{"id":2013,"date":"2018-01-21T14:09:54","date_gmt":"2018-01-21T14:09:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/?page_id=2013"},"modified":"2025-10-21T21:11:24","modified_gmt":"2025-10-21T21:11:24","slug":"palace-musicians","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/palace-musicians\/","title":{"rendered":"Palace Musicians"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: center;\">&#8220;To become a servant in the palace does not mean one is well remunerated. Generally, the primary reason for becoming an <em>abdidalem<\/em> is to obtain inner tranquility and happiness. Others base their service on feelings of thanks for being allowed to live on land owned by the Sultan. Additionally, one wishes to become an <em>abdidalem<\/em> to procure the Sultan\u2019s blessings (<em>berkah<\/em>). According to many court retainers, good fortune befalls them and family needs are met after becoming an <em>abdidalem<\/em> \u2026 <em>Abdidalem<\/em> are people who possess at one and the same time cultural insight, expertise, and a high level of dedication \u2026 In the end, being an <em>abdidalem<\/em> is very meaningful&#8211;not only through supporting the mission of [lit., the perpetuation of all the activities in] the palace, but also by upholding traditional ideals of deportment [lit., becoming a fortress of behavior] in fast-changing times.&#8221;<abbr title='&lt;em&gt;Menjadi seorang abdi di keraton bukan berarti akan mendapatkan honor yang tinggi. Alasan utama menjadi Abdi Dalem umumnya adalah untuk mendapatkan ketentraman dan kebahagiaan batin. Ada juga yang dilandasi oleh rasa terimakasih sudah diperbolehkan tinggal tanah milik Sultan. Selain itu, faktor lain yang ingin diperoleh dari menjadi Abdi Dalem adalah untuk mendapatkan berkah Dalem. Menurut para Abdi Dalem ada saja rejeki yang datang dan dapat mencukupi kebutuhari keluarganya setelah menjadi Abdi Dalem \u2026 Abdi Dalem adalah orang-orang yang memeliki wawasan budaya, kealihan sekaligus dedikasi yang tinggi \u2026 Pada akhirnya, keberadaan Abdi Dalem sangat berarti. Tidak saja untuk mendukung keberlangsungan segala aktifitas di dalam keraton, tetapi juga menjadi benteng perilaku pada jaman yang semakin cepat berubah&lt;\/em&gt;.' rel='tooltip'>[1]<\/abbr> (Tepas Tandha Yekti 2016).<\/p>\n<p>Court retainers called \u201c<em>abdidalem\u201d<\/em> (lit. \u201cservants of His Highness\u201d) constitute a large community, numbering in the few thousands, the <em>raison d\u2019\u00eatre<\/em> of which is to execute orders originating with the Sultan and\/or his administration. <em>Abdidalem<\/em> are the lifeblood of the palace, a human resource that fuels the everyday and extra-ordinary activities of the Kraton Yogyakarta. Service in the palace has always been voluntary and viewed as a means by which subjects of the kingdom (what I am calling here \u201ctraditional Javanese\u201d) can express their loyalty, respect, and esteem (<em>bekti<\/em>) for the Sultan and the institution of Javanese kingship he embodies. And, as conveyed in the above quote, there are perceived rewards for such service\u2014inner tranquility and happiness, receiving the blessing of the Sultan, living rent-free on property of the Sultan, and so forth. This reciprocal relationship between <em>abdidalem<\/em> and Sultan, captured in the Javanese terms \u201c<em>kawula &#8211; gusti<\/em>\u201d (\u201cservant \u2013 master\u201d), is a personal one, modeled on traditional concepts of mutual respect and responsibility, on the care and love of family ties. (Moetono, p. 14)<\/p>\n<p>Operating a socio-cultural institution such as the Kraton Yogyakarta requires organization and coordination, and reduced to their essences the royalty\/administrators and the <em>abdidalem<\/em> are, respectively, the institution\u2019s organizers and organized. There exists an understood and accepted scaffolding of behavioral norms bolstering the operational paradigm of the palace. Members of the royal family (<em>bangsawan<\/em>) carry higher social status than the <em>abdidalem<\/em> but are themselves hierarchically positioned relative to the Sultan by a system of titles that is completely separate from the system marking the relative status of the court retainers. <em>Bangsawan<\/em> serve as the heads of the palace administrative divisions and offices and are assisted by the highest-ranking <em>abdidalem<\/em> in carrying out the governing duties and responsibilities of their organizational domains.<\/p>\n<p>Being an <em>abdidalem<\/em> involves acceptance of a number of conditions that collectively shape their behavior while in palace service. <em>Abdidalem<\/em> unquestioningly carry out specific tasks assigned to them by the palace administrative unit to which they are affiliated. They are given a hierarchical rank (<em>pangkat<\/em>) that reflects their social standing both vis-\u00e0-vis other <em>abdidalem<\/em> and as separate from the <em>bangsawan.<\/em>\u00a0One\u2019s rank is a status marker and reflects, first and foremost, the time depth of one\u2019s dedication to the Sultan and the Kraton. Following a trial period of up to two years during which a candidate holds the rank of <em>magang<\/em> (apprentice), he or she advances to the status of <em>abdidalem<\/em>-ship at the rank of <em>jajar<\/em> (lit. \u201cin a row\u201d or \u201cequal\u201d). <em>Jajar<\/em> is the first of about eleven hierarchically-arranged <em>pangkat<\/em> through which <em>abdidalem<\/em> may pass during their palace service. While movement through the lower ranks (<em>jajar<\/em>, <em>bekel enom<\/em>, <em>bekel sepuh<\/em>, and <em>lurah<\/em>) is now relatively fast<abbr title='approximately three years at each level; in 1982 the pace was closer to eight years in each rank' rel='tooltip'>[2]<\/abbr>, the pace of promotion slows down significantly for movement through the higher ranks (<em>penewu<\/em>, <em>wedana<\/em>, <em>riya bupati<\/em>, <em>bupati anom<\/em>, <em>bupati sepuh<\/em>, and <em>bupati kliwon<\/em>) and the quality of one\u2019s contribution to the palace increases in importance in promotion considerations. In that the palace has noticeably increased the pace of rank promotion during the thirty-five years I have been following this phenomenon suggests to me that it has come to the realization that this strategy is an effective tool in the recruitment and retention of <em>abdidalem<\/em>. <em>Abdidalem<\/em> promotion ceremonies are now held twice a year<abbr title='in the months of Bakdamulud and Sawal' rel='tooltip'>[3]<\/abbr>, and it is not unusual for a few hundred retainers to receive their promotion certificates (<em>serat kekancingan<\/em>) at each<abbr title='Back in 1982, this sort of ceremony took place once a year and, at least at the one event at which I was in attendance, only about fifty &lt;em&gt;abdidalem&lt;\/em&gt; were promoted.' rel='tooltip'>[4]<\/abbr>. The palace also introduced a fast-track promotion program in about 2012 to entice individuals with university degrees and preferred specializations (including musicians) to skip being a <em>magang<\/em> and move through the lower <em>abdidalem<\/em> ranks (<em>jajar<\/em> through <em>wedana<\/em>) at a pace of from six months to a year in each <em>pangkat<\/em>. Before leaving the topic of rank I should mention that there is one further status inflection attached to the <em>pangkat<\/em> of an <em>abdidalem<\/em> that acknowledges whether or not the individual descends from royal blood\u2014the rank of an <em>abdidalem<\/em> whose bloodline can be traced to an earlier sultan will be preceded by the title \u201c<em>rad\u00e8n<\/em>,\u201d and for one who cannot (a true commoner) by \u201c<em>mas.<\/em>\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Along with being assigned a rank, the palace also gives each <em>abdidalem<\/em> a name (<em>asma paring dalem<\/em>, lit. \u201cname from the Sultan\u201d) which is assigned them when they become an <em>abdidalem jajar <\/em>and appears on their <em>serat kekancingan <\/em>certificate<abbr title='This name is used while in the Kraton; &lt;em&gt;abdidalem&lt;\/em&gt; generally do not change the name they use in everyday life outside the palace.' rel='tooltip'>[5]<\/abbr>.\u00a0The palace-given name of an <em>abdidalem<\/em> often is in some way connected to the area of service he or she provides in the palace.<\/p>\n<p>Humbleness is a quality expected of <em>abdidalem<\/em> and this character trait is symbolically communicated in a number of ways. <em>Abdidalem<\/em> wear a distinctive traditional outfit called <em>peranakan<\/em> while serving in the palace. <em>Peranakan<\/em> consists of a dark blue and black <em>surjon<\/em> (top), a <em>bathik kain<\/em> (wrap-around bottom pleated in front in a specific way) displaying a restricted range of design motifs different from those that are reserved for the <em>kain<\/em> worn by <em>bangsawan<\/em>. When one is promoted to the <em>pangkat<\/em> of <em>bekel enom<\/em>, one can wear ones <em>kris<\/em> (ceremonial dagger) as part of their palace uniform.<abbr title='To be allowed to wear a &lt;em&gt;kris&lt;\/em&gt; in the palace is an affirmation of an individual\u2019s identity as a mature man and a responsible member of his family and community (Solyom and Solyom l978:5).' rel='tooltip'>[6]<\/abbr> <em>Abdidalem<\/em> avoid standing erect while in service in the palace. The height of one\u2019s head vis-\u00e0-vis those of others in their presence is read as a sign of relative social status in traditional Javanese culture\u2014the head of a person of lower status should never be higher than that of a person of higher status. <em>Abdidalem<\/em> also always sit on the ground\/floor rather than in chairs, which is what people of higher status sit upon. Yet another behavioral habit of <em>abdidalem<\/em> is the performance of <em>sembah<\/em><abbr title='&lt;em&gt;Sembah &lt;\/em&gt;is executed by pressing one\u2019s palms together, thumbs approaching the nose, while bowing the head slightly.' rel='tooltip'>[7]<\/abbr>\u00a0as a gesture of respect to anyone in the palace world that is of higher status than themselves or to anything that is associated directly with the Sultan.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_2896\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2896\" style=\"width: 445px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/IMGA0937.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-0\" data-rl_title=\"An abdidalem Kraton Yogyakarta in the standard &quot;uniform&quot; of a palace retainer; this individual holds the rank of at least a bekel enom as is evident because he is wearing a kris.\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"An abdidalem Kraton Yogyakarta in the standard &quot;uniform&quot; of a palace retainer; this individual holds the rank of at least a bekel enom as is evident because he is wearing a kris.\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-2896 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/IMGA0937.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"445\" height=\"590\" srcset=\"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/IMGA0937.jpg 445w, https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/IMGA0937-226x300.jpg 226w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 445px) 85vw, 445px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-2896\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">An abdidalem Kraton Yogyakarta in the standard &#8220;uniform&#8221; of a palace retainer; this individual holds the rank of at least a bekel enom as is evident because he is wearing a kris.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The instrumentalists (<em>niyaga<\/em>), singers (<em>pesindh\u00e8n<\/em> if female, <em>lebdaswara<\/em>, if male), and puppeteers (<em>dhalang<\/em>) who perform on, sing with, or are accompanied by the gamelans of the Kraton Yogyakarta for palace ceremonies are all <em>abdidalem<\/em>. They are members of the Kawedanan Hageng Punokawan Kridhamardawa (lit. \u201cOffice of the Servants of Refined Activities,\u201d rendered here as the \u201cPerforming Arts Office\u201d), which in turn is one of five offices of the Kawedanan Hageng Punokawan Parwa Budaya (Division of the Servants of the Cultural Section,\u201d rendered here as \u201cDivision of Cultural Affairs\u201d)<abbr title='In addition to the Kridha Mardawa office, this division includes offices that oversee religious matters (Kawedanan Pengulon), the royal cemeteries (Kawedanan Puralaya), and the traditional needs of the royal family who are in residence in the Kaputren area of the palace (Kawedanan Kaputren).' rel='tooltip'>[8]<\/abbr>. For the entire span of my research in the palace, a son of the Ninth Sultan (and a brother of the Tenth Sultan by a different mother)\u2014Bendara Raden Mas<abbr title='a royal title communicating that its bearer is the son of the Sultan by a lower-ranked wife and that he has not yet been advanced to the title of Prince' rel='tooltip'>[9]<\/abbr> Sulaksmono in the 1980s and Gusti Bendara Pangeran Harya<abbr title='the title for a Prince who is a son of a sultan by a lower-ranking wife' rel='tooltip'>[10]<\/abbr> Yudhaningrat\u2014has served as the <em>pengageng<\/em> (head) of Kridhamardawa. Thoughout this period he has had as assistants in charge of all the daily doings of the office lower ranking <em>bangsawan<\/em> (such as in-laws) and high-ranking <em>abdidalem<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Each palace musician, as is the case with all <em>abdidalem<\/em> in the Kraton, has a rank (<em>pangkat<\/em>) and palace name (<em>asma paring dalem<\/em>) that is conferred upon them by the palace administration. <em>Niyaga<\/em> (gamelan instrumentalists) are given names of <em>gendhing<\/em> (gamelan compositions), <em>pesindh\u00e8n<\/em> and <em>lebdaswara<\/em> (female and male vocalists) the names of <em>sekar<\/em> (vocal compositions), and <em>dhalang<\/em> (puppeteers) will have as a component of their names the word \u201c<em>cerma<\/em>\u201d (\u201cleather,\u201d from which shadow puppets are made).<\/p>\n<p>Some background on two <em>abdidalem niyaga<\/em> I have known will illustrate, first, how the system of palace ranks and names communicate to members of the palace community in general the identities of individual <em>abdidalem<\/em>, and, secondly, how the nature of each individual\u2019s service in the palace is shaped by the times during which they serve the institution.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mas Lurah Lokasari<\/strong>, now deceased, was an <em>abdidalem niyaga<\/em> I knew in 1982-83, at which time he was around 67 years old (born in 1915). \u201c<em>Mas<\/em>\u201d indicates that he has no royal blood in his background, \u201c<em>lurah<\/em>\u201d is the fourth of eleven<em> abdidalem <\/em>ranks, and \u201cLokasari\u201d is the name of a gamelan<em> gendhing<\/em><abbr title='&lt;em&gt;Gendhing &lt;\/em&gt;Lokasari&lt;em&gt;, sl\u00e9ndro pathet nem, kethuk 4 arang dhawah kethuk 8, kendhangan &lt;\/em&gt;Mawur&lt;em&gt;.&lt;\/em&gt;' rel='tooltip'>[11]<\/abbr>.\u00a0Although he attended school only through the fourth grade, Lokasari was always determined to be a musician and started playing at a young age. He joined Kridhamardawa as a <em>magang<\/em> in 1934 (at age 19) during the reign of the Eighth Sultan, and was advanced to <em>abdidalem<\/em> status and given the <em>asma paring Dalem<\/em> Lokasari in 1937. He also was a member of a number of important non-palace <em>gamelan<\/em> groups<abbr title='Murba Laras, Susila Pradangga, and Daya Mardawa' rel='tooltip'>[12]<\/abbr> between 1934 and 1951, and joined the Yogyakarta branch of the national radio station (Radio Republik Indonesia, or RRI) as a studio musician when it was founded in 1951. In 1957, <em>Pak<\/em> Lokasari was a member of an Indonesian arts mission to Eastern Europe and, in 1981, he began teaching <em>karawitan<\/em> at the National Dance Academy (Akademi Seni Tari Indonesia, or ASTI) in Yogyakarta. Throughout all of this outside activity, Lokasari continued performing in the palace. Although a well-rounded musician, he was primarily known both inside and outside the palace as a <em>rebab<\/em> player<em>. <\/em>In 1947 he began playing <em>bonang <\/em>for Sekat\u00e8n, and continued in this prestigious musical role up to his death in the early 1990s. Yet, in 1983, after over forty-five years of service in the palace, he had ascended only to the fourth <em>abdidalem<\/em> rank\u2014an average of more than ten years at each level<abbr title='Sometime in the late 1980s he was finally promoted to the rank of &lt;em&gt;wedana&lt;\/em&gt;.' rel='tooltip'>[13]<\/abbr>.\u00a0His glacial pace of rank advancement was not uncommon for the time (basically, the entire 20<sup>th<\/sup> century), and this slow rate of advancement was probably an important factor contributing to the absence of any significant number of younger musicians (under 40 years of age) in the ranks of Kridhamardawa <em>abdidalem<\/em> in the 1980s.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Rad\u00e8n Lurah Ngeksibranta<\/strong>, who I know from my two most recent visits to Yogyakarta in 2016 and 2017, entered palace service around 2011 when he was in his early 40s. \u201c<em>Rad\u00e8n<\/em>\u201d indicates that he descends from royal blood, \u201c<em>lurah<\/em>\u201d is the fourth of eleven<em> abdidalem <\/em>ranks, and \u201cNgeksibranta\u201d is the name of a gamelan<em> gendhing<\/em><abbr title='&lt;em&gt;Gendhing &lt;\/em&gt;Ngeksibranta&lt;em&gt;, sl\u00e9ndro pathet sanga kethuk 2 kerep dhawah kethuk 4, kendhangan &lt;\/em&gt;Candra&lt;em&gt;.&lt;\/em&gt;' rel='tooltip'>[14]<\/abbr><em>.<\/em>\u00a0He holds a <em>sarjana <\/em>degree (equivalent to an undergraduate diploma in the U.S.) from ISI Yogyakarta (Institut Seni Indonesia Yogyakarta, a national tertiary educational institution for the arts). Mas Agung, as he is known outside the palace, is known first and foremost as an excellent <em>pengendhang<\/em> (drummer, or player of the <em>kendhang<\/em>) for <em>uyon-uyon<\/em> (concert music), <em>beksa<\/em> (dance), and <em>kethoprak<\/em> (a modern form of gamelan-accompanied theatre). He and four other ISI graduates entered palace service together in the \u201cfast-track\u201d promotion program described above and within a few years had already advanced to the rank of <em>lurah<\/em>. He told me he had never considered becoming an <em>abdidalem niyaga<\/em> until the fast-track option came into being and he was invited by Kridhamardawa to join. His decision to do so was made easier by the introduction, also around 2012, of higher stipends for <em>abdidalem<\/em>, made possible by a new national government program to support Yogyakarta as a cultural center. Supposedly a good portion of the funds infused into Yogyakarta by this program has been making its way to the palace, where it has been used to incentivize <em>abdidalem<\/em> service through meaningful stipends and enhance the physical structures of the palace.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#8220;To become a servant in the palace does not mean one is well remunerated. Generally, the primary reason for becoming an abdidalem is to obtain inner tranquility and happiness. Others base their service on feelings of thanks for being allowed to live on land owned by the Sultan. Additionally, one wishes to become an abdidalem &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/palace-musicians\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Palace Musicians&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-2013","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2013","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2013"}],"version-history":[{"count":19,"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2013\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2897,"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2013\/revisions\/2897"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/vetter.sites.grinnell.edu\/gamelan\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2013"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}