Tarian yang jarang dipakai

Idiophones are iron percussion instruments called tetti-lagoni. Séré lolosu: rare traditional dance practiced by transvestites and intended to chase away evil spirits. South Celebes Islands. Field recordings of Christian Pelras during an expedition in Indonesia in 1972.
Archivist's Original Title
id Tarian yang jarang dipakai
en Rare traditional dance
fr Rare danse traditionnelle
Original description
en Idiophones are iron percussion instruments called tetti-lagoni. Séré lolosu: rare traditional dance practiced by transvestites and intended to chase away evil spirits. South Celebes Islands. Field recordings of Christian Pelras during an expedition in Indonesia in 1972.
fr Les idiophones sont des percussions en fer appelées tetti-lagoni. Séré lolosu: rare danse traditionnelle pratiquée par les travestis et destinée à chasser les mauvais esprits. Ile de Célèbes Sud. Enregistrements inédits de Christian Pelras lors d'un terrain en Indonésie en 1972.
Time duration
en 00:05:42
Recording date of the original material
en 1973-08-20
Acquisition Date
en 1975
Population
en Bugis
Place of the cultural origin
Country Name
Recording place
en Celebes, Sulawesi, Singkang
Comment
en Speed 19 Track 1
Archivist Category
en Music (Dance)
Recording context
en Field recording
Instrument, Original Archivist Data
en  drum;Idiophone;Rattle
Instrument (Supplementary/Annotated Data)
en Lolosu
Collector
Name of original Collection
en Indonésie, Sulawesi (Célèbes): populations Bugis, Mandar, Toraja, Makassar, 1972.
Collection source citation
History of ownership
en Recording archived by Ch. Pelras in 1975 at Musée de l'Homme, Paris.
Holding Institution of Original Materials
Copyright Notice
For any use, please contact the CREM-LESC (CNRS, Nanterre University, France): see information at https://archives.crem-cnrs.fr
Physical format
en Magnetic tape 19 cm/s
Preservation State of Physical Object
en Original tape
Original item number
en CNRSMH_I_1975_008_009_01
SEAH Identifier
en SEAH_CNRSMH_I_1975_008_009_01
Provenance
en Recording archived by Ch. Pelras in 1975 at Musée de l'Homme, Paris.