I Nyoman Rembang

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I Nyoman Renbang (1937–2001) was an Indonesian musician, composer, teacher and instrument maker. He is considered by many ethnomusicologists as one of the most influential Balinese musicians and composers of the twentieth century (along with I Nyoman Kaler, I Wayan Lotring, Gusti Putu Madia Geria, I Wayan Suweca and I Wayan Berata).[1]

I Nyoman Rembang started his musical career when he joined the local Gambuh group in his village. At seven he was already playing gender wayang on a professional basis. At eight he began to learn to play legong from many teachers around Badung, Bali. While still a teenager, Rembang was one of the most accomplished musicians in Bali. The Government of Bale offered him a job to teach Balinese Gamelan at the Surakarta Conservatory in Central Java. He also became a specialist of Javanese gamelan under RM Yudoprawiro, a nobleman from Surakarta Palace.

Teaching

In 1960, with the former Bali's second governor, Ida Bagus Mantra, Rembang pioneered the establishment of the Balinese Conservatory. In 1963, Rembang resigned from his position in Surakarta to concentrated in Bali where he taught at the College of Music (SMKI). He was also frequently invited to teach in Europe as a visiting artist, composer and performer. He was the teacher of many contemporary composers and musicians such as I Wayan Suweca and André Éric Létourneau.

Compositions

References and sources

References

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