Gamelan
Music Generator
The shimmering bronze ensembles of Java and Bali — interlocking melodic patterns, resonant gongs marking cyclic time, and drums guiding the tempo. Slendro and pelog tuning systems create a sound unlike anything in Western music. Describe your vision and let Music Agent bring the gamelan to life.
Bronze Garden
Gamelan AI
Gamelan DNA
The four building blocks that define the gamelan sound — origins, tuning, instruments, and structural principles.
Origins
Gamelan ensembles have existed in Java and Bali for over a thousand years, predating Hindu-Buddhist influence. The word gamelan comes from gamel (to hammer). Each ensemble is tuned as a unit — instruments are not interchangeable between sets. Court gamelans in Yogyakarta and Surakarta carry distinct traditions. Balinese gamelan developed independently with a more dynamic, aggressive character.
Tuning Systems
Two primary tuning systems — slendro (five roughly equidistant tones per octave) and pelog (seven tones per octave with unequal intervals, from which five-note modes are selected). Neither matches Western equal temperament. Each gamelan set has its own unique tuning, and the slight detuning between paired instruments creates the characteristic shimmering acoustical beats (ombak).
Instruments
Bronze metallophones (saron, gender, slenthem) carry the core melody at different speeds. Gongs (gong ageng, kempul, kenong, ketuk) mark structural points in the cycle. Kendang drums direct tempo and transitions. Bonang (rack of small gongs) plays elaborating patterns. Rebab (bowed fiddle), suling (bamboo flute), and singers add melodic ornamentation.
Interlocking & Colotomy
Music is organized in cycles (gongan) punctuated by specific gongs at specific points — this structural framework is called colotomy. Above it, instruments play interlocking (kotekan in Bali) patterns where two players share a single melody by alternating notes at rapid speed. The core melody (balungan) moves slowly while elaborating instruments play faster subdivisions — a principle called irama (tempo level).
Explore the Spectrum
Six distinct subgenres within gamelan — from meditative Javanese court music to explosive Balinese kebyar.
Javanese Court Gamelan
Refined, meditative, and stately. The gamelan of Yogyakarta and Surakarta courts plays in soft (lirihan) and loud (soran) styles. Slow-moving balungan melodies with elaborate gender and rebab ornamentation. Accompanies wayang kulit (shadow puppet) performances.
Balinese Gamelan Gong Kebyar
Explosive, virtuosic, and rhythmically complex. Kebyar (meaning 'to burst open') features sudden dynamic changes, blazing unison passages, and intricate interlocking kotekan patterns. The most internationally known Balinese gamelan style.
Gamelan Semar Pegulingan
The 'gamelan of the love god' — a delicate pelog-tuned ensemble originally from Balinese courts. Refined melodies with ornate elaboration, paired with graceful legong dance. Gentler than kebyar with an emphasis on melodic beauty.
Gamelan Jegog
Giant bamboo gamelan from western Bali — massive bass tubes produce deep, thunderous tones that vibrate through the body. Interlocking patterns at extreme volumes. Jegog battles (mebarung) pit two ensembles against each other in competitive performances.
Sundanese Degung
The gamelan tradition of West Java (Sunda). Degung ensemble features suling (bamboo flute) as lead melodic voice over a smaller set of metallophones and gongs. Lighter, more lyrical character compared to Central Javanese gamelan. Kacapi suling (zither and flute) is a popular chamber variant.
Experimental/Fusion Gamelan
Western composers (Debussy, Britten, Reich, Cage) were profoundly influenced by gamelan. Modern fusion blends gamelan instruments with electronics, jazz, and contemporary classical. I Wayan Balawan fuses Balinese gamelan with jazz guitar. Ensemble Robot builds new electronic gamelans.
How It Compares
See how gamelan stacks up against Chinese traditional, Japanese gagaku, and West African ensemble music.
| Feature | Gamelan | Chinese Traditional | Japanese Gagaku | West African Ensemble |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPM Range | 30–200 | 40–140 | 30–80 | 80–180 |
| Key Instruments | Bronze metallophones, gongs, drums | Erhu, pipa, guzheng, dizi | Shō, hichiriki, ryūteki, biwa | Djembe, balafon, kora, dunun |
| Tuning System | Slendro/pelog (non-Western) | Pentatonic (gong, shang, jue, zhi, yu) | Gagaku modes (ritsu, ryo) | Variable, heptatonic/pentatonic |
| Structural Principle | Colotomy (gong cycles), kotekan | Melodic variation, heterophony | Free-breathing phrases, jo-ha-kyu | Polyrhythmic interlocking |
| Typical Use | Temple, court, dance, theater | Opera, ceremony, meditation, film | Imperial court, Shinto ritual | Ceremony, dance, storytelling |
| Notable Artists | I Wayan Balawan, Pak Cokro | Wu Man, Lang Lang (crossover) | Gagaku ensemble, Reigakusha | Mamady Keïta, Toumani Diabaté |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts covering every gamelan mood — copy one and start creating instantly.
Javanese Court Meditation
Create a Javanese gamelan piece in pelog pathet nem at 50 BPM. Slow-moving saron balungan, gender barung playing elaborate patterns, soft rebab melody, suling flute ornamentation, kenong and kempul marking the colotomy, and gong ageng ending each cycle. Mood: midnight wayang kulit performance in a Jogja pendopo.
Kebyar Explosion
Generate a Balinese kebyar piece at 160 BPM in slendro. Sudden fortissimo unison attack, rapid interlocking kotekan patterns between two gangsa groups, ceng-ceng cymbal shimmers, kendang drum directing sudden tempo changes, and reyong pot-gong patterns. Mood: kebyar burst — controlled chaos.
Kecak Vocal Gamelan
Compose a kecak (monkey chant) piece at 130 BPM. Large male vocal chorus chanting interlocking 'cak-cak-cak' patterns in polyrhythm, solo vocalist narrating over the top, dynamic swells from whisper to shout, and occasional cymbal punctuation. Mood: Uluwatu temple at sunset, Ramayana drama.
Degung Serenity
Produce a Sundanese degung piece at 80 BPM in pelog degung scale. Suling (bamboo flute) carrying a lyrical melody, kacapi (zither) arpeggios, soft metallophone punctuation, and goong marking phrases. Sparse, spacious arrangement. Mood: misty tea plantation in the West Java highlands.
Jegog Thunder
Build a Balinese jegog piece at 120 BPM. Giant bamboo bass tubes resonating deep tones, smaller bamboo metallophones playing rapid interlocking patterns above, heavy rhythmic accents, and dynamic crescendo-decrescendo waves. Mood: the earth rumbles — two jegog ensembles in mebarung competition.
Gamelan Ambient
Create an ambient piece at 60 BPM featuring gamelan instruments. Sustained gender tones with shimmering ombak beats, distant gong ageng resonance, sparse bonang notes with long decay, suling flute floating freely above, and field-recorded temple atmosphere. Mood: Borobudur at dawn, mist and bronze.
Gamelan Jazz Fusion
Generate a fusion track at 110 BPM blending gamelan and jazz. Vibraphone and gender playing interlocking patterns, upright bass walking line, jazz drums with cross-stick and ride cymbal, bonang riff as a melodic hook, and saxophone improvising over the slendro scale. Mood: late-night Bali jazz club.
Shadow Puppet Score
Compose a wayang kulit dramatic score alternating between calm and battle scenes. Start at 45 BPM with soft gender and rebab, build tension with accelerating kendang patterns, explode into a loud saron-driven battle theme at 140 BPM, then resolve back to stillness. Mood: Arjuna faces the demon king.
Where Gamelan Lives
Real-world scenarios where gamelan music shines — from film scoring to meditation and experimental composition.
Film & Documentary
Gamelan adds authentic Indonesian atmosphere and unique timbral color to films, nature documentaries, and narratives set in Southeast Asia.
Three Simple Steps
From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your gamelan music.
Describe Your Vision
Tell Music Agent what kind of track you want — reference a mood, artist, or scene. No jargon needed.
Refine Through Chat
Fine-tune BPM, key, instruments, and structure through natural conversation. Iterate until it's perfect.
Export & Use
Download your track in high-quality audio. Fully cleared for commercial use — games, videos, ads, and more.
Explore More Genres
Discover related genres and expand your sonic palette.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about creating gamelan music with Tunee.
Yes. All tracks generated through Tunee are cleared for commercial use — films, games, YouTube, podcasts, and more. No royalty fees or licensing headaches.
Yes. Specify slendro (5-tone) or pelog (7-tone) scale, including specific pathet (modal) selections like pelog pathet nem or slendro pathet manyura. The AI generates authentic non-Western tuning and intervallic relationships.
All major traditions — Javanese court gamelan, Balinese gong kebyar, Sundanese degung, jegog, semar pegulingan, and kecak vocal gamelan. Plus experimental and fusion approaches.
Not at all. Describe what you want — "shimmering metallic meditation" or "explosive Balinese percussion" works perfectly. Mentioning specific instruments or styles helps but isn't required.
Absolutely. Gamelan-electronic, gamelan-ambient, and gamelan-jazz fusions are all supported. Debussy, Steve Reich, and many others have drawn on gamelan — the AI handles these cross-cultural blends.
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Gamelan Music?
From shimmering Javanese court music to explosive Balinese kebyar — bring Indonesia's bronze ensembles to life in minutes.
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