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They’re known for setting the heart racing and getting the feet moving at time-honoured community events such as weddings. But in Fatih – The Prince & The Drum, Malay percussion instruments—very much the soul of music in this region—get a much bigger stage. Staged in June 2019, it is the first large-scale commission of a theatre production by Esplanade at Pesta Raya – Malay Festival of Arts.
The production was the brainchild of Malay drumming whiz Riduan Zalani, the co-founder and artistic director of Malay percussion ensemble NADI Singapura, and involved noted artists and creatives from Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand.
Over 100 drums of all shapes and sizes were transposed onto the massive Esplanade Theatre stage, telling a mythical coming-of-age tale about a seafaring prince from the fictional kingdom of Sritanmira. The prince, Fatih, makes new friends and enemies, uncovering secrets of a forgotten past and discovering a lot more about himself in the process.
Featuring performers such as Singapore dance and drumming artist Nizar Fauzie (who plays Fatih) and Indonesia’s leading contemporary dance company Nan Jombang, Fatih – The Prince & The Drum is a feast for the senses combining songs, poetry, storytelling and dance, directed by acclaimed Indonesian film auteur Garin Nugroho.
Their incantatory rhythms evoked violence, heartbreak, passion and every other emotion in between. As director Garin notes, it highlighted the interplay between “three areas … with different colours, different perspectives and different music” – the regal and orderly Sritanmira kingdom into which Fatih is born, the coastal and free-spirited Maialena village which he embraces, and the savage Tohmah pirates with whom he clashes. Each community speaks a different language through its own kind of drums.
No mere percussion instruments, drums were key to the choreography—performers did headstands on drums, danced with them and rode atop a barrel-shaped drum as it transformed into a boat, spiriting him away.
Cover photo by Bernie Ng
A barrel drum and traditional communication tool, this is the instrument used in mosques to initiate the call of prayer. In Singapore, the housing estate of Bedok got its name from this iconic instrument.
Fun fact
For Fatih – The Prince & The Drum, NADI Singapura created the tambur singa, inspired by the actual wooden beduk but made of oil barrels and weighing only a third of the original, which is more than 150kg.
This tambur singa is pivotal in more ways than one – the Nan Jombang dancers actually dance on the drum, and it's later assembled into a ship used by Prince Fatih to sail the high seas.
A large, barrel-like double-headed drum, this is mid to low in pitch and often played with drumsticks or mallets.
In Fatih – The Prince & The Drum, this instrument is closely identified with the Tohmah pirates and the troops of Sritanmira, marshalling both sides as they go into battle.
Fun fact
In the production, the royal guard of Sritanmira rallies the troops of the kingdom by playing with great dexterity on five jidur that have been arranged in a row, a departure from the traditional way in which it is played, with one musician to one jidur.
A double-headed drum that is tied to a hollow wooden frame with leather, rattan strings or ropes, the kendang is capable of creating a variation of sounds.
Used in Sundanese, Javanese and Balinese cultures, it can be played with the hands, drumsticks or mallets. Alternately spelled gendang or kendhang.
Fun fact
Historically used in royal courts during important ceremonies, the kendang is a key instrument for the troops of Sritanmira in Fatih – The Prince & The Drum, who wield them in their battle with the Tohmah pirates.
A small double-headed drum believed to have been brought over to the Malay archipelago by the Arabs from Yemen. It is always played in groups, by striking the drums in an interlocking manner.
Fun fact
The Arabic-sounding rhythms of the marwas give the Maialena villagers in Fatih – The Prince & The Drum their distinctive, ‘exotic’-sounding character. These drums also provide one of the more dramatic moments of the production, when a tree with 70 hanging marwas is flown onto the stage.
This hand-held, single-headed frame drum often makes its presence felt on joyous occasions such as festivals and weddings with its interlocking rhythms. Requiring a lot of teamwork to play, the kompang can be said to be a musical display of gotong royong (communal culture). In Indonesia, it is also called rebana.
Fun fact
One of NADI Singapura's creations for Fatih – The Prince & The Drum is a supersized kompang called the maha kompang, twice the size of the usual kompang (which is about 35cm in diameter). This larger-than-life drum is used by the Maialena in battle, as a war instrument.