When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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.

  3. Jaipongan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaipongan

    Jaipongan, also known as jaipong, is a musical performance genre of the Sundanese people in the Sundanese language of West Java, Indonesia. Jaipongan includes revived indigenous arts, like gamelan, but it also does not ignore Western music completely despite the ban on rock and roll. It uses the sensuality found in traditional village music and ...

  4. Piring dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piring_dance

    Piring dance (Minangkabau: Piriang; Jawi: تاري ڤيريڠ) is a traditional Minangkabau plate dance originated and performed in West Sumatra, Indonesia.It is also performed in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.

  5. Javanese dances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javanese_dances

    The movement of social dances, such as ronggeng and tayub are more vigorous and often erotic, closely related to Sundanese jaipongan. Because of the erotic nuances, those who perform this type of dance are sometimes perceived as intentionally being suggestive or even openly advertising sexual favors. Some examples of Javanese commoner dances

  6. Tjong A Fie Mansion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tjong_A_Fie_Mansion

    the mansion (1930) Tjong A Fie Mansion (traditional Chinese: 張 耀 軒 故居; simplified Chinese: 张 耀 轩 故居; pinyin: Zhāng Yàoxuān Gùjū) is a Dutch colonial-style two-story mansion in Medan, North Sumatra, built by Tjong A Fie (1860–1921) a Hakka merchant who came to own much of the land in Medan through his plantations, later becoming 'Majoor der Chineezen' (leader of the ...

  7. 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 ...

  8. Music of Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Indonesia

    Jaipongan dance performance. Jaipongan is a very complex rhythmic dance music from the Sundanese people of western Java. The rhythm is liable to change seemingly randomly, making dancing difficult for most listeners. Its instruments are entirely Sundanese, completely without imported instruments.

  9. Yapong dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yapong_dance

    Colossal Yapong dance Hundreds of dancers demonstrate the yapong dance. The pattern in the clothes worn by the dancers is a development of the Betawi mask dancer clothes. This can be seen clearly from the shape and decoration of the headgear and the sash worn on the chest, which is called the toka-toka.