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Danongan Sibay Kalanduyan
Danongan Sibay Kalanduyan
Danongan Kalanduyan is
a master of all aspects of the Maguindanao tribal style of
kulintang music and has been a central artistic figure in virtually all major
Filipino-American communities for nearly two decades. Born in the fishing
village of Datu Piang in the Cotabato area of Mindanao, he was raised in a
strongly traditional musical environment. "If you were born in my village
you'd hear no Western music, just traditional music," he says. "The
music was everywhere and for everyone, not just as entertainment, but also
as an accompaniment to rituals and ceremonies. I didn't need a tutor; it just
automatically came to my head, day and night. I learned it through exposure,
through listening."
Like many kulintang musicians, he began by steadying the large agung gongs
when
they swayed back and forth as the older musicians struck them. At the age
of seven, he began to study the other instruments--the kulintang the dabakan
goblet-shaped drum, the small babandir "timekeeper" gong, and the
gandingan four-gong set--from his grandmother, father, uncles, and cousins.
As a young man, he won
island-wide competitions on the gandingan and became widely recognized as
a
master musician. In 1971, he toured the Far East with the Darangan Cultural
Troupe.
In 1976, a Rockefeller grant brought Kalanduyan to the University of Washington
in Seattle as an artist-in-residence in the ethnomusicology program headed
by
Dr. Robert Garfias. He has resided in the U.S. ever since. Word of his presence
spread among Filipino communities, and he was soon very much in demand as
a
performer and as a guro, or "teacher." He has taught and performed
with virtually all
of the American kulintang ensembles. His missionary zeal and endless patience
have brought success in his efforts to make his cherished musical tradition
a respected part of American life. In the words of Los Angeles-based World
Kulintang Institute director Eleanor Academia-Magda, "he can pride himself
in exposing kulintang to the masses in America, which he has quietly done
almost single-handedly."
It is ironic to some that kulintang music, almost entirely confined to a small
Muslim minority in the Philippines, has been enthusiastically embraced by
scores of young Christian Filipino-Americans for whom, through its pre-Hispanic,
pre-Muslim roots, it now serves as a cultural icon of pan-Filipino-American
unity. Danongan Kalanduyan has been a featured artist in performances at major
venues such as the Hollywood Bowl (with the Los Angeles Philharmonic) the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Kennedy Center, as well as
in countless concerts and festivals throughout the United States. In 1990,
he served as a master artist in the California state apprenticeship program.
In his own view, passing on the tradition is his foremost goal. "I feel
that transmitting
the knowledge I possess is important for Filipino Americans everywhere, not
only to preserve what may be the only authentic Filipino musical form, but
also to encourage Filipino Americans to maintain contact with their cultural
heritage."

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