Naif (band)

Naif is an Indonesian band from Jakarta formed in 1995. It currently consists of David Bayu Danangjaya (vocals), Fajar Endra Taruna Mangkudisastro (guitar & backing vocals), Franki Indrasmoro Sumbodo (drums), and Mohammad Amil Hussein (bass & backing vocals). They are known for their retro sound and style. Two of their songs, "Mobil Balap" ("Racecar") and "Posesif" ("Possessive"), were listed by Rolling Stone Indonesia in its 2009 list of the best Indonesian songs of all time.

Naif
OriginJakarta, Indonesia
Years active1995 (1995)–present
Websitewww.naifband.com
Members
  • David Bayu Danangjaya
  • Fajar Endra Taruna Mangkudisastro
  • Franki Indrasmoro Sumbodo
  • Mohammad Amil Hussein
Past members
  • Shendy
  • Chandra Sukardi

History

Naif was formed by Franki Indrasmoro Sumbodo (Pepeng; drums), David Bayu Danangjaya (David; vocals), Fajar Endra Taruna Mangkudisastro (Jarwo; guitar), and Shendy (keyboard) – all students of the Jakarta Art Institute (Institut Kesenian Jakarta) – in 1995, when the young men gathered at Shendy's house to work on an assignment. Inspired by a televised Nirvana concert, they wrote their first song, "Jauh" ("Far").[1][2] Shendy was soon replaced by Chandra Sukardi (Chandra), while Mohammad Amil Hussein (Emil; bass) joined some time later. They began to play on campus and visit several recording studios.[3][2] After a friend suggested that their music was simple yet harmonic, the group took up the name Naif; it had the added benefit of being easy to remember.[4]

After hearing that Indo Semar Sakti, a label of Bulletin Records, was preparing a compilation album, Naif sent a demo cassette to the company.[4] This demo, consisting of "Picnic '72'", "Benci Libur" ("Hate the Holidays"), and "Just B", was at first refused. However, with the inclusion of the more upbeat "Mobil Balap" ("Racecar"), the group were accepted[5] and booked for a self-titled album; their sound was deemed unsuitable to the compilation album.[6] This debut album, released in 1998, spawned several singles, including "Mobil Balap" ("Racecar").[4][5] However, it was a commercial failure, selling only 20,000 copies; it had been released in the middle of a recession.[2]

Two years later, Naif released the album Jangan Terlalu Naif (Don't Be Too Naive);[5] it sold 500,000 copies. In 2002 they released Titik Cerah (A Point of Clarity).[2]

Chandra left the band few days before Naif band held their 8th years anniversary "Sewindu Naif" in 2003 to pursue a career in graphic design, which he had majored in.[7] The following year the band collaborated with senior singer Chrisye on the song "Tjah Ayoe" ("Beautiful Face"), for the latter's 2004 album Senyawa (One Soul). The members wrote the song together, while David sang a duet with Chrisye.[8]

Naif released a comic and children's music album in 2008 as the animated band BonBinBen (short for Kebon Binatang Band; or Zoo Band). This featured the band members as anthropomorphic animals, based on their nicknames for each other: David became a gorilla named Si Gori, Emil became a wolf named Si Gala, Jarwo became a pony named Si Kupon and Pepeng became a monkey named Si Dungde. The band described BonBinBen as a separate band than Naif. The debut album for BonBinBen, entitled Di Rimba Hijau Kemilau (In the Shining Green Jungle) included eight songs.[9]

In 2009 Naif covered several songs for the soundtrack to Ruma Maida (Maida's House), including songs from the 1940s such as "Juwita Malam" ("Beauty of the Night", by Ismail Marzuki[10]), "Di Bawah Sinar Bulan Purnama" ("Under the Light of the Full Moon"; by R. Maladi[11]) and "Ibu Pertiwi" ("Motherland").[12] The covers were recorded over a period of five days.[13]

Naif established their own indie label, Electrified Records, in 2009; they found work with major labels to be overly restrictive. Around that time the members began working on their own side-projects. Jarwo released a solo instrumental album entitled Mr. J. - 1st Journey, then David created a sneaker design for Cosmic clothing; the vocalist later released a solo album entitled DVD Boy.[6] The following year, Pepeng released a series of five comics detailing a fictionalised version of the band's formation and development.[14]

Style

Hera Diani, writing in The Jakarta Post, describes the band as having a sound reminiscent of music from the 1960s and 1970s. She describes them as having a tacky style of fashion, and David as having a "hilarious stage act" involving off-key dancing and jumping.[2]

Legacy

In 2009, Rolling Stone Indonesia listed two of Naif's songs in their list of the best Indonesian songs of all time. "Mobil Balap" placed at 55 and was described as Naif's most popular song at concerts. The song "Posesif" ("Possessive"), which placed at number 96, was described as one of their most recognisable songs.[5]

gollark: It says here that Matlab has a `parfor` and `spmd` thing, are you using those?
gollark: Your personal computer probably has basically as much single-threaded performance as the best available ones now, give or take 40%, which is actually quite substantial but oh well.
gollark: That probably doesn't help if your thing isn't already parallel.
gollark: GPU acceleration is hard. Running mostly independent things in parallel on CPU probably isn't.
gollark: Does Matlab have some kind of profiler to find the slowest bits?

References

Footnotes
Bibliography
  • "150 Lagu Indonesia Terbaik Sepanjang Masa" [150 Best Indonesian Songs of All Time]. Rolling Stone Indonesia (in Indonesian). Jakarta: a&e Media (56): 66, 83. December 2009. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2012-05-15.
  • "Adventures of Naif in Comic Land". Jakarta Globe. 28 February 2010. Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  • Dekade (Media notes). Chrisye. Musica Studios. 2002. MSCD 0306.CS1 maint: others (link)
  • Diani, Hera (6 October 2002). "Naif: A band obsessed with being taken seriously". Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  • Hermawan, Ary (23 July 2008). "Naif: Charming children with music, comic". Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  • Kurniasari, Triwik (1 November 2009). "'Ruma Maida' portrays the country's history". The Jakarta Post. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  • Kuswandini, Dian (24 October 2009). "Naif: Anything but naive". Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  • Mohamad, Goenawan (6 November 2006). "K.A". Tempo (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  • Senyawa (Media notes). Chrisye. Musica Studios. 2004. MSCD 0306.CS1 maint: others (link)
  • Soeriaatmadja, Teddy (director and producer) (2010b). Di Balik Layar Part 2 [Behind the Screen Part 2] (in Indonesian). Jakarta: EZY Home Entertainment. OCLC 706774253.
  • Tantagode, Jube (2008). Revolusi Indie Label [Revolution of the Indie Labels] (in Indonesian). Yogyakarta: Harmoni. ISBN 978-979-99585-6-3.
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