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If music really is the universal language, Sacramento State is fluent.
The University's 300 acres host a world of international musical from campus
groups and visiting performers annually. Performers and style vary greatly semester
to semester, but the constantly affordable ticket prices and intimate venues
make Sacramento State the place to hear the unexpected.
The newest addition to the mix is the University's own Balinese percussion
orchestra, Gamelan Suara Santi, or Voice of Peace. The homegrown group is a
traditional Indonesian five-tone "angklung" gamelan. Its instruments
are mostly brass bells and gongs in tuned pairs that create waves of exotic
sound. Doing the striking are up to 25 Sacramento State students under the direction
of music professor Daniel Kennedy.
The instruments came to Sacramento State because of Kennedy's longtime interest
in Indonesian music, the same interest that led Kennedy to the island of Bali
on a research trip in 2003. While studying Balinese music under gamelan master
Made Subandi, Kennedy visited famed instrument builders Gableron and Sons from
the town of Blabatuh. With assistance from Subandi, Kennedy arranged for the
creation of the varied instruments that make up Sacramento State's gamelan.
Work on the instruments spanned four months, all done in the rustic Gableron
workshops. "You had guys with flip-flops carrying around pots of molten
brass," Kennedy says. The gongs and bells were cast and the wooden supports
were hand-carved with fierce dragons. By the end of Kennedy's trip the one-of-a-kind
instruments were packed and ready to go. "I ended up with eight enormous
boxes to ship," Kennedy says.
The group debuted last fall in a concert featuring renowned Balinese musicians
Gamelan Sekar Jaya and Balinese dance. The Gamelan Suara Santi has become a
hub of classes taught by Kennedy, and he's planning future concerts as well
as community outreach events and off-campus shows.
Brass of a different kind is the focus of another Sacramento State group, the
Latin Jazz Ensemble. Formed by professor Steve Roach in the fall of 2001, the
10-piece group has become a on- and off-campus favorite.
"What we do is play contemporary Latin jazz. We try to stay hip, to be
new. That piques the interest of the group. The students are always challenged,"
Roach says. He plays trumpet as well as directs the group. The ensemble has
played countless campus events, appeared annually at the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee
and even plays private parties. Con Sentimento, the group's first CD, is out
and another is planned to be released in May.
"I just love this music," Roach says, "and I think the ensemble
is an important part of the jazz program at Sacramento State."
The University's own international musical offerings are augmented with regular
concerts by visiting talent through Sacramento State's ongoing World Music Series
under the guidance of professor Jim Chopyak.
"We put on four to five concerts a year," Chopyak says, adding that
many of the performances feature Indian music. That's made possible by the Vivek
Wagle Memorial Foundation. Wagle, a Sacramento State engineering professor,
died in the early 1990s. His love for Indian music lives on in the foundation
that bears his name, funding Indian concerts at the University that have become
a focus of the World Music Series and made Sacramento State a regional center
for Indian musical performance. "The quality of the Indian concerts we've
had is astounding," Chopyak says.
Examples are a performance by Indian music superstar Ali Akbar Khan, who came
to the University early in the series, and recently a guitar, sitar and tabla
show by acclaimed artists Ancient Future. Other offerings have included Siberian
throat singers and classical Chinese performers.
The series draws community members to campus, many for the first time, but
for Chopyak the concert series is about much more than entertainment. "It
is directly related to what I do in the classroom," he says. "The
music is not just an abstract to the students when it's right here in concert."
When not on stage, visiting performers visit classes as well. Sacramento State
students enjoy some of the best international performers right on campus. "Most
students approach the concerts fearful, but they come back thrilled by the music,"
Chopyak says. "It's an eye-opener to other cultures and a non-threatening
way to learn about them."