When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jaipongan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaipongan

    Jaipongan (Sundanese: ᮏᮄᮕᮧᮍᮔ᮪), also known as Jaipong, is a popular traditional dance of Sundanese people from Indonesia. The dance was created by Gugum Gumbira , based on the traditional Sundanese Ketuk Tilu music and pencak silat movements.

  3. Sundanese dances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundanese_dances

    Jaipongan Mojang Priangan dance. Sundanese dances ( Indonesian : Tarian Sunda ) is a dance tradition that is a part of ritual, artistic expression as well as entertainment and social conduct among the Sundanese people of West Java and Banten , Indonesia .

  4. Sundanese people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundanese_people

    Jaipongan Mojang Priangan, a Sundanese traditional dance performance. There is a widespread belief among Indonesian ethnicities that the Sundanese are famous for their beauty. In his report "Summa Oriental" on the early 16th century Sunda Kingdom , Portuguese apothecary Tomé Pires mentioned: "The (Sundanese) women are beautiful, and those of ...

  5. Bajidor Kahot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bajidor_Kahot

    Bajidor Kahot (from Sundanese ᮘᮏᮤᮓᮧᮁ ᮊᮠᮧᮒ᮪) is a Sundanese dance from Indonesia which combines the dance movements of Ketuk Tilu and Jaipongan as the basis of its motions. [1] What distinguishes them from the two, Bajidor Kahot dance does not optimize shoulder movement as the Jaipongan and Tap Tilu do. In the dance, hips ...

  6. Wayang golek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayang_golek

    Wayang golek (wooden puppet) performance, Indonesia The history of the wayang golek began in the 17th century. Initially, the wayang golek art emerged and was born on the north coast of the island of Java, especially in Cirebon, the wayang used is the wayang cepak in the form of a papak or flat head.

  7. Angklung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angklung

    The angklung also signaled the time for prayers, and was said to have been played since the 7th century in the Kingdom of Sunda. In the Kingdom of Sunda, it provided martial music during the Battle of Bubat, as told in the Kidung Sunda. [6] The oldest surviving angklung is the Angklung Gubrag, made in the 17th century in Jasinga, Bogor.

  8. Tifa totobuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tifa_totobuang

    A tifa totobuang is a music ensemble from the Maluku Islands, related to the kulintang orchestra. It consists of a set of a double row of gong chimes known as the totobuang (similar to set of bonang gong chimes) and a set of tifa drums.

  9. Tarawangsa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarawangsa

    The word 'tarawangsa' comes from the Sundanese language. Tarawangsa comes from three combinations of words, namely 'Ta - Ra - Wangsa'.'Ta' is an acronym for the word 'Meta' which means 'movement', then 'Ra' means 'great fire' or 'the sun', and 'Wangsa' is a synonym for the word 'nation'.