
research design uses a case study, which only takes
three examples of Javanese song from several songs
published in Indonesian folk songs. The reason for
taking Javanese song from books is folk songs in
Indonesia because it is assumed that the majority of
Indonesian people know the song from Indonesian
folk songs. The book was used for music art lessons
in public schools at various levels. The focus of this
research is related to Javanese song from the
pentatonic and diatonic perspectives. The pentatonic
perspective relates to the way of writing, reading /
singing, and the knowledge of tone intervals in the
scale or laras. The term laras in the song world or
Javanese gamelan music is considered the same as the
scale. The diatonic perspective relates to the way of
writing, reading, and interval knowledge in diatonic
music.
The technique of collecting data uses interviews,
documentation studies, and observations. The
interview was aimed at the teachers and students of
the Public School about Javanese song used in
learning. Documentation is obtained from document
searches by researchers to various public schools in
Semarang City and Regency. The levels of the Public
Schools are elementary, middle and high school,
which every school uses Javanese song songs in
learning music. Observations were made when the
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teacher taught by seeing the Javanese songs sung
using pentatonic or diatonic tones. When the teacher
or student develops, the notation is taken care of by
the researcher as an observer, until it is known that
the notation applied in the song is using the Javanese
gamelan pentatonic tones or Western diatonic music.
The technique of data validity is essentially using
data manipulation, which is to match data from
interviews, documentation, and observations. The
data analysis technique uses a method of checking
every note used in singing Javanese songs based on
the scale used. Pelog and slendro subscriptions, as
well as diatonic scales are used as keys in analyzing
any distance or interval of tones that appear in songs.
After knowing the scale through the distance or tone
interval used in the song, then the side of the way of
writing the notation is used in the song. Javanese song
notations or songs that do not use a timeline and are
seen as a pelog and / or slendro scale, whereas if the
writing method uses a time signature, the writing is
seen as a diatonic scale. The way of writing the
musical scale of diatonic tone uses western music
model while the scale of pelog and slendro is using
gamelan music model.
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
In the results of this study, it was stated that the results
of the study with the discussion were not separated.
The purpose of the results of this study and discussion
is not separated so that any data presented as a result
of research can be directly explained using
appropriate theories and or concepts. Javanese song
as a traditional art of Javanese society is certainly
known by Javanese society at large. The meaning of
this Javanese song is according to the results of
research by Heriwati (2010) consisting of Tembang
Gede, Tembang Tengahan, and Tembang Alit with
still Tembang Dolanan. According to Supeni (2015)
to date, there are still many elementary schools in
Surakarta, Central Java, which use Javanese gamelan
music and pure Javanese songs, as stated by Heriwati,
even though they are more dominant in Dolanan song.
There is also the form of Pentatonic Javanese
Gamelan mixed with diatonic music which is not
evenly matched. This is often used to accompany
Javanese songs and Javanese singing using diatonic
tunes. The results of the research conducted by
Rustiningrum (2016) noted that many songs with the
strings of Javanese language on them are diatonic
accompanied by using Pentatonic Javanese gamelan
music. One of them was found in Badutan art which
was mostly performed in Sragen, Central Java. There
both Javanese songs with pelog or slendro or
Javanese song diatonic are all accompanied by
pentatonic gamelan music. This certainly makes the
musical feeling uncomfortable or disturbed because
there are many discordant / unsuitable sounds.
The pentatonic tunes that are converted into
diatonic laras and to accompany Javanese songs are
more prevalent and very common. The figure or
musician who changes the tunes of pelog and slendro
music into the very famous diatonic music is
Manthous in his campursari work (Wadiyo, 2018).
Far from that, actually the Javanese song, whose
notation has been changed into diatonic Western
music, has been done for a long time. Books of
Indonesian Regional songs used in Public Schools at
all levels by Rangkuti (1981), this Javanesse Song
notation is also converted into diatonic music. Songs
as intended, for example the song Gambang Suling
(diatonic music version contained in Regional songs
in Indonesia) or Swara Suling (version of the
Javanese Song of Gamelan), Suwe Ora Jamu, Gundul
Pacul, and Te Kate Dipanah. These songs will be
studied more broadly in this discussion.
The side of writing the Javanese Songs notation
from the pentatonic Javanese gamelan to Western
music is diatonic as it is in the songbook for formal
school children as written by Rangkuti which has an
impact on the changing nuances of the song. The
theory of writing the Javanese Tembang notation
actually has been around for a long time Osada (2018).
Initially according to Rustopo, writing a Javanese
song notation departed from giving a number on the
saron (gamelan musical instrument) bar in Javanese
gamelan music to simplify the game by looking at the
numbers. The notation was then known as the
Kepatihan notation. Numbers 1 through 7 are in lieu
of the name tone. The saron’s laras slendro blades
consist of six blades, given sequential numbers from
the leftmost bar to the rightmost bar. The sequence
numbers are 1 to 7 without numbers 4. As for the
saron’s laras pelog blades from the lowest tones to
the highest tones given numbers 1 through 7. Along
with the development of subsequent writing to date,
for Javanese song writing has been like writing
diatonic musical number notation but usually not
given the blue line known as kepatihan notation, like
the following.
It appears in the notation writing, in the lines of
writing the notation does not use the timeline. Besides
that, in the upper right there is the Pelog Nem writing.
The writing is so different from the song writing that
is changed into the form of diatonic Western musical
model number notation. Next, this Swara Suling song
and Suwe Ora Jamu in Western music are diatonic.
Javanesse Songs in Pentatonic and Diatonic Perspective
143
Figure 1.
Figure 2.
In the numeric notation, the writing model of this
diatonic Western musical notation there appears a line
of bars. The timeline shows the number of beats per
hour. The upper right is usually written the name of
the song / song creator, not the name of the laras of
pelog or barrel of Slendro. The term laras in the world
of karawitan and Tembang Jawa according to
Brotosejati (2008) besides being used to refer to the
scale is also to mention the tone. Laras pelog means
the scale of pelog, while laras slendro means thesong
uses the slendro scale. Laras pelog and laras slendro
is often called the pentatonic scale, 5-tone system.
Laras pelog and laras slendro use 5 main tones in a
musical composition karawitan and tembang. In the
song Swara Suling and Suwe Ora Jamu, use the Pelog
Nem tuning. The basic tone is Nem (6). The following
is a song entitled Gundul Pacul which is played or
sung with Pelog Barang and a song titled Te Kate
Dipanah which is played or sung by Slendro Sanga.
Figure 3.
Figure 4.
Figure 5.
It appears in the article that, besides not being
accompanied by a sign of time, there is also a writing
in the upper right corner of Pelog Barang on the song
Gundul Pacul and Slendro Sanga in the title of Kate
Dipanah's Teaching song. This article is completely
different from the writing of Bald Dip and Tekate Di
Panah, which uses diatonic Western music writing. In
writing notation that uses diatonic Western notation
using a line of bars and in the upper right corner
written the name of the creator or the name of the area
the song originates, as we can see in the following
song.
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Figure 6.
Kusnadi (2006) argues, a composition of songs is
a composition that combines melodic elements,
rhythms, and sound colors in dynamic forms of work
by being decorated with song lyrics in accordance
with the theme being worked on. With an aesthetic
approach, the Javanese song is not only viewed from
the perspective of a writing method, but also looks at
how the intervals that appear in the scale can be seen
that in fact the Javanese song when sung using
diatonic Western music is very different in frequency.
The use of the pelog Nem laras Pelog Barang,
slendro Sanga in Javanese song here is a continuation
of the Javanese gamelan music tradition which until
now is actually still alive but many are transformed
into diatonic musical tone by the user community.
It can be assessed technically that, actually
singing or singing using such as pelog Nem, pelog
barang, and Slendro Sanga is as easy and or as
difficult as singing a song using diatonic western
musical notation. The following can be seen using a
review of the frequency of Western music, which is
also written as pelog nem (6) and Pelog Barang. The
use of the pelog laras of goods relatively using the
laras is rather high because of the tonic tone 3 (lu),
much higher than the pelog bem which uses tonika 6
(nem).
Table 1: The Conversion of Laras Pelog Bem/ Nem Into
Western Diatonic Music Scale.
In the table below it can be seen to see the song
using the pelog or slendro can be very variety
according to the laras and of course the frequency of
the tones is very different from diatonic Western
music. Each tuning (pelog and slendro) may only be
played with two basic tones, namely at the slendro do
= 1 (ji) and do = 5 (five). Whereas on the tuning of
the pelog it is only possible to play the basic note do
= 6 (nem) or do = 3 (lu). This can be explained by
observing the intervals of the campursari gamelan
tones as follows.
Table 2: The use of Tonika in Pelog and Slendro with
Interval Comparison.
At the laras Pelog, a row of 400-100-200-400-100
intervals may only be played in two kinds of ways,
namely the notes do-mi-fa-sol-si-do or sol-la-si-do-
re- mi in the pelog laras are identical to nem-ji-ro-lu-
ma-nem or lu-ma-nem-ji-ro-lu. The two possible
basic notes in Javanese karawitan are included in
pathet nem. In the slendro laras, to arrange a range of
intervals of 200-200-300-200-300 only possible in
two ways, namely: do-re-mi-sol-la-do or sol-la-si-re-
mi-sol which in the slendro tuning it is identical to ji-
ro-lu-ma-nem-ji or ma-nem-ji-ro-lu-ma. Two types of
basic tones are included in pathet sanga in Javanese
gamelan.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Based on the results of the research and discussion it
can be concluded that there are two themes. First, the
way to write the Javanese Song notation in the
perspective of Javanese gamelan pentatonic music is
to use numerical notation like diatonic music. The
difference is that diatonic music always uses a line of
bars to determine the number of types per time
signature while for writing Javanese Songs notation
does not usually use a line of bars. In addition, in
writing Javanese song, at the top right corner of the
score is always written the laras. While the diatonic
notation is written only the name of the creator or
origin of the song area. Second, the intervals in the
scales are used between the pentatonic and diatonic
perspectives, different. The difference is mainly in the
frequency of each pitch interval. Besides that, the way
to read the notes is different. Reading pelog and or
slendo notations using the Javanese numeral
designation, namely ji ro lu pat mo nem pi adjusts the
laras, while reading Western diatonic musical
number notations is do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si, do.
Javanesse Songs in Pentatonic and Diatonic Perspective
145
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