Early period (1552–1880) From the time when Portuguese sailors landed in Malacca in 1552 and Portuguese slaves were freed in
Kampung Tugu (now part of
Koja in North Jakarta) in 1661, the genre of music that was to become known as Keroncong has started to take shape. Modern keroncong came into being after 1880, when its main instrument, the ukulele, was invented in Hawaii. The so-called "long evolution" of 1552–1879 was a preliminary stage of development that led to the modern form. Since the 1880s, keroncong is at a stage known as "short evolution".
Later evolution (1880–present) The later period is divided into four periods:
Tempo Doeloe (1880–1920) Tempo Doeloe means "olden time".
Komedie Stamboel was an
Indo touring comedy company that performed folk entertainment, which was very popular between 1891 and 1903, especially in East Java. It performed tales from
One Thousand and One Nights, European folk tales, and local folk tales, such as Ali Baba, Cinderella, and
Si Pitoeng. They toured by railway and ship to Malaysia and all over Indonesia. Between the scenes, there were musical intermezzos such as marches, polkas, waltzes, and kronchong music called
stamboel. During the
Tempo Doeloe (1880–1920), there were 3 types of
stamboel song. They usually had 16 bars and were played in a fast tempo (up to 110
beats per minute). :
Key to tables: ::, – sounded ::. – unsounded (
tacet) ::I –
Tonic chord ::II# –
Supertonic chromatic chord ::IV –
Subdominant chord ::V –
Dominant chord ::V7 –
Dominant seventh chord ;
Stamboel I Songs in this category include
Terang Bulan, Potong Padi, Nina Bobo, Sarinande, O Ina Ni Keke, Bolelebo, and many others. The structure is A – B – A – B or A – B – C – D (16 bars): ;
Stamboel II Among the songs in this category are Si Jampang and Jali-Jali. The structure is A – B – A – C (16 bars): ;
Stamboel III The structure is Prelude – A – Interlude – B – C (16 bars):
Kronchong Eternity (1920–1960) After World War I, American popular music came to Indonesia through ballroom music in hotels. Most of the musicians came from the Philippines. The 32-
bar American songs influenced local music; for example
Gesang Martohartono composed the song
Bengawan Solo during this period. After a while, the center of development moved to
Surakarta in Central Java. The kroncong there is slower (typically 80 beats per minute). ;
Langgam Keroncong This structure has a binary form, like a pop song: Verse A – Verse A – Bridge B – Verse A (32 bars): ;
Stamboel Keroncong:
Stamboel Keroncong has the form (A-B-A-B') x 2 = 16 bars x 2 = 32 bars. It is a modification of the 16-bar
stambul II, doubled to give 32 bars. ;
Keroncong Asli Keroncong Asli has A-B-B' structure made up of 8 rows of 4 bars. It begins with a 4-bar instrumental prelude based on the 7th row. After the A section, there is a 4-bar interlude.
Modern Kronchong (1960–2000) Kronchong continued to develop in the vicinity of Surakarta, and some kronchong musicians moved to other parts of Indonesia, like
Yogyakarta and Jakarta. ;Javanese Genre Gamelan and other Javanese music also influenced kroncong. The characteristics of Javanese music include: melodies using the
Pelog and
Slendro (pentatonic) modes; the use of a
siter (a plucked stringed instrument), a
kendang (a Javanese drum), a kempul (a gong used in gamelan), metal and wood
marimbas, gongs, and a unique style of Javanese singing. The songs still follow the binary form used in pop music: A-A-B-A or sometimes A-B-C-D, with 32 bars. In 1958, composer
Anjar Any (1936–2008) composed the well-known song "Yen Ing Tawang Ana Lintang" (If there is a star in the sky) and performed it with
Waljinah, the winner of a local radio singing contest in Surakarta. ;Keroncong Beat In 1959, Rudy Pirngadie and his Jakarta-based group (Yayasan Tetap Segar / Foundation) used the kronchong beat for accompanying various songs, local and foreign music. He introduced kroncong music to global audiences at the
1964 New York World's Fair. Idris Sardi, an Indonesian violin virtuoso, presented the song "
I Left My Heart in San Francisco" with a kronchong beat, but was fined by the US Music Authority for copyright violation. ;
Campursari In 1968 at
Gunung Kidul, an area near Yogyakarta, a local musician named
Manthous introduced
Campursari, a mixture of gamelan music and kronchong. Now, it is developing in the vicinity of Surakarta,
Sragen and
Ngawi. ;Koes-Plus
Koes Plus, a rock-pop group from Surakarta, introduced kronchong music in a rock style in 1974 and has produced kronchong-style albums.
Millennium Kroncong (2000–present) Kroncong music continues today. The pop music industry has not yet produced popular kroncong, but some groups have been experimenting with it. The
Bandung-based group Keroncong Merah Putih has experimented with elements of rap combined with kroncong music in the background.
Bondan Prakoso has fused kroncong and hip-hop with his group,
Bondan Prakoso & Fade 2 Black. At the Solo International Keroncong Festival in 2008, the
Harmony Chinese Music Group added Chinese musical instruments to keroncong, creating a different atmosphere. They called the style Indonesian Chinese Keroncong. ==See also==