Check out this feature article in VCU Alumni magazine about Hannah’s Fulbright research on preserving an endangered form of music on the remote island of Mendanau.
Category: Press
Rumput at InLight 2017
Rumput was featured in InLight 2017, a juried outdoor public festival of illuminated art with an international draw. Many thanks to our fabulous crankie artist Beth Reid for putting together the application, and to sound & vision designer Greyson Goodenow for making us look so spectacular the photographers couldn’t keep away. (Fully 28% of the 7 photos featured in the Richmond Times-Dispatch gallery were of us!)
Thanks also to photographers Robert Parrish (freelance) and James H. Wallace (Richmond Times-Dispatch).
Edupublik: “The Sound of Keroncong Meriahkan Paris van Java”
Dust Up magazine reviews our debut album
Dust Up reviewed our debut album Rumput in their feature Bandcamp of the Week.
…melodies and break-downs that make Indonesia feel like a short highway ride away, instead of on the opposite side of a globe….
While that’s something that specifically speaks to us in 2017, it’s also a timeless inspiration, which is ultimately what Rumput has beautifully created here.
Java residency and scholarships
We’re excited to announce several emerging long-range developments.
We often call ourselves Richmond’s first and only orkes kroncong. That’s true, but it seems we’re actually the only active kroncong group in North America. We’ve been gratified by the positive recognition we’ve received for playing this music that is very dear to Indonesians: for every view our YouTube channel gets here in the US, we get 45 in Indonesia.
In the coming weeks we will deepen that connection. In August we are all being flown to Bandung, Java, for a 12-day residency where we’ll perform several hours a day and collaborate with local musicians.
Then singer / cakista / bandleader Hannah, bassist Natalie, and puppeteer Edward will stay on for a year of immersive study — Hannah as a Fulbright scholar studying kroncong, and Natalie and Edward as Darmasiswa scholars studying gamelan and wayang (shadow theater), respectively. (See the writeup on the VCU Music Alumni Kudos blog.)
Before our scholars depart we’ll drop into Montrose Recording in July to document some of our current repertoire. Then the rest of us stateside will retool and learn new and adapted repertoire in collaboration with master musician and visiting Fulbright Scholar Danis Sugiyanto from the Indonesian Institute of the Arts, in residence at the University of Richmond during the spring 2018 semester. (You may have seen Danis perform with us as part of the Shadow Ballads tour in 2016.)
All of this means you have only one last opportunity to catch us in our current form: June 16 at Henrico Theater with Gamelan Raga Kusuma. Come out and see how far we’ve come in the last two years; we can scarcely imagine the next two!
Hannah featured in Shenandoah Conservatory magazine
Hannah and Andy featured in RVAMag
Thanks to RVAMag for a feature article on our parent orchestra, Gamelan Raga Kusuma in advance of our Grace Street Theater show!
The group was comfortable — laughter shot out between songs and a few of the members’ children played off to the side — but their preparation was precise.
Rumput live on WRIR
Many thanks to Carl Hamm of If Music Could Talk for hosting us for a little chat and in-studio performance in support of our Grace Street Theater show!
Rumput live on WRIR
We dropped in to play a set for WRIR-LP-FM’s Fall Fund Drive. Many thanks to Alan Coberly of The New Breakfast Snob!
Playlist:
00:32:00 — Introduction to kroncong
00:32:44 — Walang Kekek
00:38:15 — Jali-Jali
00:51:40 — Valley Forge / Walking Up Georgia Row
00:58:48 — Wedang Kacang
01:03:04 — Nyi Roro Kidul
01:09:00 — Band introduction
01:16:20 — How Come That Blood
Daily Progress features Rumput at The Garage
Feature article by Dave Cantor. Many thanks to our lovely hosts at The Garage!