Bumi Liar (Izuan Shah)

Bumi Liar (Izuan Shah)

Malaysian musical artist Bumi Liar (real name Izuan Shah) undertook a six-week residency at Rimbun Dahan in April-May 2025.

About the Artist

Izuan Shah is a songwriter/composer and multi-instrumental musician based in Kuala Lumpur. He has a music repertoire stretching back 20 years with his art band Auburn, his pop duo Emmett I, and various other featured appearances. He trained at the Australia Institute of Music in Sydney, majoring in composition. Returning on break in 2013, he was awarded for his music video treatment to Auburn’s song, “Youth”, in the Best Digital Music Video category at the Malaysian Digital Film Awards that year. In 2019, his rock song for Emmett I, “Mogok”, was featured in the Southeast Asian blockbuster film, Polis Evo 2

In January 2024, his song “Jiwa Kuala Lumpur”, written for his hometown on a routine LRT commute to the studio, was performed by the Kuala Lumpur’s DBKL Orchestra. At the end of last year, he was made honorary member of London-based collective Bill Dury And The Healers in Camden’s vibrant pub scene.

His songs have arced from the third culture idealism of his youth towards a more seasoned, rustic worldview which expresses his Southeast Asian consciousness while preserving his sense of romanticism for a just world.

A writer at heart, his lifelong journaling and lyrical practice has crystallised over time as one with his musical output, evolving him into an artist striding further into the realm of poeticism. Izuan’s current residency brings him back home full circle to the essence of his creative purpose: storytelling.

https://www.instagram.com/izuanshah.isme/
https://vimeo.com/81976138
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1EK8FMYRp1JT21bAUAjE2D


About the Residency

My tenure at Rimbun Dahan has removed me from the racing machinery of city existence, and opened me up to redirect my musical journey. Here I am given license to pursue a solo album that accepts realist commercial standards, while crucially returning to the beauty and parity of nature and the communal. My main focus here has entailed the sharpening of an artistic style where an East/West fusion serves the universal receiver, ideally sparking a conjunct spectrum of response and activation from both the proud listener and the inspired arts practitioner. The lyrical work meanwhile should speak for a silent majority, beyond the introspection and catharsis of the songwriter. For my current process, I have deliberately eschewed the luxury of modern studio approaches, making do with only voice, guitar, the humble dabruka hand drum, and maracas to shape the harmonic and rhythmic foundations. With a white canvas to express melody lines and inflections to my taste, I am also prompted to record previously suppressed traditional rhythms myself without relying on the touch of specialist players.

Unique synthesis options are also available to me here, such as live gamelan ensemble, prepared piano, and field recordings. Digital treatment has been only necessary for the rendering of these found sounds into the raw song material to complete these album demos, which will be reproduced in Jakarta as a full-length to be mixed and mastered in London. In a concerted move away from the rock band format, the original spirit of my previous ouvre–truth, resistance, rebellion, protest, amplified dissonance–has not been abandoned, but merely augmented with a matured emotional quotient in resilience towards the external chaos of the times. These dramatic elements have not been necessarily softened, but refined with subtler textures and refrained tones in the performance of my present Bumi Liar vessel (a stage name which translates simply to ‘wild world’) and my personal constitution of what could be defined as contemporary Malaysiana. This Bumi Liar aesthetic was conceived with a view towards preserving the musical, literary, visual, and cultural tenets of my birth heritage, descendant of my multi-strained ‘Nusantaran’ lineage, with all its inherent spiritual, mystical, and folklore aspects. The bi-lingual Melodis Pasca Silam (Post-Ancient Melodist) album may be preceded by an EP, entitled Kehalusan (Refinery), and will be made available into physical formats as a touring card along with its requisite digital presence.

Gardika Gigih

Gardika Gigih

Indonesian composer Gardika Gigih is at Rimbun Dahan for a two-month residency in 2024.

About the Artist

Gardika Gigih Pradipta is an Indonesian composer, pianist, and soundscape researcher. After studying composition at the Indonesian Institute of Arts, Gardika’s interest in the intersection of music, society, and culture led him to pursue a Masters Degree in Cultural Anthropology. His works span numerous genres, from concerts to contemporary improvisation, film scoring, and sound ethnography. His debut album Nyala (2017), released by Indonesian independent label Sorge Records, received widespread acclaim and was named a top album of the year by The Jakarta Post.

In 2019, Gardika received a fellowship from The Japan Foundation Asia Center to conduct soundscape research as cultural narratives in Southeast Asia and Japan. Published in www.lostinsound.art
From January to June 2023, he lived in New York as an Asian Cultural Council Fellow, to study cultural diversity and multicultural collaboration in the New York music scene. Last May at the British Library, his composition “Mimpi Owa: A Duet with Javanese Gibbons” won the “Sound of the Year Awards” for the Composed with Sound category, initiated by the BBC Radiophonic Institute and the Museum of Sounds.

Gardika is continuing to develop new compositions and electroacoustic works inspired by his global research.

https://www.instagram.com/gardikagigih/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/0o6rbDGIxDEw5vzGKyxdcK

About the Residency

Every day at Rimbun Dahan, from the very morning until late at night, I listen to so many sounds from the tropical nature surrounding us. It’s a wonderful experience to feel so many creatures living together in this place, and it makes me listen deeper to the various birds, insects, dogs, winds, etc. to know that they have their own characteristics, timbral, rhythm, texture, and even daily hours. For example, some insects only create sounds between 7pm and 8pm, and some birds mostly sing in the early morning during sunrise. It’s nurturing my ear sensibility.

From this pure listening experience, I want to create “Mikrokosmos 2: Saripati Kehidupan”, a series of compositions with this magical natural soundscape recording, and combine it with music instruments from various cultures, including gambus, guzheng, cello, Balinese gamelan, and piano. This work is a reflection on our current environmental crisis. What can we still do for our shared Earth?