Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The bedug is commonly used in mosques in Java among Javanese and Sundanese people to precede the adhan as a sign of the prayer [5] or during Islamic festivals. [2] For example, the sound of a bedug is used to signal the end of the day-long fast during Ramadan and sometimes it is used to signal time for Suhoor during Ramadan. [ 6 ]
Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin Stadium (Malay: Stadium Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin) is a football stadium in Kuala Nerus, Terengganu, Malaysia. [1] Together with the adjacent Mini Stadium, it forms the centrepiece of Terengganu Sports Complex.
A permanent campus was built on a 350-acre (1.4 km 2) site in Gong Badak, Kuala Nerus, Kuala Terengganu and KUSZA began operating in the campus from January 1983. [8] The first program to be offered was a Diploma in Islamic Studies . This has expanded to 23 Diploma programs and three Advanced Diploma programs. [9]
A gong chime is a generic term for a set of small, high-pitched bossed pot gongs. The gongs are ordinarily placed in order of pitch, with the boss upward on cords held in a low wooden frame. The frames can be rectangular or circular (the latter are sometimes called "gong circles"), and may have one or two rows of gongs.
Health concerns about soft drinks also contributed to the decline, [2] although many parents who fears doctors used to prescribe bottles of Badak to their children. Many of them claimed to have healed. [5] Badak's production was also slowly declining as of 2010, although many people, particularly those in the North Sumatra area, still consumed it.
At the centrepiece of the activities was the newly built Gong Badak Sports Complex. Incorporating the 50,000-seat Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin Stadium, it hosts most of the events. A games village was not built, instead athletes and officials were housed in universities across Terengganu. Besides being physically near to the competition venues ...
The structure of the music is similar to gong kebyar, although employing a four-tone scale. A pair of jegog metallophones carries the basic melody, which is elaborated by gangsa, reyong, ceng-ceng, flute, and small drums played with mallets. A medium-sized gong, called kempur, is generally used to punctuate a piece's major sections.
Kulintang (Indonesian: kolintang, [13] Malay: kulintangan [14]) is a modern term for an ancient instrumental form of music composed on a row of small, horizontally laid gongs that function melodically, accompanied by larger, suspended gongs and drums.