Pop goes the fiddle

This article was published in The Star, the leading English daily newspaper in Malaysia, Sunday, 20 May 2007.


By NILA TANZIL

IN the Indonesian music industry, Maylaffayza stands out for being the only solo pop-classic-crossover female violinist. She combines hip-hop, rap and R&B rhythms and a touch of popular Indonesian tunes with the sounds of her violin. In some pieces, she also sings.

Maylaffayza started to play the violin when she was just nine. Her uncle, Iswan Sutopo, a musician, gave her an old violin. She put the instrument next to her bed and wished that one day she would be able to play it.

Maylaffayza agrees that the violin is serious and elegant, but wants it to rock, too.
Seeing that their girl was so determined, her parents sent her to Bina Musika, a music school specialising in stringed instruments.

Her first lessons were not easy. “I could not even make a nice sound with my violin. It was so difficult!” she laughs.

However, her first experience did not discourage her from learning the delicate instrument. “I was so excited with my course and could not wait to be able to play well.”

When she was 10, Indonesia’s renowned violin maestro Idris Sardi took her in as his only apprentice. Sardi gave her a private lesson every week, but she had to practise at least three hours each day. During the holidays, she practised for five hours.

To this day, the maestro still spares time for Maylaffayza, who turns 31 this year. These days, the lessons are not as intense as they used to be, and the schedule is more flexible.

1994 was a memorable year for Maylaffayza. “It was my first performance and I had to play duet with the maestro Idris Sardi, my teacher”, she says. “It was an honour to play together with him, but on the other hand, it was big pressure too.”

Standing in front of hundreds of people with a well-known violinist was definitely not easy. “I was so nervous that I would make a mistake and disappoint him.”

Maylaffayza made her public debut as a solo violinist in 2000 when she performed for a variety show in RCTI, the leading private TV channel in Indonesia.

I still remember attending her performance in one of the cafes in Jakarta years ago. She played in that café weekly, with a male solo pianist. I became a regular customer there as I fell in love with her performance.

In February of 2007, I had the chance to see her perform again. I have to say that she gave a completely different performance than the ones I had seen before. She has found her own music and looks very comfortable, confident and expressive on stage.

When asked why she chose to be a professional violinist while her degree was a Bachelor of Arts in Industrial Product Design from Jakarta’s Trisakti University, she says, “I decided to be a solo violinist rather than working as an industrial product designer because I love music, I love the violin.”

When I think of the word “violin”, the first few words that come to my mind will be classic, serious and elegant.

Maylaffayza agrees: “That is the image and I do not want to change that perception. Instead, I want to give more added values to that image.”

When Maylaffayza performs, she finds that the audience gets enthusiastic but don’t quite know how to respond to it.
By using R&B, hip-hop and rap as the rhythm of her music, she wants to convince people that listening to the violin can be fun, too.

“Violin music is for everyone, not necessarily for the older generation only”, she says. “I want the younger generation and teenagers to enjoy and appreciate it as well.”

Maylaffayza is currently preparing her first solo album. She will be the album producer, working in collaboration with music arranger Bobby Soerjadi and composer Maestro Sardi.

They have been working on the album for the past three years and are determined to release it this year.

“It will be a breakthrough in the music industry”, she says confidently.

“I used to listen to Michael Jackson back in the old days”, she admits. “Nowadays, I listen to Beyonce, Usher and Alicia Keys ? they inspire my music”.

“I am happy to see that Indonesians’ appreciation for instrumentalists have increased a lot. People are more enthusiastic nowadays. Unfortunately, they just do not know how to express their enthusiasm”, she explains.

“It is very different when people go to see a band or singer. They can be very expressive and sing along ? when seeing a performance by an instrumentalist, they do get enthusiastic but just do not know how to respond to it.”

Maylaffayza is one of the few Indonesian musicians who maximises the use of technology. She uses her blog (maylaffayza.multiply.com/) as one of her marketing tools.

“Blogging is not only fun, I use it effectively to make people aware of my music, my activity, my life”, she says.

“Apart from that, the readers get to know me personally. It creates a closer bond as I am the one who responds to them directly, using my own informal language”, she explains. “Blogs enable people to discuss things. It opens two-way communications whereas a website is only one way,” she adds.

Maylaffayza always embraces every moment of her life. She says “I am falling in love with my life every day. I do what I love and it is such a blessing for me. Not many people have that privilege.”


24 hours a day

Have you ever experienced this, at least for once in your lifetime?

You don't feel like doing anything
Things that you love to do, suddenly are no longer appealing
... You change. You've become a stranger to yourself.
...
Then when you start to get back on your track
And get excited on things that you used to love and longed to do
Suddenly the world turns busy
And you don't have time to touch those things

What a pity
Shouldn't we all have time to do things that we love?

How do you divide 24 hours a day into work, read newspapers, read book(s), write (anything), meet friends, go to the gym, watch movies, go to theater play, etc etc.. yet still able to help others and do your own so called social responsibility?? (it's known as Corporate Social Responsibility in business term, but I call it as Personal Social Responsibility)
Sometimes I feel 24 hours a day are not enough.
What do you think?

Candles for Alan Johnston, BBC Reporter


UPDATED VERSION
Alan Johnston, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)'s reporter, was abducted in Gaza Strip on 12 March 2007. It's been almost two months and yet nobody knows whether he's still alive since there's no news whatsoever from the captors until today...

Last night (3 May), BBC organized a vigil in Jakarta and called up Jakartans as well as expats, including foreign journalists, to express their supports and call for Alan's release as well as to mark Press Freedom Day. The vigil was held in Taman Suropati, Menteng, Jakarta.

If you want to participate in signing the petition together with people from all over the world, please click here.

Below are some pictures of the event. Click here to read more.






It was very touching to see people came to Taman Suropati to express their support, as well as to find out that many people have signed the petition to call for Alan Johsnton's release. My heart goes to Johsnton and his family. May the light of those candles brings warm in his heart and soul, his family and the loved ones... and may his experience teaches us to have the courage to fight for our rights and values that each of us hold dearly...

May Day 2007 in Jakarta

Some "oleh-oleh" from the International Labor Day commemoration in Jakarta, held on 1 May 2007 in front of the presidential palace. My piece is here.