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Funkot music is a mix of Funky House [12] [b] and Dangdut music with a tempo of around 160 to 220 bpm. Funkot music usually includes percussion sounds such as cowbells, woodblocks, fast triple bass kicks, vocal samples (namely "ay!", "are you ready?", and "one, two, three, four" samples), the extensive use of Amen breaks, and high-pitched synths.
Indonesian regional folk pop musics reflects the diversity of Indonesian culture and Indonesian ethnicity, mostly use local languages and a mix of western and regional style music and instruments. Indonesian folk music is quite diverse, and today embraces pop, rock, house, hip hop and other genres, as well as distinct Indonesian forms.
National genres, including Pop sunda, kroncong, dangdut, qasidah modern, rock, rap, country, jazz, disco, house and Hawaiian, generally feature lyrics in Indonesian (though sometimes in English) and are marketed mainly in the urban regions throughout the archipelago, both as audio cassettes and compact discs.
Tantowi Yahya — Indonesian well-known country singer, TV presenter and member of Indonesian house of representative; Terry Shahab — Pop female singer; Tiara Andini - Pop female singer and actress, runner up Indonesian Idol season 10; Tielman Brothers — First Indonesian band; Tika and The Dissidents - Indonesian indie pop
Pages in category "Lists of songs recorded by Indonesian artists" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
List of regional songs of Indonesia; References. Redaksi, Tim. 125 Lagu Wajib Nasional. Titik Media Publisher. ISMN 9790801890009. Kirana, Dilla Chandra (2015).
Variously, songs often combine formal Indonesian with street slang, youth code, regionally colored pronunciations, and even expressions from regional languages (typically Javanese, Sundanese, or Betawi). Indonesian hip hop is often mixed with heavy metal, dubbed "hip-metal". Groups such as Iwa-K and Denada produce music in this style.
In 2009, Rolling Stone Indonesia listed two of Naif's songs in their list of the best Indonesian songs of all time. "Mobil Balap" placed at 55 and was described as Naif's most popular song at concerts. The song "Posesif" ("Possessive"), which placed at number 96, was described as one of their most recognisable songs. [6]