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Intro l
Handicraft l
Musical
Instruments l
Song & Dance l
Traditional Cuisine
l Costumes
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Keamatan Festivals
Musical Instruments
The music of Sabah is intimately bound up with the daily
lives and cultural traditions of the diverse ethnic cultures of Sabah. It
can be found in many forms like ritual music (for birth, marriages, harvest
festivals, deaths) love music, battle songs, story telling songs, among others.
For example, the Kadasan Dusun Bobohizan or Bobolian (or high priestess) engages
in ritual chanting to appease the spirit in times disaster like floods or
droughts. Also, music and dancing are closely linked: the festive dances like
the Limbai of the Bajaus and Sumazau of the Penampang Kadazans have distinctive
wedding music. In fact, in most Sabahan ethnic groups, song, dance and the
accompanying music are, in the main, inseperable as each element is a part
of an organic whole, which permeates the lives of the natives.
This is reflected in the music’s significance to festive and commemorative
occasions and as a means of personal expression and entertainment. Experience,
then, the intensifying power of the gong ensembles, the rhythmic tung, tung,
tung harmonies of the togunggak, the healing musical balm of the suling.
The following traditional musical instruments of the various Sabahan ethnic
groups are divided according to the way in which they work:
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IDIOPHONES: Instruments
made with materials which produce sounds when scraped, rubbed, hit and
without further intervention of other materials.
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GONG ENSEMBLES
Are the most prevalent of Sabah’s indiophones, found
throughout most parts of Sabah especially amongst the Kadazan Dusuns and
muruts.
The gongs are made of brass or bronze and were originally traded in from
Brunei in earlier times. Usually they are thick with a broad rim. They
produce a muffled sound of a deep tone.
The sopogandangan from the enterior (of the Tambunan Kadazan Dusuns) accompanies
the magarang, usually in commemoration of harvest festival and weddings
though traditionally the magarang was associated with headhunting.
The sopogandangan has more instruments (nine-eight gongs and one drum)
than the sompogogungan (seven-six gongs and one drum) from coastal Penampang
and used by the Kadazan Dusuns there.(This does not include the popular
kulintangan).
The sompogogungan accompanies the sumazau, a festive and ritual dance
like the magarang but slower in tempo. The Kadazan Dusuns also play dunsai,
a type of gong music, at funerals.
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KULINTANGAN
Is frequently included amongst coastal gong ensembles
though it is also found amongst interior natives like the Labuk-Kinabatangan
Kadazans and the Paitanic peoples (both from the eastern Sabah) who
have come into contract with the coastal natives.
These idiophones produce predominantly ritual Music:
The Tatana Dusun of Kuala Penyu (Southwestern Sabah) employ kulintangan
music, and sumayau dancing, as well as unaccompanied by ritual chanting
in Moginum rites to welcome the spirits.
The Lotud-Dusun of Tuaran (west Coast of Sabah) use gong ensembles in
the slow sedate mongigol dance for the seven-day Rumaha rites which
honour the spirits of sacred skulls and the five-day Mangahau rites
which honour possessed jars.
TOGUNGGAK (Interior Dusuns)
TOGUNGGU (Penampang Kadazan dusun) &
TAGUNGGAK (Muruts).
In older times before gongs were traded into Sabah, the togunggak was
used to accompany dancing and in procession. It was and still is made
of bamboo, which flourishes in most parts of Sabah. Bamboo is a great
source of raw materials for Sabah’s musical instruments.
The togunggak consists of a series of hollowed out bamboo tubes of varying
sizes of the gongs. The music produced is a hollow and rhythmic tung,
tung, tung sound of different pitches in each of the different sizes.
The togunggak is played by a troupe of a dozen or so people in lieu
of the gong ensemble.
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MEMBRANOPHONES: Instruments
where a membrane is stretched across a hallow body (the ‘resonator’)
and then made to vibrate by rubbing/hitting.
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DRUMS
Usually found in gong ensemble. They produce
a distinctive rhythmic musical pattern, leading to the festive dances
which they accompany an air of urgency or heightened sense of excitement
as the case may be.
Single-headed drums come mainly from the interior. For example,
the tontog of the Rungus or the karatung of the Tambunan Kadazan
Dusuns.
Double headed drums are found in coastal areas as well as the interior,
for example, the gandang of the bajau. The membranes covering the
drumheads used to be made of goat or deer skin, or cowhide.
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CHORDOPHONES: Consist
of Chord and Resonator. Vibrations are produced when
the chord is scraped by a bow or plucked with fingers and amplified
by a resonator (unsually a hollow compartment).
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TONGKUNGON
Prevalent mainly amongst the Kadazan Dusun
in Tambunan, Penampang and Tuaran. It is made from a large bamboo
tube with thin strips cut in its surface to form its strings,
which can be tuned with tiny pieces of wood/ cane at each end
of the tongkungon. The names and number of this string correspond
to the main gongs.
Though it is mainly played solo and for personal entertainment,
its music can accompany dance in the absence of gong ensembles.
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SUNDATANG
A long-necked strummed lute found amongst
Dusunic peoples. It is made of jackfruit wood two or three
brass strings.
The sundatang of the Penampang Kadazan Dusun, the Lotud-Dusun
(who call it gagayan) and the Rungus are more widely played
than that of the Kadazan Dusuns of Tambunan. The Tambunan
sundatang has a small body and a neck over one metre long.
It can be played for personal entertainment or as a dance
accompaniment (in the Tambunan magarang and in Tuaran where
it is sometimes played in pairs).
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AEROPHONES:
Instruments with a column of air
within a cylinder or cone. The sound is produced when this
air is vibrate by the player’s lips or nose or a single/double
reed or by air passing across the top of the tube. Sabah’s
aerophones are mainly played solo and for personal pleasure.
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SULING
Short bamboo mouth flute brown from
the end with fives holes ( Tambunan ) or six holes (Penampang).
The sound produced is soothing.
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TURALI Bamboo Nose flute
This is common to Dusunic communities.
The Tambunan Kadazan Dusuns call it turali or turahi whilst
in Penampang, it is called tuahi. It is widely played
for personal entertainment, except in Penampang and the
central part of Tambunan where it expresses grief after
a death.
The story behind the origin of the turali is that once
upon a time there was a man who had 7 sons and no daughters.
When both parents died due to some illness, the sons were
very grieved. However, as men and warriors, they could
not cry. To express their great sorrow and grief for the
death of their parents, they made and played the turali.
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BUNGKAU
Bungkau Jew’s Harp (Uriding, Lotud-Dusuns)
is widely found throughout Sabah. Made from polod palm
wood. It is small and is held between the teeth. Its
central lamella vibrates when the end of the instrument
is hit. The sound is then resonated by the mouth to
produce a wide spectrum of sounds.
It is versalite as a device to attract edible lizards,
in farewell and battle songs, for post rice harvesting
celebrations and to imitate gong ensemble music.
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SOMPOTON
Traditional this was from Kampung
Tikolod, Tambunan. It is now prevalent among Dusuns
and some Muruts.
It is made of a double raft of eight bamboo pipes
inserted into a gourd. Inside the gourd seven of the
pipes have small polod palm lamellae or sodi inserted
into their sides and kept in place by beeswax ofr
sopinit. The eighth soundless pipe is stopped up with
sopinit.
The player blows and sucks air through the gourd mouthpiece
to activate the sodi. The musical sound produced can
be likened to a cross between the sounds from a conventional
mouth organ and a bagpipe, minus the latters’ shrillness.
Often it is played solo, for personal expression.
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Source: Sabah Tourism Promotion
Corporation
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