

A gamelan orchestra accompanies this traditional

Javanese dance from the court of Yogyakarta.



While [the musicians] are warming up under the mango and jackfruit trees that offer some cover from the occasional drifting shower, I make a phone call to the surgeon who has performed Helen's operation and who has been so patient and reassuring with all my questions over the past few days. He confirms that all went well, that the meningioma was benign and has been completely and successfully removed. Then he breaks off and asks me what the noise is in the background.



"It's something called a gamelan orchestra," I begin, about to embark on a long explanation.



"I thought so!" he exclaims. "The man who's teaching me to play the saxophone leads a gamelan orchestra."



"In London?"



"Yes."



This unlikely piece of synchronicity is oddly comforting. Ridiculous, I know, but when I go back into the garden the music of Java reminds me of home.

#



I'm still in my Michael Palin Period , and at the moment have just crossed with Michael from Indonesia to Australia and New Zealand in the companion book to his travel series, his 50,000-mile 1995-96 journey around the Pacific Rim, starting from the Alaskan island of Little Diomede in the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia (we've actually watched the kickoff of the trip ), then moving counter-clockwise around the Pacific: to Siberia and on around the Pacific Rim of Asia and on to Australia and New Zealand, then across to the southern tip of South America and up the Pacific coast of the Americas, all the way backto Little Diomede, stopping in all the countries that border the Pacific except North Korea, to which he got as close as he could via a visit to the Korean DMZ.One of the things that puzzled me about the series as broadcast was the disconnect between Indonesia and Australia. After Michael and the BBC crew made their way across the length of Java, from the Indonesian capital of Jakarta in the west to Surabaya in the east, the plan was to continue finding small boats to travel a mere thousand miles across Indonesia and the short hop across the Timor Sea to Darwin in the far north of Australia. But at that time of year they were unable to find any captain willing to take them any farther east. Only then, there they are in Darwin!It turns out that two members of the party, Michael and crew member Steve, made the trip via London, for family concerns. While still on Java, each had received fairly terrifying news from home. Steve, who thought his great concern was the imminent arrival of his third child, learned that one of his daughters had fallen and hit her head, extent of injury unknown (and then several hours later his third daughter was born). Michael had learned that his wife Helen, suffering unbearable headaches, had been diagnosed with a benign meningioma near the brain, for which immediate surgery was indicated.After intense consultation with his wife and the doctor, Michael had agreed that there was no point in his dropping everything and making the round-the-world trip home, where there was nothing for him to do before the surgery, which the doctor considered relatively straightforward. On arrival in Yogyakarta in central Java, Michael had found out that the surgery was successfully completed. ("Textbook" is what he's told half an hour after the surgery, and when he sends his love, "she is already conscious enough to send hers back.")Meanwhile, in the heart of gamelan country, theteam finds that, as another consequence of their traveling through this predominantly Muslim country during Ramadan, "the recitals of gamelan -- the best known and most admired of Java's traditional music -- have been suspended. A large blackboard explains, crisply: 'During Ramadan, there'll be no music, no dance'." And yet, to Michael's pleasure, they get "a chance to hear a gamelan orchestra at work at an impromptu session organized in the garden of a house in a quiet neighbourhood not far from the centre of Yogya." And this scene ensues:(We learn in the first entry from Darwin that while the crew found their way, presumably by whatever air connections they could make from Surabaya to Darwin, Steve and Michael had made the trip via London. At the small cost of 16,000 miles added to the 1200-mile distance from Surabaya to Darwin, and "the short, sharp shock of exposure to a northern winter," before plunging right back into the tropics, both travelers have been well rewarded. Michael found Helen recovering well, and Steve found his daughters "old and new" fine.)is available by itself, but if you have any interest in Michael Palin's other remarkable travel series, you should instead get the nearly complete Michael Palin Collection. As we've discussed several times, though, if you can play regionally encoded PAL DVDs, you should buy directly from the U.K. The newer Travels with Palin set includes thesequel and costs a fraction of the U.S. price. For that matter, Amazon.co.uk is currently listing the Full Circle DVDs for £7.47 (less than $13) as opposed to Amazon.com's $45. Both Amazons list an abundance of copies of thebook ( here, for example ) at ridiculously low prices.]

Labels: Full Circle, gamelan, Michael Palin