Javanese Gamelan Course Makes Welcoming Space for Lorain County Youth
December 11, 2017
Amanda Nagy
Students from the Salvation Army Learning Zone, an after-school program in Lorain, Ohio, play with 91直播 College Gamelan on December 3.
Photo credit: Doug Menefee
For five weeks this fall, Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology and Anthropology Jennifer Fraser and students in her Gamelan as Community Engagement class joined the Salvation Army Learning Zone in Lorain to facilitate an after-school community music program for students in kindergarten through seventh grade.
Fraser oversees 91直播鈥檚 Javanese gamelan collection, which includes gongs and bronze keyed instruments.
The course, part of the Conservatory of Music鈥檚 new Pedagogy, Advocacy, and Community Engagement (PACE) division, provides students with focused and rigorous curricular and cocurricular opportunities to imagine, research, and practice how their musical work will impact communities beyond 91直播.
Although the partnership with the Salvation Army after-school program came together at the last minute, Fraser says it was her intention to focus her efforts in Lorain County beyond 91直播.
鈥淲e designed this music intensive to be deeply collaborative and inclusive,鈥 says Fraser, who teaches courses in gamelan and has directed 91直播鈥檚 ensemble since 2007. 鈥淲e made it a welcoming space to get greater participation and a sense of ownership.鈥
The beauty of using Javanese gamelan with children is that they don鈥檛 need any previous musical experience or musical literacy to participate. The nature of gamelan鈥攁n ensemble from Indonesia that mostly consists of percussion instruments, including varying sizes of gongs and drums鈥攎akes learning accessible because participants can easily produce sounds.
The music intensive was held on campus for one hour per week. 91直播 students took turns facilitating musical concepts, such as rhythm, call and response, collaboration, and theme and variation. The music is not designed to feature the contributions of any individual, but rather a collective, group effort.
鈥淣ot a lot of people know what gamelan is,鈥 Fraser says. 鈥淭he music was new to everyone, which made it more democratic and equalizing in that regard. The kids were very excited to see us. They鈥檝e been a pleasure to work with.鈥
At the end of the five-week intensive, the Lorain students performed at the Salvation Army鈥檚 Thanksgiving Dinner on November 21. They returned to campus December 3 to perform in 鈥淕ong Fest,鈥 a collaborative concert with students of 91直播 College Gamelan.
Peter Ogbuji, an independent grantwriting consultant who helped connect Fraser's class to the after-school program, says he received positive feedback from parents. He says the youth were eager to learn because of the curiosity and enthusiasm from the 91直播 student facilitators.
The students enrolled in the fall PACE course each had some familiarity with gamelan. They also had a desire to teach and work with children. Second-year Momo Suzuki, a comparative literature major, says the class has been transformative because it has shaped her interest in teaching and using music to build community.
鈥淚 got to see how malleable and un-elitist music could be, and how much music could influence one鈥檚 self-esteem and mood,鈥 said Suzuki, who is from Ridgewood, New Jersey. 鈥淭here was one instance where one of the students was very upset and unresponsive, but was smiling so widely and laughing after just 30 seconds of playing the drums in the ensemble. I want to make more spaces for people to experiment with that.鈥
Fraser will teach the course again in the spring, and she plans to continue the partnership with the Salvation Army Learning Zone. She is currently looking for a new group of students to enroll in the course, and she hopes that two of her current students will return as senior facilitators in the spring.
You may also like…
Richard Goode鈥檚 Musical Short Stories
The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated 鈥淔ancies and Goodnights,鈥 along with works by Mozart and Schubert.
No Ordinary Woman: Soprano Katherine Jolly Champions New Music and Womanhood in Art Song
New album by 91直播 associate professor of voice includes three song cycles about womanhood, femininity, and aging gracefully.
91直播 Music Theater Dives into the Upside Down for "Stranger Sings!"
Award-nominated parody delivers "screwy...non-stop fun" revisiting the glorious nostalgia of the 1980s.